juliar wrote on Jul 31
st, 2012 at 11:57am:
Pity the NbN is turning into a white elephant like everything this utterly hopeless government touches with massive cost overruns, massive lag behind all targets, cost blowouts everywhere, etc.
Face it the NbN as dreamed about by the arm waving Labor liars will never be built. It would cost at least $100 bn and would take years to build and would never be profitable and Labor won't be there after next year. The trouble is that all the growth is in mobile services and the NbN fiber optic cable doesn't stretch very well and is awfully heavy to drag around and what about using a mobile while travelling in a car - where do you connect the NbN fiber optic cable ? There is also the problem that if the 240v power goes off so does the NbN if the backup battery has died from old age.
The Coalition will be forced to sell it off in order to begin to pay off the enormous irresponsible debt incurred by the economically and financially illiterate Labor morons. Telstra has sold its NZ interest to get the money to buy up what little has been built of the NbN.
We've covered this before.
The NBN isn't over budget, and has not suffered any cost blowouts.
Some of it is running behind schedule, due mainly to delays with the Telstra deal.
People are not moving to mobile broadband, and it cannot replace the fixed network anyway. There's not a single country or telco anywhere in the world replacing their urban fixed networks with wireless. Even the coalition's policy is not wireless.
I would have thought that Google's multi billion dollar investment in a fibre network might have shut up the wireless fanboys, but apparently not.
Oh, and btw, the nbn doesn't mean you need to tie yourself to a cable. It just means that wifi networks will actually be able to perform to their capabilities.
Finally, if the coalition try to sell the nbn unfinished, they wouldn't get a fraction of the money spent so far on it, because the rural and regional portions of the nbn are not profitable and need the metro sections to be complete to get the cross subsidy running.
Even the coalition have worked this out, and have said they won't scrap/sell the nbn. They'll just continue it with cheap obsolete technology.