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NBN progress? (Read 126346 times)
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Re: NBN progress?
Reply #135 - Nov 25th, 2013 at 2:46pm
 
LaQuinn wrote on Nov 25th, 2013 at 1:50pm:
I can't post videos yet so youtube "Senator Ludlam asks questions to NBN"
It is a very good watch. It just goes to show how unorganized the FTTN really is. It's a shame, I admired Mr Turnbull, but I'm starting to think it's best that he considers leaving politics before his reputation begins to sink.  Undecided

Here's a quote from the Video
Ludlam "Will 100% of copper customers get maximum speed?"
Ziggy "No"
I'd have been interested to find out whether Turnbull would have been as much of a disappointment had he remained leader. With the turkey that is the Coalition's NBN, Abbott's certainly done a job on him.
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Re: Update 25 November
Reply #136 - Nov 25th, 2013 at 3:41pm
 
# wrote on Nov 25th, 2013 at 2:40pm:
Wow, that response was incredible.

When we emailed you on Friday about the NBN national day of action there were 40 events lined up -- now there's 145 deliveries of the petition happening to MPs right across the country tomorrow. Amazing.

That means there's an event organised near you. Want to join other petition signers to help deliver our 260,000+ signatures to to your MP tomorrow?

Find all the details here.

I hope you can come along. It's likely to be just 30 minutes out of your day -- but the more people that show up, the louder our message will be heard in parliament (and the more media coverage we'll be able to get about our campaign to save the NBN)!

Thanks so much for your help. And look forward to seeing you out there tomorrow!

Nick, Alex and the Save the NBN campaign.


and it was so successful that the media totally ignored it...
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AUSSIE: "Speaking for myself, I could not care less about 298 human beings having their life snuffed out in a nano-second, or what impact that loss has on Members of their family, their parents..."
 
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Re: Update 25 November
Reply #137 - Nov 25th, 2013 at 4:12pm
 
longweekend58 wrote on Nov 25th, 2013 at 3:41pm:
# wrote on Nov 25th, 2013 at 2:40pm:
Wow, that response was incredible.

When we emailed you on Friday about the NBN national day of action there were 40 events lined up -- now there's 145 deliveries of the petition happening to MPs right across the country tomorrow. Amazing.

That means there's an event organised near you. Want to join other petition signers to help deliver our 260,000+ signatures to to your MP tomorrow?

Find all the details here.

I hope you can come along. It's likely to be just 30 minutes out of your day -- but the more people that show up, the louder our message will be heard in parliament (and the more media coverage we'll be able to get about our campaign to save the NBN)!

Thanks so much for your help. And look forward to seeing you out there tomorrow!

Nick, Alex and the Save the NBN campaign.


and it was so successful that the media totally ignored it...
Given that it hasn't happened yet, you're surprised?
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Re: Update 25 November
Reply #138 - Nov 25th, 2013 at 4:38pm
 
# wrote on Nov 25th, 2013 at 4:12pm:
longweekend58 wrote on Nov 25th, 2013 at 3:41pm:
# wrote on Nov 25th, 2013 at 2:40pm:
Wow, that response was incredible.

When we emailed you on Friday about the NBN national day of action there were 40 events lined up -- now there's 145 deliveries of the petition happening to MPs right across the country tomorrow. Amazing.

That means there's an event organised near you. Want to join other petition signers to help deliver our 260,000+ signatures to to your MP tomorrow?

Find all the details here.

I hope you can come along. It's likely to be just 30 minutes out of your day -- but the more people that show up, the louder our message will be heard in parliament (and the more media coverage we'll be able to get about our campaign to save the NBN)!

Thanks so much for your help. And look forward to seeing you out there tomorrow!

Nick, Alex and the Save the NBN campaign.


and it was so successful that the media totally ignored it...
Given that it hasn't happened yet, you're surprised?



SNAP!!
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Re: NBN progress?
Reply #139 - Nov 26th, 2013 at 9:41am
 
Mixed messages complicate Turncoat’s path:
http://www.zdnet.com/mixed-messages-on-telstra-copper-complicate-fttn-nbn-case-7...

