Kiron22 wrote on Dec 16
th, 2015 at 12:19pm:
You're an nice person and you don't understand technology.
Are you seriously ****ing arguing that there is no economic argument for fast upload speeds from the home? no economic argument for cloud computing from the home? no economic argument for home teleconferencing?
The NBN could change the entire nature of the workforce, it could make being an independent professional in Australia actually viable, it could make home IT and other services avaliable, it could allow office workers to work from home.
Please explain how having to deal with hours upon hours of upload for small file sizes on an unstable connection is viable in the 21st century?
Upload a single portfolo, enjoy waiting hours, now imagine your an independent graphic designer needing to upload multiple 4k portfolios in a single day, enjoy watching your business fail.
You also ignore that technology is already moving quickly into 4k 60fps for streaming.
The only reason you are defending this **** policy is because you're a rusted on Liberal party shill who can't ever criticize the party that I suspect you get paid to post on forums astroturfing for.
Funny how I've never, ever once seen a Liberal party poster on this forum actually ever criticize their own party for anything.
Yes I am. The home is NOT an economic powerhouse. For the home-based business, most need web and email and little more. Those that do need more can get fibre to their house as a legitimate needs-based tax deduction. You have repeatedly talked about 2Gb uploads multiple times a day despite that being virtually unheard of in a home. And being someone who has actually worked from home, teleconferenced and even used graphic designers, you are positing a pile of BS.
If you NEED fibre then pay to be connected as it would be both tax deductible and needed. If all you want is the fasted 'whatever' for your home, then again, pay for it and stop expecting the tax payer to cover the cost.