Thứ Tư, 28 tháng 9, 2016

Coalition NBN position - Part 6 part 7

  • Megalfar
    this post was edited

    So you been reading what newspapers what you to 'hear'?

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    My opinion is that the NBN won't determine a lot of people's votes. How else can support for the NBN be at 80% when support for the Coalition is at 58%?

    You say this, but the polling stands on 58% and growing.

    What you should be saying is that Coalition don't care about polls and thus it's why it's going to destroy the NBN, and that's why they get people like yourself saying "NBN won't determine alot of people's view".

    Heres another thing to consider, QLD State Goverment is banning camera's in Parliament till August:

    http://www.smh.com.au/queensland/cameras-banned-after-broadcast-of-parliamentary-protest-20120709-21r84.html

    How far are people willing to go for the opposite side and say "The Government's always going to loose the elections"? When it should be stupid decisions like this.

  • ungulate

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    My opinion is that the NBN won't determine a lot of people's votes. How else can support for the NBN be at 80% when support for the Coalition is at 58%?

    CMOT, that says a lot about your mindset.

    Actually the NBN is starting to affect people's votes but at the moment its so on the margins that you won't be able to identify it in the polls.

    You get a lot of "oh I like the NBN but I hate labor" comments, but then the same people can't actually produce a reasonable argument about why they don't like labor. Its just a "brand" thing.

    The other thing is the Liberal's tactic is to take those people affected by the herd-mentality "Labor is bad, m'kay" thing and trying to reassure them that they won't get screwed under the Liberals over broadband. Again, if they (the Liberals) weren't so worried about it, they'd have simply forgotten the whole area, like they did in previous Parliaments.

    I'm sorry for being a bit critical of you, but you do seem to be captive to the thought that somehow sometime the Libs will come up with a policy. You so badly want to believe that. And failing that you do an awful lot of spreading of doubt and uncertainty here. Just endless nitpicks and "im not sure.. " and so on.

    Btw, the trend currently is about 55/45 for national polls and trending up for Labor. its not a good place to be in, but there's still a good 2 or 3 percent that is just plain "soft" in the classic sense of people telling pollsters something that reflects their current mood. And a lot of that is the carbon pricing scheme. And a lot of that will fall out.

    Now, how does the NBN affect things? As a single issue cause it's not likely to switch more than 0.5% of voters, but even that is a big thing in a close election where the incumbent can feasibly win on 49/51 (Howard did it on the GST election I might add)

    But the NBN is more dangerous to the Liberals than just the "gee whiz I want some too" factor. What it does is unglue them from the narrative that "everything Labor is bad".. and you know, when such narratives snap, they do so pretty suddenly.

    Don't forget Rudd was enjoying 56-57 in the polls just as the beat up over the pink bats occurred. He lost 4 points in 2 months.

  • 2012-Jul-9, 5:49 pm
    jwbam

    Murdoch writes...

    That post was a pretty damn good analogy

    As with all analogies, it is only as good as it matches the actual situation for the purposes of the explanation being made

    An analogy is used to explain specific properties of a real object, and the analogy must also have the same or similar properties. As the analogy is not completely the same, it will inevitably lead to false conclusions if it is used to explain OTHER properties.

    Looking back at my earlier post, FTTN signals in copper don't travel slow like donkeys. In fact they travel at the same speed as light in optic fibre. But it is true they need to be sent slowly to avoid mixing up the signals over long distances. But unlike a donkey, which can be timestamped and sorted at the other end, you can't timestamp an electronic signal. All pulses look alike. It's like a donkey that can't carry anything, but can only convey information by being made to walk head first or tail first and may randomly turn around before it reaches the destination. But "refining" the analogy like that to make it closer to the real system also destroys the simplicity of donkey (and sounds ridiculous) and makes it no easier to understand the limits of real signalling technology.

