That's not the bit to which I refer but frankly, you're not going to be taken seriously in any forum where you present commentary as your own and then attempt to blame someone else when it turns out to be wrong.
Our data consumption continues to double every 12 months. There is no sign of the growth slowdown predicted by Mal et al. Remember Turnbull told us just 5 years ago that we didn't need more than 12Mbps.
If in going back that far you're suggesting that everything I've said since that time has come to pass, you're possibly being a little generous but I thank you for the compliment in any case.From drsmith circa 2012....for insight... and you want to be taken seriously???
I have shared a 2 bedroom unit with the same person for the last 6 years, in that time we have gone from a 30 gig 1.5 Mbps DSL1 plan to 25 Mbps 250 gig NBN fibre, we generally don't watch TV anymore, everything is online...i remember watching Malcolm give that "we didn't need more than 12 Mbps" presentation and thinking to myself that he was foolish to be saying such things.
He should've been smarter than that, Abbott made him look like a fool...he should've known better than to take the Communications minister job.
. Gee, I wonder who could have seen that one coming.
I have reviewed the author's actual article and the calculations therein and the data from which it was sourced.
Woohoo!
The MTM now has 1,000 customers connected to FTTN.
In October last year, the plan was to have 244,500 by October 2015. So they're only 243,500 (or 99.6%) behind target. Top effort Bill, Mal et al. It doesn't come much closer than that.
Once again, I'm reminded of all those people who assured us that the 'grown ups are now in charge' and they'll run the project properly. Even as their FTTN stumbles from one problem to the next, and Labor's FTTP sections continue to experience smooth sailing.
In some cases it could be related to an end user’s in-home network, the backhaul provisioning of a retail service provider or the capacity (CVC) being purchased at an NBN Point of Interconnect by an RSP, the CEO said.
“We evaluated and inspected every complaint on this to see because this is so important for us to understand if in fact the technology cannot deliver the speeds that we need to, and we did not find one case where fibre to the node technology was a factor in those speed complaints that were coming forward.”
However the CEO said that in some cases assessed by NBN the speed issue was linked to an under-provisioning of capacity at a Point of Interconnect.
I think that for very large infrastructure projects of any kind that will take more than say, 5 years to complete, all 3 parties (ALP/Libs/Greens) should be involved and come to some sort of agreement be made before starting the project.
If Labor get back in, plans will change again and it will inevitability cost more money and take more time to complete this project.
AUSTRALIA’S Commonwealth Games will not just be a speed test for athletes but for smartphones, as Telstra today revealed it would use the Gold Coast 2018 Games to test its next-generation 5G network.
The new network could offer speeds as high as 20 gigabits per second, theoretically able to deliver three series of Games of Thrones in less than one second.
The country’s biggest telecommunications carrier revealed its 5G plans before Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, also revealing plans to launch a high-speed mobile modem this year.
Telstra networks group managing director Mike Wright said the telco aimed to deliver its 5G network by 2020, and the 2018 Gold Coast Commonwealth Games had been chosen as “a great way to focus energy” on delivering a significantly faster mobile network with partner Ericsson.
The trials may not necessarily involve finished smartphones, however, as manufacturers might not yet be ready for the technology.
l did a search on 5G on ASF, but way too much came up.
Anyways, NBNMyths said that 5G was a pipe-dream...
Telstra to launch 5G network tests
Ahh.... no. I never said 5G was a pipe dream. Of course there will be 5G. And 6G, 7G, 8G, 9G...until we run out of Gs.
What I said was that 5G will not be a viable replacement for a fixed network. And it won't. Too slow (once many people are connected), and too expensive.
Telstra's real-world 4G speeds dropped by 50% between 2014-2015, as more users connected. The price is 20x higher than fixed line (GB for GB), and hasn't fallen to any great extent. By the time 5G hits the street it will be required just to keep the networks from collapsing under the data strain being imposed on 4G.
Looking at the latest data from the ABS, it's clear that there is still no sign of a move away from fixed data, despite what all the fanbois said when 4G was launched. In fact, fixed line volume growth is massively in front of mobile:
View attachment 65958
Yeah but...
I'm a heavy user of both mobile and fixed line data
Mobile data when i'm working on the road doing important stuff
Fixed line when I'm chilling at home and want to download the entire Game of thrones series.
Fixed line is awesome but it's all just wank - Download just one pissy single Gig of documents, data whatever and see how long it take to analyse said info....... I'll see you next year.
Fixed lines main claim to fame is just for watching movies and stuff.
If the government / corporations can come up with a way to block dodgy movie downloads then the whole NBN reasons for existence is moot. ( they won't though as there is heaps more money selling bandwidth than selling actual product )
I just got a new work phone, samsung something with LTE data ( ??? ) I hooked it up to download Bush tucker man and Billions. 5 min's later it was all done over the wireless and my boss is now on my **** over the $1200 excess Data bill FFS. ( forgot about the torrent 'till next day ) He can get stuffed though.
If mobile ever catches up to or comes even comes remotely close to fixed line pricing - Who would bother with copper? It's not needed in the real word (excluding valid dodgy entertainment reasons) With LTE speed isn't an issue. It's like microwaving Baked beans - who cares if they take 2.4 seconds as opposed to 1.2 sec's, It's the same.
It would help if journalists such as the above reconciled that leaked Scale-the-Deployment-Program document with other information publically available to understand it in context.
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