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NBN Rollout Scrapped

http://www.theage.com.au/business/c...d-slower-than-kazakhstan-20180107-p4yyb1.html

 
l'm paying $58.50 a month for 50/20 100GB on Telecube and getting this.....

 
An update on some HFC numbers in the half year report published this week,
As at 31 December 2017, there were 1,358,295 premises ready for service and 408,293 end users activated with 1,194,288 premises currently in design or construction.

https://www.nbnco.com.au/content/dam/nbnco2/documents/nbn_Half_Year_Report_FY18.pdf

The balance of 950k between RFS and users activated are now listed as Not Yet Ready To Connect. There was a large increase in this group the same week the pause on new HFC orders took effect. With the NYRTC presently at ~1m, there are ~50k from in that group from other fixed line technologies suggesting this is now quiet stable and not rising as the rollout progresses.

The above also indicates the broader HFC rollout is continuing as anticipated. If HFC RFS remains at 1.35m at June 30 2018, this will be 550k short of the 1.9m target leaving RFS at 8.15m at that date assuming the other components progress to schedule. With RFS of ~7.3m as at Feb 8, this needs to progress at an average of ~43k per week to reach 8.15m at June 30.
 
Have Telstra here right now replacing the second modem with a third one. Not bad for 6 months or so.
 
https://www.buzzfeed.com/joshtaylor...and-hes-on-the?utm_term=.aikxVbaGg#.dlq0oez5E

 

5g is overhyped and degrades in bandwidth very quickly away for the tower. Of course more towers/repeaters would solve that and we all know how attractive they are.

Light pipes are the go and if NBN could be stripped of their monopoly for premises connections, electrical contractors could make a decent dollar installing fibre to the premises while charging a competitive affordable one off rate to consumers.
 
NBN is coming to our area in a few months. We will not be switching.

We are connected with Uniti Wireless and consistently achieve download speeds of 50MBps and upload in excess of 10MBps.

I'm on Telstra Wireless and got 30/11 last night. Only 30GB allowance but its better than the 9GB I got with my old plan.

NBN won't be available in my area for several years.
 
I'm on Telstra Wireless and got 30/11 last night. Only 30GB allowance but its better than the 9GB I got with my old plan.

NBN won't be available in my area for several years.

What frequency are they running on for that speed (e.g. 24ghz or 60 ghz)? That's not 4g speeds
 
The ACCC has published it's NBN Wholesale Market Indicators Report to Dec 31 2017

https://www.accc.gov.au/regulated-i...bn-wholesale-market-indicators-report/reports

The Dec report shows 20.38% of premises on FTTP are connecting to plans of 50Mbps or faster. This compares to 18.77% as at Sept 30.

NBN late last year modified its pricing model late last year to effectively price 50Mbp at the same level as 25Mbps in order to encourage more users onto the higher speed plan. Many RSP's have responded by removing 25Mbps plans from their product list and Telstra is migrating its customers on 25Mbps plans to 50Mbps plans according to the following Fairfax article,

https://www.smh.com.au/business/com...to-get-nbn-speed-upgrade-20180223-p4z1hi.html

The proportion of users on 50Mbps plans should therefore change dramatically over them months ahead however, the proportion on 100Mbps will remain relatively low due to the price difference.

At some point, NBN will probably reduce 25Mbps to the price of 12Mbps and remove 12Mbps altogether and hope those on 50Mbps don't go back.

FTTN is scheduled to be available in my local area in April. I currently get ~12/1Mbps on ADSL. I won't be changing to NBN as the ADSL plan I'm on offers better value for money than the corresponding 12/1Mbps NBN plan through the same ISP. This decision would be the same irrespective of fixed line technology. I'll essentially use the 18-month coexistence period to see how pricing evolves.
 
Personally, if I had an NBN problem to resolve, I'm not sure a retail store would be where I'd start.
Agreed although there's a problem these days as to how does one get in contact with these organisations?

Email or postal mail will probably be ignored.

Phone not an option as they won't answer, just playing music (been there, had that happen with an internet company and gave up after 20 minutes).

Generally no physical office or shopfront that you can go to.

So what do you do?
 
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