You can see now one can know the true state of the full copper network:
Quote:
Given the scale of Telstra's network, Hughes told a National Absestos Forum in Sydney today that Telstra does have an asbestos register in place to locate and prioritise those pits that have asbestos in them, but the records do not go back far enough to cover all pits and ducts in the Telstra network.

"We do have an asbestos register. Unfortunately when, and it dates back to when we were the Post-Master General, and many of those pits were first laid, none of those records were kept of the content of those pits, and there are literally millions of them," Hughes said.

"Every time we find one containing asbestos containing material, we add it to the register."

Hughes said that if the public does notice a pit in poor condition, it should be reported to Telstra so the company can prioritise it to be assessed for asbestos.

"Unless people tell us about the pits, because there are so many, we can't always assess and prioritise them."

Hughes said Telstra was "very supportive" of the establishment of a telco industry standard for asbestos management.

http://www.zdnet.com/au/telstra-relies-on-public-to-inform-on-asbestos-infested-...

If it doesn’t know about all its pits how the hell can it know about all its lines?
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I want Muso as GMod. Bring back Muso!
WWW Friends of the National Broadband Network  
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Re: NBN progress?
Reply #140 - Nov 26th, 2013 at 7:16pm
 
NBN petitioners target Turnbull, MPs

November 26, 2013 - 1:38PM
...
Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull says he won't walk away from the Coalition's current NBN policy. Photo: Alex Ellinghausen

National broadband network (NBN) campaigners are delivering a petition with 270,000 signatures to MPs across the country as they fight for a fibre-to-the-premises plan.

The online petition is being presented to 145 federal parliamentarians and to NBN Co headquarters in Sydney on Tuesday.

The petitioners want the Abbott government to invest in the fibre-to-the-premises (FTTP) model over the cheaper, but much slower fibre-to-the-node option the Coalition campaigned on at the election.

NBN Defender spokesman Alex Stewart said the group wanted to underscore widespread community support for a to-the-home broadband plan.
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"We want [Communications Minister] Malcolm Turnbull to know he cannot ignore the voices of so many Australians, so we are taking our message to his parliamentary colleagues across the country and asking them to put pressure on him," he said in a statement.

"This is the most critical infrastructure project facing Australia right now and the public wants to see an increase in the amount of fibre-to-the-premises being rolled out.

"There is no economic case for fibre-to-the-node."

Mr Turnbull has previously responded to the group's online petition by saying he won’t walk away from one of the Coalition's "most well debated, well understood and prominent policies".

The Queensland student who started the petition, Nick Paine, says the fact the petition has taken off shows there's "a real depth of feeling about this issue in the community".

AAP
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Re: NBN progress?
Reply #141 - Nov 27th, 2013 at 6:43pm
 
Interesting story for everyone.
Went down to the bank and happened to bump into someone from Telstra. I introduced myself etc etc, I asked him how things were developing since the change from FTTP to FTTN. He replied, whilst shaking his head in disgust
"We have been testing Fibre to the Node at Port Macquire and the results have been 8Mbps instead of the proposed 25Mbps"

Yep things are looking good.....
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Re: NBN progress?
Reply #142 - Nov 28th, 2013 at 2:45pm
 
The Rise and Fall of Australia’s $44 Billion Broadband Project

Why Australia decided to abort an ambitious fiber-to-the-home plan

By Rodney S. Tucker
Posted 26 Nov 2013 | 15:00 GMT

In April 2009, Australia’s then prime minister, Kevin Rudd, dropped a bombshell on the press and the global technology community: His social democrat Labor administration was going to deliver broadband Internet to every single resident of Australia. It was an audacious goal, not least of all because Australia is one of the most sparsely populated countries on Earth.

The National Broadband Network (NBN), as the project is known, would extend high-speed optical fiber directly into the homes, schools, and workplaces of 93 percent of Australians. The remaining 7 percent, living out of fiber’s reach in rural areas and remote pockets of the vast outback in the middle of the continent, would be linked to the Internet via state-of-the-art wireless and satellite technology.

