Thanks for that. A friend of mine signed up to 50 megs FTTP and teased me endlessly about my then mere 30 megs cable speed (he's a LNP party faithful and hosted our previous Canberra boss on a few occasions) he loves it and is considering a faster throughput to keep pace with his increased use of features. I'm going to be particularly jealous when ultraHD starts streaming..... my current 20meg ADSL can't handle Stan high res without stalling and Netflix kicks down to medium as well.
Noco
Do the following:
1. Check aerial is connected.
2. Check TV is set to DTV. Note, it might be set to HDMI to get Foxtel or whatever. I suspect this is most likely the problem.
Got another one today from the local Labor member in the form of a personalised letter stating that Labor will prioritise the delivery of FTTH NBN in my suburb by 2018.The following in a election flyer from the local Labor candidate offers a hint on Labor's upcoming NBN rollout policy,
That's why I support a plan for Jobs in WA, protecting your penalty rates and a fibre-to-the-premise nbn to foster innovation.
In a state of unrestrained excitement, I contacted the office of the local Labor candidate and when I read out the above and mentioned 18 months, the above timetable immediately slipped. I was advised that the beginning of 2018 is 1.5 years and the end of 2018 is 2.5 years.
The suburb I'm in is in a 3-year first priority list. Presently, FTTN is scheduled to be rolled out in H1 2018.
The above has flowed through to the official weekly rollout update to June 23.If the following is correct, FTTN is going to have a big week of premises RFS in the weekly update ending June 23.
http://www.finder.com.au/nbn-tracker/recent/copper
June 17 tallies to 52,200.
The update for the week to June 16 however will be somewhat leaner at 15,600.
Note the above is for FTTN only and not brownfields as a whole. FTTB on the above pages looks to me like it's listed on a separate page under High Value Build.
By then 18G technology will be all over the airwaves Doc. Recently got NBN and not much different to ADSL turbo that I had previously except for theto bundle the telephone into the same system. Oh yes Mr Trainspotter you can have faster speeds but you MUST PAY FOR IT - nearly double what I was on originally. Been with same company 11 years and 10 months - Loyalty for ya !
The week to June 30 looks like it will be even bigger based on recent activations (Finder). FTTN > 80k and total over 100k. Not included in that is 18.8k HFC quietly announced by NBN Co on June 30.The above has flowed through to the official weekly rollout update to June 23.
http://www.nbnco.com.au/content/dam/nbnco2/documents/nbn-rollout-metrics/rollout-metrics-230616.pdf
Brownfields/total was ~67k/~73k RFS for the week respectively. Brownfields/total are now ~52k/~84k above their respective June 30 targets.
And that was the case.The numbers are so large that they possibly include all those originally scheduled for July 1 2016. That will become clear in next week's update.
And that was the case.
Only 437 Brownfield premises were passed in the week ending July 7.
http://www.nbnco.com.au/corporate-i...co/corporate-plan/weekly-progress-report.html
Well, who'd have thought. Trying to upgrade and integrate the old, unmaintained and obsolete HFC into the NBN was a waste of time and money. If only some sort of expert had said that before they started down that path .
How can governments be trusted with anything, when this happens?
http://www.businessinsider.com.au/t...00-times-faster-than-nbn-theoretically-2016-9
Because (as it partially hints in the article) it doesn't mean anything for two reasons:
1. Mobile networks never meet their headline speeds.
2. The NBN can be upgraded to faster speeds relatively easily (at least the original fibre sections can).
Telstra's current 4G network is already theoretically 3x faster than the NBN. It can do 300Mbps, while the NBN is currently limited to 100Mbps (although the fibre is set up for 1000Mbps). Despite the theoretical speed, the mobile network typically delivers about 10Mbps, and its real-world speed has actually fallen since it was launched a few years ago, as more people have joined the network.
Mobile networks are shared mediums. Fibre is not. The more people connected to a mobile tower, the slower the network gets. They are also limited by the amount of radio spectrum available.
That's why there isn't a single carrier anywhere in the World that is proposing to replace fixed line networks with mobile. To the contrary, they do everything they can to shift data off their cellular networks by charging huge prices, capping data volumes and rolling out WiFi grid networks (e.g. Telstra Air). All of these things only exist to move traffic off cellular (4G/5G) networks and onto the fixed line, to keep the cellular networks chugging along.
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