    People keep using car analogies for the NBN, but a car is not a network. A road system is a better one because like NBN they are:

    • very expensive to create
    • last half a century
    • need huge planning
    • benefits increase with ubiquity, connectedness, coverage and ease of access

    But they keep using cars because

    • the intended audience has never personally built or finance a road, but has bought a car or two.
    • the real intention of the speaker is to infer that NBN's benefits are non-essential and self-indulgent luxuries. Hence comparisons between Kias, Toyotas with Rolls, Ferrari etc.

    and inappropriate because cars don't last decades, and each one is only used and chosen by its owner or driver for the purpose at hand.

  • 2012-Jul-9, 5:49 pm
    Tailgator
    this post was edited

    jwbam writes...

    As with all analogies, it is only as good as it matches the actual situation for the purposes of the explanation being made

    An analogy is used to explain specific properties of a real object, and the analogy must also have the same or similar properties. As the analogy is not completely the same, it will inevitably lead to false conclusions if it is used to explain OTHER properties.

    +100

    Hence the futility of making them in the first place. Analogies should only be used to explain a concept, one which may in it's original form be difficult to grasp. It should never be used to support an argument. The reason being that if you pick a flaw in the analogy (which is easy to do because it doesn't relate 100% to the original concept) then the argument is shot down in flames at worst, seriously weakened at best.

    Hence the weakness of discussions about roads, Ferraris (especially red ones), etc.

    Seriously. The concept of the NBN and the underlying technology is not hard to understand or explain. It doesn't NEED analogies. Use them at your risk.

  • 2012-Jul-9, 6:05 pm
    Genetic Modified Zealot

    ungulate writes...

    But the NBN is more dangerous to the Liberals than just the "gee whiz I want some too" factor. What it does is unglue them from the narrative that "everything Labor is bad".. and you know, when such narratives snap, they do so pretty suddenly.

    Mr Turnbull has said they will keep the NBN and fix it. Voters do not just vote on broadband but other issues and the NBN is a minor issue.

    Mr Turnbull' s job is to simply neutralise the NBN so that Mr Abbott can concentrate on the main issues.

  • 2012-Jul-9, 6:05 pm
    Tallweirdo

    ungulate writes...

    That's precisely the sort of idiotic thing we need from Campbell to help Federal Labor :)

    I know this is off-topic but why should this help Federal Labor?

    Federal Labor has a permanent ban on private video cameras in Federal Parliament (as did the Howard Gov before them).

    Clause 4(a)
    Television filming in the Chambers is the exclusive responsibility of
    parliamentary staff.

    The rules for the cameras operated by the Federal parliamentary staff also specifically forbid covering disturbances in the gallery, the same rule that the private camera operators in the Queensland parliament are being suspended for violating.

    A state Government temporarily suspending something that is permanently banned at the Federal level hardly seems to be a good reason to support a particular party at the Federal level.

  • Murdoch

    raoulrules writes...

    Mr Turnbull' s job is to simply neutralise the NBN so that Mr Abbott can concentrate on the main issues.

    Considering that one of the reasons (if not the main reason) why they lost the last election was the NBN, then I would take a guess that it IS one of the main issues Raoul.

  • Megalfar

    raoulrules writes...

    Mr Turnbull has said they will keep the NBN and fix it. Voters do not just vote on broadband but other issues and the NBN is a minor issue

    No they did not say they will keep the NBN and fix it, they said they will change it.

    http://www.smh.com.au/it-pro/government-it/we-will-not-cancel-the-nbn-turnbull-20120629-217f3.html

    "The Coalition's aim is not to cancel contracts but rather, renegotiate existing contracts where possible to accommodate different architectures and lower the capital cost of the network and hence, the end cost to consumers," Mr Turnbull said.

    He told IT Pro "a range of architectures" would include fibre-to-the-premises for homes and businesses in greenfield areas; fibre-to-the-node where possible and HFC. HFC, or hybrid fibre coaxial, is used for networks that employ both fibre optic and copper cables, usually to deliver cable television. Fibre optics are used for the backbone up to nodes, then copper cables from the nodes to the premises.

