not for the fed govt???
How about state govt? any other form of government, unions etc.
You are an ALP lackey.
It won't be completed in its present form with one reason being that the rollout phase will outlive the current government by some margin.The realities for a project this size and complexity is that it is unlikely to be on time and wont be on cost. Time and cost will be politicized to death but success engineering wise is about it working, being maintainable and low fault rate.
Of course they are.The IT industry, experts, the business community, the telco community are all backing the NBN, albeit sometimes with assorted qualifications.
Of course they are.
It's the taxpayer who is stumping up the cash and who will likely take on most, if not all of the risk.
It won't be completed in its present form with one reason being that the rollout phase will outlive the current government by some margin.
That's assuming the current government doesn't fall before the serious rollout even begins.
You want an optimistic figure? OK, let's say only 1% of Australians are online at the same time. Including those at work. That would be an average speed of 4Mbps each from the 10 satellites.
So you think spending $5bn to deliver satellites enabling a speed of about half what we can currently get (on average), is a good idea?
IFocus I rarely weigh into these political debates as everyone has them covered (as well as questions to you)...but seriously...you would have to be one of the most die-hard/one-eyed/would run over their own grandmother - Labor supporters i've ever witnessed.
.You can simply not accept that this minority government is a shambles and has done virtually nothing right. If they were all about prosperity and Australia moving forward - they would have responsibly managed the massive inflows coming in via our very favourable lucky land and made "real changes" to ensure this country can thrive once the minerals are gone/China buys us out..
The way they conduct themselves and draft legislations beggars belief. The 'resource rent' tax and carbon tax are 2 prime examples of Labor shooting for the moon and landing nowhere near the stars...rather their 'rocket' went backwards. Can you agree on these points? You don't have to say they were bad ideas (in which they are but that's my opinion) - can you agree they have been grossly mismanaged?
Julia has asked you numerous questions in which you have conveniently side-stepped...no doubt you will do the same to mine...thus confirming you know you're caught out...
I didn't say anything about satellites. I just noted your completely ridiculous assumptions that you used in your reply.
Your model needs to work out how many users are online at any one time on average and the average amount of time each of those users spends actually uploading/downloading from the internet when online.
If 1% are online at any one time on average (your more recent figure) and each spends 5% of their time uploading/downloading (which is high for the average person using the internet at work, but low for online gamers and movie watchers - so it may be close to the average) then that would give an average speed of 80Mbps using your calculations. This compares to the figure of 0.06Mbps that you used in your response to the original post.
See what a difference a bit of realism makes.
With data growth running at 50% a year, can we afford not to build the NBN, or something like it?
Of course.
WHY is data growing?
Piracy, youtube, social media.
Which of these improves productivity????
Future projections no doubt include streaming of TV and movies.
CONSUMPTION.
extra tax revenues, consumption, zero or v v little increase in productivity = extremely poor investment for me as a taxpayer.
Where would I spend $50 billion?
A viable steel industry / value adding for minerals and port and rail infrastructure.
you know, stuff that will actually make our country LOTS of money.
I have no doubt that all of those things are growing. But that isn't a reason not to build the NBN.
Video and multimedia are the big growth areas for bandwidth, and these things are a part of a modern economy. Whether it be IPTV, movie downloads, HD video conferencing, the sending of large files between producers and customers, the move to cloud computing and online storage etc.
All of these things improve business turnover, efficiency, and therefore productivity.
All that said, the NBN is not "spending" your tax dollars, and none of the NBN equity injections have any impact whatsoever on the budget or other Government spending.
The NBN will be paid for by the revenue coming in from the users of the network. Big users will pay more than small users. As a taxpayer, you're not subsidising those who want big NBN connections for games/piracy/movies, because those users will have to pay a premium for those speeds and volumes, more than paying for their share of constructing the network.
Taxpayers are taking the risk on the NBN, not actually spending on it. True, if it goes pear shaped, then the equity injections will become spends. But given the growing number of signed contracts, the copper network shutdown, the constant growth in data consumption and the announcement by Vodafone and others that they will use the NBN for cellular backhaul (income not figured in the biz case), the chances that the assumptions in the biz case won't pan out are pretty slim and getting slimmer all the time.
1. Businesses that benefit from fast internet ALREADY HAVE fast internet. The NBN will only accomplish increased consumption, less jobs.
Far from true. Plenty of companies operate outside of the cities. I recently worked at a place where the choice of internet was between substandard dialup or satellite. Satellite had more speed but depending on many factors could drop out at an instant.
Current workplace is at the end of a long copper loop. Barely get ADSL 1 speeds.
In many places there is only 1 choice of infrastructure - Telstra. When you have only Telstra the prices rise. To install fibre many companies would go bankrupt because they are so far from existing fibre runs.
Remember the cities and the population centres mostly only supply one raw material - people.
There are lots of electorates in the cities. Lots of the voters never spend any substantial time away from the cities.
BTW, IPTV seems to be experiencing a bit of growth now which is good. It gives Foxtel competition. Telstra's wholesale customers don't get features enabled that allow efficient delivery of such content - multicast.
Far from true. Plenty of companies operate outside of the cities. I recently worked at a place where the choice of internet was between substandard dialup or satellite. Satellite had more speed but depending on many factors could drop out at an instant.
Current workplace is at the end of a long copper loop. Barely get ADSL 1 speeds.
In many places there is only 1 choice of infrastructure - Telstra. When you have only Telstra the prices rise. To install fibre many companies would go bankrupt because they are so far from existing fibre runs.
Remember the cities and the population centres mostly only supply one raw material - people.
There are lots of electorates in the cities. Lots of the voters never spend any substantial time away from the cities.
BTW, IPTV seems to be experiencing a bit of growth now which is good. It gives Foxtel competition. Telstra's wholesale customers don't get features enabled that allow efficient delivery of such content - multicast.
Far from true. Plenty of companies operate outside of the cities. I recently worked at a place where the choice of internet was between substandard dialup or satellite. Satellite had more speed but depending on many factors could drop out at an instant.
Current workplace is at the end of a long copper loop. Barely get ADSL 1 speeds.
In many places there is only 1 choice of infrastructure - Telstra. When you have only Telstra the prices rise. To install fibre many companies would go bankrupt because they are so far from existing fibre runs.
Remember the cities and the population centres mostly only supply one raw material - people.
There are lots of electorates in the cities. Lots of the voters never spend any substantial time away from the cities.
BTW, IPTV seems to be experiencing a bit of growth now which is good. It gives Foxtel competition. Telstra's wholesale customers don't get features enabled that allow efficient delivery of such content - multicast.
Medico and the other right wing, spend nothing, do nothing Liberals don't care about the broader Australian context and the reality's of life out side the major city's...the vast majority of city people have no idea about what's going on in rural Australia or even on the city fringes.
"Businesses that benefit from fast internet ALREADY HAVE fast internet." yes they do and that's because they need fast internet and so will need faster internet when that's available...its called growth, been going on for years.
+1
That is spot on. People who believe that businesses who need fast internet already have it must be living a very sheltered life.
I'd suggest you watch what Glen Innes-based Eastmon Digital have to say about how a lack of fast connection is a huge impediment to their business. It's on the 4 Corners programme about the NBN.
But you don't have to go that far into the regions. I'm only 2 hours out of Sydney, and can only get ADSL1 speeds.
The massive lack of telco infrastructure makes operating a media-based business outside the CBDs a very difficult thing to do. This increases centralisation and all the problems associated with it.
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