Governments and telecom carriers in other countries, such as Japan, New Zealand, Singapore, and South Korea, have similarly embarked on endeavors to deploy widespread fiber-to-the-premises (FTTP) networks. But those countries are much smaller and more densely populated than Australia. The country has roughly the landmass of the contiguous United States but only 7 percent as many people—fewer, in fact, than the state of Texas. To lay a nationwide fiber footprint, the government would need armies of workers and unprecedented access to rights-of-way, utility poles, and underground ducts.

And indeed, the NBN’s estimated cost was high: The latest figure was AU $45.6 billion (US $44.1 billion). It would be one of the largest, most pervasive FTTP rollouts any government has ever attempted. But although the price would be great, so would the impact: The network would bring broadband access to underserved areas, but it would also raise standards of living everywhere by driving innovations in telemedicine, remote education, e-commerce, and e-governance. A government-funded report released this year by Deloitte Access Economics concluded that the NBN would provide job opportunities, time savings, and other benefits worth, on average, AU $3800 (US $3600) per household per year by 2020, when construction would be nearly complete. In addition, fiber’s enormous bandwidth capacity means that transmitting and receiving equipment could be upgraded indefinitely at low cost, allowing the NBN to keep pace for decades with the incessant demand for higher data rates.

Yet despite these benefits, some conservative politicians and media outlets vehemently opposed the plan. In the campaign leading up to a national election this September, the fate of the NBN was vigorously debated. Although polls showed that the majority of voters supported the project, they nevertheless rejected the Labor Party and ushered into power an alliance of moderate conservative parties known as the Coalition, whose leader and now prime minister, Tony Abbott, promised to drastically scale back the national network.

So now, after three years of planning and construction, during which workers connected some 210 000 premises (out of an anticipated 13.2 million), Australia’s visionary and trailblazing initiative is at a crossroads. The new government plans to deploy fiber only to the premises of new housing developments. For the remaining homes and businesses—about 71 percent—it will bring fiber only as far as curbside cabinets, called nodes. Existing copper-wire pairs will cover the so-called last mile to individual buildings.

Such issues are not unique to Australia. Enthusiasm for near-universal broadband was once widespread, and it is still being pursued in the countries mentioned above, among others. But the ardor has cooled in recent years as legislators in many parts of the world move to cut government spending. Unfortunately, as is so often the case with technology, the public debate is beset by misunderstanding, misinformation, and a general lack of technical knowledge. A rare opportunity for growth and development is about to be lost, and disappointingly few people fully grasp the implications of that loss.

For example, in Australia, the Coalition is pursuing a fiber-to-the-node (FTTN) strategy because it would be much cheaper in the short term—about two-thirds the price of the original NBN. But that calculus overlooks the longer-term realities. Copper links simply lack the capacity to support the massive growth in data consumption that analysts predict. Eventually, Australians will have no choice but to replace those links with fiber, probably before the end of this decade. At that point, upgrading to an FTTP network will add to the cost of the FTTN rollout, increasing the total investment beyond the price of installing that fiber today.

[continued ...]
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Re: NBN progress?
Reply #143 - Nov 28th, 2013 at 2:54pm
 
[... continued]

And in delaying the deployment, Australians will have passed up a unique chance to become leaders in the global digital economy—an opportunity they may not get again.

Australia in the Slow Lane
Global ranking      Average connection speed (Mb/s)
1 South Korea            13.3
2 Japan                  12.0
3 Switzerland            11.0
4 Hong Kong            10.8
5 Latvia                  10.6
6 Netherlands            10.1
7 Czech Republic        9.8
8 United States              8.7
9 Sweden                    8.4
10 United Kingdom        8.4
43 Australia              4.8
Global Average:        3.3 Mb/s
Source: Akamai Technologies


Today in Australia, as in much of Asia, Europe, and North America, commercial carriers own and operate competing landline networks. Such an arrangement normally encourages carriers to stay at the forefront of technology. However, it can have disadvantages as well: In a thinly populated country such as Australia, carriers may cherry-pick customers in the few dense urban centers where they know they can make the most profit. Consequently, progress is slow to reach the vast majority of people living in rural and suburban areas.

