Knobby22
Mmmmmm 2nd breakfast
- Joined
- 13 October 2004
- Posts
- 9,818
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OK, make it other alternatives if you like. However any private enterprise broadband system would be more taxpayer-friendly.
The Australian isn't exactly known for their accurate NBN reporting.
Naturally you would think like Conroy who wants to censor it because it is too accurate.
Funny thing is, it depends which side of the fence you are on.
One side call him a visionary, the other side call him a blackmailer and extortionist.
As a TLS shareholder I call him a visionary! Thanks for the $$$.
NBN Myths,
in this rural district (not so far from Wollongong) we asked the NBN co when it will arrive, answer - not in the near term future. Also with optical fibre, my arithmetic tells me that 93% doesn't equal 100%.
Entry level phone plus broadband for $35, outside of metropolitan areas, surely you jest.
You'd be hard pressed to find anywhere this hasn't happened when utilities have been privatised.Hasn't worked with electricity. They stop maintenance and start working out ways to rort us. At least that is what has happened in Victoria.
OK, I hope you're right. Thank you for the response.Under the NBN there is no line rental charge. So the $35 plan from Exetel (which I mentioned above) is all you pay for phone and broadband combined. Also, the phone calls on that $35 plan are 10c each, un-timed to any fixed line in Australia. This is less than half the cost of a local call on the copper network, let alone STD calls.
So if I decide I'm fed up with suburbia and decide to build my house thousands of kms from anywhere, I should have every right to expect the same services as I obtained in suburbia?Yes, but that is how we work in Australia. The country gets a good deal and I think that is good. They already suffer in heathcare and petrol (though they are subsidised in both). I can't see what is wrong with that.
No, I don't jest. NBN pricing is identical nationwide. Exetel charge $35 for a phone and 12Mbps broadband bundle on the NBN (fibre or wireless). That's ~30% less than phone+ADSL. See for yourself: http://www.exetel.com.au/residential-fibre-pricing-mainland.php
He's right, but has compared apples with oranges.OK, I hope you're right. Thank you for the response.
I have serious reservations regarding the NBN, but there are some things private enterprise doesn't cope well with and infrastructure like this is one of them.
He's right, but has compared apples with oranges.
There's no line rental for VOIP over copper either.
Still doesn't compare to Exetel's 50GB w/VoIP and 10c calls on the NBN, and access to the same 'free' VoIP services as naked DSL.
Agreed. I'd prefer an old-style Commission largely beyond the day to day reach of politics. I can't see it happening in today's political climate however (regardless of whoever wins the next election).As long as it is not called a Labour Government Enterprise. That is an oxymoron, and the kiss of death for any project. It is just a licence to waste money.
Agreed. I'd prefer an old-style Commission largely beyond the day to day reach of politics. I can't see it happening in today's political climate however (regardless of whoever wins the next election).
How does that translate to percentage of households ?That's true. But Telstra don't offer unbundled services on their network and only about 10% of exchanges have 3rd-party ADSL2+ which do allow unbundled DSL.
A question that comes to mind here is the impact the NBN has had on the rollout of ADSL2+ enabling of Telstra's exchanges by the ISP's themselves ?I pay around $85 per month for 1.5k / 20GB / line rental and use VoIP its the best deal I can get not even close to the proposed NBN costs.
The continued cost claims from some sections of the media is... well ...just disgracefull then of course the same people sling mud at the ABC.
Fortunately I am in the 1st year connection area............bring it on.
Thanks for the updates NBNMyths
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