  • 2012-Jul-9, 6:23 pm
    Genetic Modified Zealot

    Murdoch writes...

    Considering that one of the reasons (if not the main reason) why they lost the last election was the NBN, then I would take a guess that it IS one of the main issues Raoul.

    With politics a slip up in any policy area be it industrial relations, job cuts can affect perception of other policies.

    I admit they made a poor presentation at the last election on their broadband policy but that can be any policy.

    Mr Turnbull' s job is to make sure they have no slip ups. Mr Turnbull being an ex Investment Banker has accomplished presentation skills and would not expect any slip ups.

  • 2012-Jul-9, 6:23 pm
    Tailgator
    this post was edited

    raoulrules writes...

    Mr Turnbull has said they will keep the NBN and fix it.

    When in reality they will 'stuff it'.

    Voters do not just vote on broadband but other issues and the NBN is a minor issue.
    Oh. OK Another major subject just introduced. 'Scuse me while adjust the goal posts.

    Mr Turnbull' s job is to simply neutralise the NBN so that Mr Abbott can concentrate on the main issues. (My bold)
    Which is a very telling commentary on Turnbull's (and the LNP's) attitude to the NBN, is it not. An issue to be just 'neutralised'?

    Yep. The LNP Turnbull and Abbott couldn't give a shit about the NBN. It's just an issue to be neutralised in order for them gain power.

    Out of 'raoulrule's own mouth.

    (Sarcasm on.) So yeah. Vote for the Liberal Party if you want a good broadband policy.

    Edit: Damn 'rr'. How does it feel to have just negated every argument you have ever put forward against the NBN and for the Coalition alternative. Ouch!. It must really hurt.

  • 2012-Jul-9, 6:25 pm
    texmex

    raoulrules writes...

    I admit they made a poor presentation at the last election on their broadband policy

    And if anything it's got worse since then, starting with the instruction from Tony Abbott to Malcolm Turnbull to destroy NBN.

    Mr Turnbull being an ex Investment Banker has accomplished presentation skills

    Certainly. But a silk purse (or a silk's purse) will never be produced from a sow's ear.

  • 2012-Jul-9, 6:25 pm
    Tailgator
    this post was edited

    raoulrules writes...

    I admit they made a poor presentation at the last election on their broadband policy but that can be any policy.

    +1 After years of Helen Coonan's ineptitude, they managed to plumb new depths. Tony Smith.
    Only the Liberals .....

  • 2012-Jul-9, 6:26 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    ungulate writes...

    CMOT, that says a lot about your mindset.

    In what way? There must be a lot of people who say they support the NBN but also say they intend to vote Coalition. That's not mindset, it's arithmetic.

    I'm sorry for being a bit critical of you, but you do seem to be captive to the thought that somehow sometime the Libs will come up with a policy.

    He's said a lot of things over the last couple of years. afaik he hasn't explicitly backed away from any of it. He's just changed the way he talks about some things. I thought he was moving toward a credible policy. I was wrong.
    whrl.pl/Rde5kt

    Btw, the trend currently is about 55/45 for national polls and trending up for Labor.

    The latest Newspoll is 55/45. The latest Nielson poll is 58/42.
    http://au.acnielsen.com/news/200512.shtml

    People can say it mid-term but can they actually bring themselves to do it in the polling booth? I bloody hope not or it will be the sort of landslide that will take two or more elections to claw back.
    whrl.pl/RdeFdr

    It's hard to know what will happen when both leaders have been so unpopular for so long. People might not want to vote for Abbott but will they vote for Gillard?

    Now, how does the NBN affect things?

    I think NBN policy will be irrelevant to a lot of people at the next election. There are other, bigger issues.
    whrl.pl/Rdfgh3

  • 2012-Jul-9, 6:26 pm
    Graeme Here

    raoulrules writes...

    Mr Turnbull has said they will keep the NBN and fix it.