It’s not surprising, then, that among developed countries, Australia is notable for its paucity of fiber-optic links. The highest rates are in Japan and South Korea, densely populated countries with small landmasses, where fiber accounts for more than 60 percent of broadband lines. In larger, more sparsely populated countries, such as the United States and Canada, rates are much more modest. In Australia, the rate is less than 2 percent.

Today, more than two in three Australian households have fixed broadband subscriptions. Most of those connections still use digital subscriber line (DSL) technology, which transmits data packets at higher frequencies than do analog voice signals, enabling Internet traffic to travel over telephone lines at relatively high bit rates. In a DSL system, twisted copper pairs, also known as loops, connect each customer to a central switching office. There, a rack of modems known as DSL access multiplexers, or DSLAMs, link the local loop to the backbone networks of various Internet service providers.

The problem with relying on DSL for broadband service is that many modern applications, including ultrahigh-definition videoconferencing and 3-D television, already require faster transmission speeds than these lines can provide. The biggest bottleneck is the copper itself. Due to the electrical properties of the metal, signals distort and weaken considerably with distance and can interfere with signals traveling through neighboring wires. This severely limits the bit rate of connections, particularly long ones. While customers close to a central office can receive rates as high as 24 megabits per second (using a common standard known as ADSL 2+), more distant customers experience much slower speeds. In Australia, where loops can be quite long and where some users opt for low-speed plans, http://www.akamai.com/stateoftheinternet/ the average Internet connection is just 4.8 Mb/s. And because the upload rate for DSL rarely exceeds more than one-fourth the download rate, the service doesn’t work well for high-bandwidth two-way applications such as videoconferencing.
...
Source: NBN Co; Illustration: Emily Cooper

Broadband Far and Wide: The original conception for Australia’s National Broadband Network would have given all citizens high-speed data connections—93 percent of them fiber. The country’s large landmass and sparse population made this controversial plan unprecedented and hugely ambitious.


The leaders of the Labor Party weren’t the first Australians to recognize the need for a faster, more inclusive network. Telecom carriers and federal advisory groups have been kicking around proposals for a national broadband network since about 2003. But it wasn’t until December 2007, after the Labor Party won majority power, that the government committed to the venture.

At first, Labor representatives thought the new network should use an FTTN architecture, which would require removing DSLAMs from central offices, located kilometers from customers, and installing new ones in nodes as close as a couple of hundred meters. The nodes would connect to the central offices via fiber and relay data to and from each customer’s premises using very-high-bit-rate DSL, or VDSL, the highest-speed DSL standard available at the time. These shorter copper loops would boost average speeds considerably—to as high as 50 Mb/s, depending on the distance between the node and the premises. The resulting FTTN network wouldn’t be nearly as fast as a full-blown FTTP grid, but the anticipated cost seemed more reasonable.

[continued ...]
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Re: NBN progress?
Reply #144 - Nov 28th, 2013 at 2:55pm
 
[... continued]

The government also assumed that the best way to build the network was to award the job to a commercial carrier through a bidding process. It would grant the winner a monopoly license and pitch in AU $4.7 billion to subsidize the cost of construction. Six carriers, including the market leader Telstra, submitted proposals by November 2008. To evaluate them, the government appointed an expert panel; I was among its seven members.

After studying the proposals, we agreed on two key points. First, we found that the global economic recession, sparked by the bursting of the U.S. housing bubble in 2006, was preventing Australia’s carriers from raising enough capital to fully fund the construction of a national network. In fact, none of the bidders came up with a viable business model. It was clear that unless the government bankrolled the majority of the cost, a commercial network would not likely succeed.

Our second observation was that an FTTN layout would be a bad idea. Using VDSL, a home connection could theoretically deliver 50 Mb/s, but only if the node sat very close to the house—a mere 100 meters or so away. Since the panel disbanded, a newer standard, VDSL2, has emerged. When combined with a novel interference-reduction technique called vectoring, it can provide download speeds up to about 100 Mb/s over short distances. And now an even faster standard known as G.fast is in the works, which promises download rates up to 1 Gb/s, but again, only for very short connections. For customers on longer loops, telecoms would be able to guarantee only about 50 Mb/s.

