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- 23 November 2004
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People will take it up. Takeup is already over 30% in some areas, after only being available for ~9 months. At this stage, forecast takeup was only about 12%.
......... and it won't be until 2020 before people realise we've been completely left behind by the rest of the World, and we have to start rolling it out again.
I cant think of any other reason someone would set up a specific and comprehensive blog on the subject and spend hours refuting every negative comment about it on ASF
I guess you don't have any interests outside your job then?
Nothing you're passionate about that doesn't result in being paid?
You don't have any children and want them to have access to world-class technology?
Why was the forecast so low?
So that they can say look how good it is, the takeup is x% - where x is any number bigger than 12!
You must be the only person in Australia who's hobby is the NBN, really it just doesnt make sense.
My children will have world class technology not organised by that half wit Conroy but probably by Goolge who know what they're doing.
By the time this is rolled out it wil be well and truly redundant like the computer I bought last month.
The chairman of internet giant Google has thrown his support behind Australia's National Broadband Network (NBN).
The Federal Government has come under pressure from the Opposition because of the cost of the $36 billion rollout.
Speaking at a conference in Barcelona, chairman Eric Schmidt says Australia has shown great leadership on the issue.
"Australia is leading the world in understanding the importance of fibre," he said.
"Your new Prime Minister has announced that 93 per cent of Australians, which I guess are all the folks in the cities, will have gigabit or equivalent service using fibre, and the other 7 per cent will be handled through wireless services of a nature of LTE," he said.
"This is leadership from Australia, which I think is wonderful."
Seems Google and the NBN are on the same page, huh?
I just have no faith in Conroy and Gillard like millions of other Australians.
They both like the technology, big difference is the present Govt cant put pink batts in ceilings so this may be beyond them..........the Libs may tidy it up.
https://fiber.google.com/about/
Thats what I was talking about, if Google were doing it I 'd be much happier
While over 50% of labor/green voters support it, even amongst coalition supporters the supporters and opposers are evenly split, and it becomes more popular with them each poll.
Just look at the Kiama Downs trial site. Blue ribbon Liberal area, and the highest NBN takeup of anywhere in the country at 40% already.
How will it be redundant? I suspect you have a strong personal bias against it because of your political leanings and not because of technology or economics.
Various forms of wireless communications have been around for a lot longer than fibre communications. Wireless gets further and further behind.
We have not commenced work on the NBN in your area just yet.
•To keep up to date about when you will get access to high speed broadband, please subscribe to our newsletter.
•Or you can find out more about the rollout.
Any tech project that wil take 10 years or more to implement will be redundant before it's finished.
I'm sure you don't understand why the fibre buildout is very much not redundant. .
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.
You must be the only person in Australia who's hobby is the NBN, really it just doesnt make sense.
Your commenting without any real idea of what your talking about..you didn't even know the copper is going to get turned off...at least have the courtesy to have a rudimentary dig around of the facts.
Spend some time on whirlpool and get a clue.
This is interesting in itself given that governments of all persuasions have spent the past two decades effectively ridiculing this funding model for anything.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.
This is interesting in itself given that governments of all persuasions have spent the past two decades effectively ridiculing this funding model for anything.
I'm in favour of this approach, but can't help but notice the huge backflip this constitutes to all that's been said about roads, rail, power, water and other infrastructure. The wheel may have turned it seems...
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