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Saying most households won't need fibre is incredibly short-sighted. People said the same thing before the telephone was rolled out everywhere. I'm also certain that 20 years ago, most Australians would have thought they'd never want the internet at all (See this 1995 Newsweek article). Then when 256k ADSL arrived 10 years ago, people thought they could never possibly need more speed than that.... Do you see a pattern?
If I may finish with an appropriate quote from Prof Rod Tucker:
An enduring characteristic of human nature is our inability to understand and accept the rate of technological change and its impact on society.
All I can say, even though I have no expertise in this field, is the following:
"When talking about technology - never say never - as those that do often end up with egg on their face."
Guess I am just a technological optimist.
I think NBN is right Dutchie, the fastest medium known, that humans can use is the speed of light.
That's why the optical fibre will be the backbone infrastructure for a very long time. Downstream the delivery medium may change i.e wireless, microwave ect.
But the only way to move bulk data at bling speed, is optical.
Technology is inherently hard to predict however. People have been predicting a bright future for nuclear power ever since the first commercial power reactor started up back in 1957. Thus far at least, it's been a relative dud.
euronuclear.org said:On June 26, 1954, at Obninsk, Russia, the nuclear power plant APS-1 with a net electrical output of 5 MW was connected to the power grid, the world's first nuclear power plant that generated electricity for commercial use.
As of July 2 2012 in 31 countries 435 nuclear power plant units with an installed electric net capacity of about 370 GW are in operation and 62 plants with an installed capacity of 59 GW are in 14 countries under construction.
nei.org said:Nuclear power plants provided 13.5 percent of the world's electricity production in 2010.
I am sitting in a hotel room right now by myself (travel for work) killing time online.
It took me about a 2 minutes to take the laptop out of the bag, plug the mains power lead in, start it up and get online.
....
I don't doubt that technology will change radically over the next 20 years just as it has over the past 20. But what I'm not convinced about is that this technology will be tied to a cable. As I said, I'm sitting in a hotel room right now and the only cable connected to the computer is the mains power lead. I didn't even need anyone to help me carry the computer up the steps, and nobody's likely to question what I'm doing or why.
I don't doubt the technical abilities of fibre, it's just the need to run it straight to the device inside the home that I'm questioning given that the general trend does seem to be in the opposite direction with wireless networks etc.
For a wireless technology to eclipse optical fibre would mean that everything we know about the physics of radio and light must be wrong. A rather unlikely outcome.
Speed isn't the issue per se. Radio waves also travel at ~the speed of light.
It is the size of the light spectrum v the radio spectrum, combined with the inherent loss of an unshielded medium that gives fibre a higher capacity.
Isn't that what I said, the optical system will be the backbone, whereas the downstream delivery may be an alternative technology?
I defer to your superior knowledge on the subject, but lets not get over the top.
Yes, you are right about that. Just being pedantic about the reason. It's not the speed of the signals, but the capacity that makes the difference.
Think of it as a road. You can do 100km/h down a single lane road or on a freeway. But a freeway can carry 6x as many cars all doing 100km/h.
Agreed and I do comprehend the "backbone" nature of a fibre network as it relates to WiFi or similar systems.The NBN isn't about putting a cable to every device. It's just as much about improving the wireless networks you're (probably) using - WiFi (as opposed to long-range cellular wireless networks that are touted as being an NBN replacement).
Agreed and I do comprehend the "backbone" nature of a fibre network as it relates to WiFi or similar systems.
But if connection to the actual device is going to be wireless anyway (and that's certainly the way it seems to be going) then do we really need to take the cable inside the average house in the first place? Has there been a proper evaluation of options to leave the equipment "out on the street" and communicate to that via wireless?
Putting a cable along a street is one thing. Taking it into every house is sure to add lots of $ - is that really necessary especially if it's not even going to be directly connected to anything other than a wireless router?
Maybe what is proposed really is the best way, but I'm not convinced that there's been a proper analysis done.
Wireless or not wireless will be irrelevant.
1. NBN implemented by Labor - say no more.
(Actually will say more - bats, ber, clunkers, etc etc (list is too long))
2. No cost/benefit study. (private industry would be shot for even thinking about spending so much money
without a cost/benefit study).
3. Will go well and truly over budget (double budget if we are lucky).
4. Will go well and truly over roll out time.
5. A lot of people will make a load of money giving us some thing we DON'T need.
Speak for yourself. If you don't want it, don't connect. Simple.
Fine dont use my taxes to pay for it then
They're not using your taxes.
The Government equity to the NBN is being funded from the issue of Government bonds, not from taxation revenue. The bonds (including the interest paid on them) will be repaid from network revenue, not from taxation dollars.
Therefore, it is the users of the NBN that will pay for it. If you don't connect, you won't contribute. Users who connect at the higher speeds, such as businesses, contribute far more than home users.
All that said, even if it were funded from tax dollars and generated zero revenue, the cost of the NBN is tiny when compared to other government expenditure. Over the same period we spend $27bn on the NBN, we'll spend $1.2Trillion on public health, $500bn on public education, $500bn on transport and $250bn on defence. The average yearly Govt investment in the NBN of $3bn represents about 1% of federal taxation revenue.
BTW, on a per-capita basis, the NBN costs less than the Govt spent to roll out the copper network.
Finally, the NBN has been policy for the last two elections and therefore has a mandate. Additionally, every poll ever taken on the topic shows that more Australians support the project than oppose it:
http://www.essentialmedia.com.au/opinion-of-nbn/
http://www.essentialmedia.com.au/opinion-of-nbn-2/
http://www.essentialmedia.com.au/opinion-of-nbn-3/
http://cci.edu.au/sites/default/files/sewing/CCi Digital Futures 2010 1.pdf
Finally, the NBN has been policy for the last two elections and therefore has a mandate. Additionally, every poll ever taken on the topic shows that more Australians support the project than oppose it
And if people dont take it up the money will come from taxes, after it all falls in a hole, we will pay, I dont get connected till 2014 the whole thing is just another Gillard "reforming Govt" jaunt.
You cant compare this to the health budget, get real.....
Good to see you earning your kickbacks from trolling for Gillards waste machine.
Actually it is only the majority of Labor and Green supporters. Of course they would like to have the choice of a faster broadband service. They would also vote in favour faster services in every field, if asked.
The polls that you are continually throwing up are irrelevant.
I receive no pay, benefit or inducement of any kind for my opinion of the NBN, and I have no link of any kind to the NBN or anything related to it.
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