Market analysts project that data usage from a single family or small business could easily surpass that rate by 2020, and to meet this demand, Australia would need an FTTP network. Laying a cheaper FTTN footprint first would make little sense because it’s not a necessary step toward realizing an all-fiber system. In fact, an FTTN network requires special equipment and infrastructure, including nodes, that would have to be removed and discarded during an FTTP upgrade. An interim FTTN rollout would consequently end up costing Australians more in the long term than simply investing in FTTP technology today.

For these and other reasons, we recommended that the government itself create a national FTTP network. Incredibly, it accepted our advice.

Two Faces of the NBN
...
Sources: NBN Co; Coalition’s NBN policy statements; “Energy Consumption in Access Networks,” J. Baliga, R.S. Tucker, et al., Optical Fiber Communication/National Fiber Optic Engineers Conference, 2008


In April 2009, following Prime Minister Rudd’s landmark announcement, the Australian government established NBN Co to build and operate the future National Broadband Network. The governmentowned company would be responsible for connecting every home and business to more than 100 hubs, called points of interconnect, around the nation. These are places where commercial Internet providers and other content-delivery companies, called retail service providers, would hook into the network. To reduce some of the cost of laying fiber lines, NBN Co would pay commercial carriers to access existing underground ducts and pits and decommission copper telephone lines and DSLAM equipment. Telstra currently owns the vast majority of this infrastructure, and the government had agreed to pay AU $11 billion to access it.

As the sole owner of the new national network, NBN Co would run what’s known as a Layer 2 network. It would offer commercial providers a choice of speeds at set prices (from AU $24 per month for 12 Mb/s downloads and 1 Mb/s uploads to AU $150 per month for 1 Gb/s downloads and 400 Mb/s uploads). It would route the data to and from the providers’ customers using Ethernet protocol. The providers would add on the remaining layers, including data packaging, encryption, and error correction, and bill customers directly. Although NBN Co alone would manage the physical infrastructure, including the modems in people’s homes, providers could still compete, based on the type of content they offered and the quality of their service.

[continued ...]
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Re: NBN progress?
Reply #145 - Nov 28th, 2013 at 2:59pm
 
[... continued]

To construct the network’s fiber web, engineers opted to use passive optical network (PON) technology, a standard approach for FTTP networks. In NBN Co’s PON system, a single fiber would ferry data from a central office to a small curbside cabinet, where a beam splitter would divide the signal, guiding the light through up to 32 branching fibers, each leading to a separate premises. Unlike active optical networks, which electronically switch data at the cabinet in order to route it to its final destination, PON systems broadcast to all premises on a splitter. They rely on electronic switches at each customer’s terminal to weed out the neighbors’ traffic and encrypt the data to prevent eavesdropping. PON systems also tend to be cheaper, use less power, and are easier to maintain than active ones because they don’t require engineers to install and tend to switching equipment in outdoor cabinets.

When construction began on the NBN in 2010, the fastest equipment available for transmitting data on a PON network relied on an industry standard known as gigabit PON, or GPON, which can send 2.4 gigabits per second to each splitter. This overall capacity would be divided among all of the premises on a splitter. However, if several customers in a neighborhood opted for fast services, NBN Co would simply install more splitters at the cabinet—a quick, 20-minute job. This way, NBN Co could guarantee that every fiber-connected Australian who wanted the maximum 1 Gb/s rate could get it.

Inevitably, though, some people would fall outside this fiber footprint. About 7 percent of Australians live in rural communities or remote outposts where wired broadband access is technically or economically unviable. NBN Co would connect about half this population via fixed wireless towers equipped with standard 4G LTE technologies capable of delivering download speeds up to 25 Mb/s and upload speeds up to 5 Mb/s to each customer. The other half would be served by two new high-bandwidth geostationary satellites due to launch in 2015, which would provide similar data rates.

But no matter the type of access technology—fiber, wireless, or satellite—NBN Co would still charge commercial providers the same wholesale rates to use its pipes, ensuring equal and fair prices to all consumers regardless of location.

