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- 15 November 2006
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What short memories some people have. When ADSL was rolled out by Telstra most avoided the 1536/256 plan because of cost. Over time things changed, people moved up plans, Telstra uncapped speeds to allow full sync then ADSL2 became common.
FTTP has a lower operational cost so a greater proportion of money goes towards capex which has advantages. Labor favoured the laser printer model for printing lots of documents. Coalition changed it to the lower cost inket printer with more money going towards ink.
Labor FTTP allowed multiple voice providers and multiple data providers. Coalition changes with FTTN allows 1 voice provider if you don't have a data provider. It also only allows 1 data provider.
FTTP has far better capacity to scale to the future. Seems short sighted to change infrastructure investment for only the here and now and ignoring future growth. Malcolm still spouting old figures for FTTP deployment costs yet happy to use newer/adjusted FTTN deployment costs.
As for satellite - too latent for many uses and high cost. Mobile phone network has too many limitations - spectrum limitations and retail cost of data is far too high to replace much fixed line use.
ADSL used the existing copper network. NBN is costing a f*cking fortune and may or may be completely superseded by other technology by the time it's installed.
Everyone believes that gold plating of the power system was a disaster, which has caused the massive price hikes in electricity, but in the same breath they want to gold plate a bloody telephone system, weird $hit
Well you have to blame both major parties don't you ?
Turnbull didn't say it shouldn't be done he just said it shouldn't be done Labor's way.
Hypocrisy all round.
Just when Labor was hoping 4 years may have softened the public memory of the NBN they were attempting to roll out, someone's popped up to help.
You've missed the point.Well, he's right. Turnbull sold us a pup. It's all on the LNP's head now.
Well if you research it a bit, people aren't going for the highest speed, they are going for the slowest cheapest speed.
I don't know why. I negotiated 100megs down, 40megs up and a 4/5g wireless backup for way less than $100/month ..Telstra
............., 80% who have signed up, have gone for 20meg or less
That kinda defeats the purpose, yes? Apparently there is currently a huge demand for 4k TVs .... won't they get a shock when Netflix starts streaming Ultra HD here = minimum 25megs and even then there is some stutter and that's with other devices on the home network off
You are spot on with that analogy, the only problem is, do we really need 4K t.v more than road, rail, airport, wharf's etc?
I suppose it gives people something to do, when they're unemployed.
Rather than mandating 100% of the fixed line rollout as FTTP as Labor did, a minimum level of service (a speed of say 25 mbps as the social objective) should have been the criteria to be delivered by the most economical choice of technology on a location by location basis and not subject to the political time constraints that both sides have inflicted on the project with their respective rollouts. This would have been a true technology agnostic approach and may have resulted in a greater penetration of FTTP but obviously not 100% of the fixed line footprint. This would have also improved the economics of the project thereby allowing lower wholesale charges and perhaps avoided the CVC pricing component which has plagued speed across the fixed line footprint.Do people forget that Labor actually took the FTTN rollout to the 2007 election. But not one of the companies that submitted a tender met the met the requirements. It was also made apparent that we would have to buy back the ducts from Telstra (thanks Howard) and then require Telstra to maintain these ducts which didn't seem sensible for a retail service provider to have that type of control over a wholesale network (again thanks Howard for not splitting Telstra into separate wholesale and retail divisions before the sell off). The ACCC also provided the expert panel with advice that 70% of the costs to build a FTTN would be stranded costs in any subsequent upgrade to FTTP. The panel of experts recommended to the government that FTTN provided an inefficient upgrade path.
That's the social objective which could have applied to provide a minimum level of service with rollout technology then decided by economics on a location by location basis.I don't understand how a technology agnostic approach with minimum 25 megabits/s would improve anything, especially for the long term.
Rather than mandating 100% of the fixed line rollout as FTTP as Labor did, a minimum level of service (a speed of say 25 mbps as the social objective) should have been the criteria to be delivered by the most economical choice of technology on a location by location basis and not subject to the political time constraints that both sides have inflicted on the project with their respective rollouts. This would have been a true technology agnostic approach and may have resulted in a greater penetration of FTTP but obviously not 100% of the fixed line footprint. This would have also improved the economics of the project thereby allowing lower wholesale charges and perhaps avoided the CVC pricing component which has plagued speed across the fixed line footprint.
With Bill Morrow's commentary this week on taxing competing mobile services, we've come a big step closer to the inevitable multi-billion dollar writedown of the government's investment which was essentially set in stone at the time Labor's model was conceived. The Howard government should have structurally separated Telstra's wholesale and retail businesses before prior to privatisation but that doesn't excuse Labor from the disastrous publically owned NBN fantasy journey they started us on.
I note that further refinement is being considered to the current NBN wholesale pricing model.
Whether or not the fundamentals for FTTP is sound relative to the alternatives is dependant on more than the above. The more interesting question now is where rather than as a whole.The expert advice given to the government was that FTTN was a stepping stone to FTTP where most the costs would not be retrieved.
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