Many politicians and industry executives praised the NBN plan. Alan Noble, Google Australia’s head of engineering, called it “the greatest enabler of innovation.” Others said it was “a critical part in the evolution of the Internet” and “too good an opportunity to miss.” Nevertheless, the plan was controversial from the outset. Members of the conservative Coalition, concerned about rising costs and construction delays, have described the NBN as a “dangerous delusion,” a “white elephant on a massive scale,” and a “shockingly misconceived, wasteful exercise in public policy.”

Some of the early criticisms, particularly from media commentators, stemmed from technical misunderstandings. Opponents of the FTTP approach, for instance, often reasoned that the popularity of mobile gadgets is causing wireless technologies to advance so rapidly that they will eventually offer greater speeds than fiber, making the NBN obsolete.

The fallacy of this assumption is immediately apparent to anybody with a basic knowledge of wireless networks. Such connections will always be limited by the bandwidth capacity of a cellular base station, which must be shared among all its users. Even if one station could use all available radio spectrum to serve one customer, the bandwidth of frequencies that can be passed through an optical fiber would still be some 20 000 times as great.

What’s more, mobile systems may not be able to sustain their awesome growth without an extensive fiber network. Already, operators are deploying miniature base stations known as small cells in homes, businesses, and busy urban centers, to help expand capacity and bring services to places where traditional towers may not reach, such as indoors. The glut of data flowing through these cells will need to be hauled to and from an operator’s core network—a job that suits fiber very well.

Other critics of the Labor Party’s plan worried that giving NBN Co sole ownership of Australia’s physical network would stifle infrastructure competition, keeping prices high for consumers and slowing the adoption of new network technologies. This argument might be persuasive in more densely populated countries such as the United States, where high consumer demand usually ensures vigorous competition based largely on technology. Indeed, in the United States, Verizon began offering its FiOS FTTP service in 2005, and plans are now available to more than 18 million homes, 5 million of which have subscriptions, the company says.

But in Australia, providers have already demonstrated that a free market hasn’t produced good access options for most consumers. In the 1990s, for instance, Telstra and its competitor Optus strung separate hybrid fiber-coaxial lines, a faster service than DSL, to the same 2 million premises in some populous suburbs of Sydney and Melbourne. Meanwhile, millions more premises missed out on the upgrade.

[continued ...]
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Re: NBN progress?
Reply #146 - Nov 28th, 2013 at 3:00pm
 
[... continued]

By far the biggest concern about the FTTP model was, and still is, that the benefits won’t justify its high cost. The Coalition argues that an FTTN network, though less than ideal, would provide more value per dollar. But the numbers just don’t add up.

An FTTP network offering peak speeds of up to 1 Gb/s would have cost Australians about AU $3450 per premises, according to NBN Co’s cost analysis. By contrast, the new Coalition government estimates that each FTTN connection, capable of guaranteeing up to 50 Mb/s, will cost on average around AU $2320—a whopping two-thirds the cost of a vastly superior FTTP link. And if consumer data rates continue to climb as fast as analysts predict, many FTTN customers will probably want to upgrade to FTTP technology before 2020. To accommodate them, the Coalition government plans to offer “fiber-on-demand” service, in which a customer could choose to pay out of pocket for installing fiber from a curbside node to a home or business. These upgrades would likely add another AU $1000 to $5000 to the price of each connection, depending on the length of the fiber and the amount of labor required.

In the meantime, an FTTP network using GPON infrastructure could last well into the future. Upgrading it to the next-generation standard, called XGPON, which will support up to 10 Gb/s, would simply require replacing some of the equipment in central offices and the terminal modem at each customer’s premises—for a likely total bill of no more than AU $300 per connection. In the future, newer standards could provide even faster bit rates for a comparable cost.

It has been painful watching the formation of this “futureproof” network come to an end. I can’t help but think of the United States’ Interstate Highway System, championed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in the 1950s, which paved the way, literally, for a booming transportation-based economy. In Australia, a fiber-based broadband highway could transform the country’s digital economy in much the same way.

Sadly, the new Coalition government seems impervious to these arguments and is determined to downscale the NBN. I am left clinging to the hope that Australians will realize the foolishness of abandoning the FTTP network and insist that their leaders reconsider or devise a new plan that’s not too far removed from the Labor Party’s revolutionary vision.

This article originally appeared in print as “Australia’s (Less Super) Super-highway.”

About the Author


Rodney S. Tucker is a professor of electrical engineering at the University of Melbourne and an IEEE Fellow. In 2008, the Australian government appointed him to an expert panel that recommended building a nationwide all-fiber access network, now known as the National Broadband Network. Although this ambitious project is now in danger of being downscaled, Tucker considers his work on the panel “one of the most significant contributions of my engineering career.”
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Re: NBN progress?
Reply #147 - Nov 28th, 2013 at 3:47pm
 
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/technology/nbn-revenue-to-be-hit-by-triplewhammy/story-e6frgakx-1226770526546

OFFICIALS from the Department of Communications have admitted that the National Broadband Network will take a triple-whammy revenue hit because of changes to the project's technology and rollout plans.

Speaking before the Senate Select Committee on the National Broadband Network, first assistant secretary Mark Heazlett acknowledged the need for revisions to the NBN Co corporate plan to account for revenue declines brought on by increased competition from other networks and an inability to sell higher-speed broadband plans.

The Coalition is changing the rollout of the NBN from a plan that under Labor promised to connect a fibre optic network to 93 per cent of the nation's homes and businesses.

That plan would deliver download speeds to consumers as fast as 1000 gigabits per second. But sustained construction delays, low take-up rates and the expense of the project have seen the Coalition change the plan to one based on cheaper deployment costs but a technologically inferior fibre-to-the-node network.

Under that new proposal the Coalition will connect nodes on street corners with fibre cabling and use Telstra's existing copper network to connect homes over the last few hundred metres.

Today the Department of Communications conceded that those changes would preclude the Coalition's fibre-to-the-node NBN from offering broadband plans above 40Mbps, which would hit revenue forecasts for both access costs and the increased data consumption which comes with the availability of faster download speeds.

Some 72 per cent of customers on the NBN are currently using plans that deliver download speeds of 25 megabits per second (or less), the same download rates promised by the Coalition's fibre-to-the node plan.

But 5 per cent of NBN users are on plans which offer download speeds of 50Mbps and upload speeds of 20Mbps, while the remaining 23 per cent are on plans with download speeds of 100mbps and upload speeds of 40mbps. Those speeds will only be available for about 20 per cent of homes under the Coalition's plan.

"Some fibre-to-the-premise products won't be available under fibre to the node," said Department of Communications deputy secretary of telecommunications, Ian Robinson.

"There will be a revenue impact and that will have to be assessed."

The department officials said that the possibility to allow Telstra and Optus to retain their cable broadband networks in lucrative metropolitan areas could also open the NBN up to competition that could ultimately eat into its revenues.

Good luck with those promised speeds.

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Putting the n in cuts
 
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longweekend58
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Re: NBN progress?
Reply #148 - Nov 28th, 2013 at 6:02pm
 
blah blah blah...  you don't care about the cost nor the fact that FTTP is at its current rate going to take decades to complete.

And the ultimate lie to your spurious argument is that you can still have FTTP.  you just have to *shock horror* PAY FOR IT.  So the real problem is the same one it always is - you want more and more and more while being unwilling to pay anything for it.

greedy, lazy buggers.
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AUSSIE: "Speaking for myself, I could not care less about 298 human beings having their life snuffed out in a nano-second, or what impact that loss has on Members of their family, their parents..."
 
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St George of the Garden
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Re: NBN progress?
Reply #149 - Nov 28th, 2013 at 7:04pm
 
Actually the rollout was ramping up, despite obstacles put in its path by LNP state and local govts. NBN Co should have been much more aggressive in its rollout, turning to running the NBN between power poles whenever Telstra attempted to slow the rollout down for its own interests.

For me the LNP sabotage makes the LNP the Party of Treason.

Someone is whinging mining is hollowing out manufacturing. The NBN would have rectified that in many ways—optimising the potential of 3D printing, boosting education, health etc.
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I want Muso as GMod. Bring back Muso!
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