    But it's not broken.

  • 2012-Jul-9, 6:31 pm
    jwbam

    Tailgator writes...

    Yep. The LNP Turnbull and Abbott couldn't give a shit about the NBN. It's just an issue to be neutralised in order for them gain power.

    So falling behind world broadband standards is just "collateral damage".

  • 2012-Jul-9, 6:31 pm
    Tailgator

    jwbam writes...

    So falling behind world broadband standards is just "collateral damage".

    Ummm Yeah. Apparently.

  • 2012-Jul-9, 6:33 pm
    rashman

    Tailgator writes...

    Helen Coonan's ineptitude, they managed to plumb new depths. Tony Smith.
    Only the Liberals .....

    Not only, but also; http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/06/16/1055615723806.html

    Senator Richard Alston, Minister for Communications, Information Technology and the Arts,

    Senator Richard Alston, Minister for Communications, Information Technology and the Arts, June 2003

    How would you rank Australia's technological stature on the world stage as a supplier and consumer of technology?

    Australia is prominent as a supplier of advanced ICT applications, mostly in specialised fields and where ICT is transforming more traditional industry sectors, and Australians are internationally recognised as early adaptors and sophisticated users of technology.

  • 2012-Jul-9, 6:33 pm
    texmex

    Graeme Here writes...

    But it's not broken.

    It will be, just as soon as the coalition get their hands on it.

    That's assuming they persist with their present 'policy' of course, to the extent that it is possible to discern anything definite there other than stopping future contracts and replacing them with what can only be technically described as a bloody mess.

  • 2012-Jul-10, 1:08 am
    Murdoch

    raoulrules writes...

    Mr Turnbull' s job is to make sure they have no slip ups

    Too late, he already has. His originally blatant, but lately more subtle peddling of his "promise we'll do it different even if we can't define what different is" is more than what I'd call a "slip up".

    Mr Turnbull being an ex Investment Banker has accomplished presentation skills and would not expect any slip ups.

    Then he needs some serious work to fool even the mildly conversant in broadband.

  • 2012-Jul-10, 1:08 am
    Genetic Modified Zealot
    this post was edited

    Murdoch writes...

    Too late, he already has. His originally blatant, but lately more subtle peddling of his "promise we'll do it different even if we can't define what different is" is more than what I'd call a "slip up".

    That's your opinion. The NBN is hardly talked about in the press and that's what the aim is as they have other more important issues to interrogate.

    If I read the opinion polls Labor has a primary vote of 28% (Nielson/Fairfax) indicating the Coalition is winning political debate with Mr Turnbull taking NBN off the radar. Not sure what conroy is up to as he seems to be unable to articulate what is happening in NBN Land be it rollout progress or corporate plan.

  • Murdoch
    this post was edited

    raoulrules writes...

    If I read the opinion polls Labor has a primary vote of 28% (Nielson/Fairfax) indicating the Coalition is winning political debate with Mr Turnbull taking NBN off the radar. Not sure what conroy is up to as he seems to be unable to articulate what is happening in NBN Land be it rollout progress or corporate plan.

    Polls are independent of whether or not the politician is misleading Raoul. MT, Mr Abbott and Joe Hockey have been identified any number of times, by multiple reports as misleading, in some cases, plainer language is used, they're called out for lying.

    Do you concur?

    If not, please explain to me exactly what the Coalition's broadband policy is. "Cheaper and faster" doesn't cut it without detail. If you can show me this, I can and will seriously assess it against the current plan. I'm not even expecting the same detail as the current one. But "faster, cheaper, we'll do it different, prudent management" isn't detail, it's waffle. How do you lend these guys credibility for simple waffle when the alternative is so clearly mapped out with the detail we have today is beyond my understanding.

    Your team's got it wrong Raoul. Just because the current government team doesn't have it exactly right in some quarters does not add credibility to the garbage policy to the alternative. I fear that Australians are going to be rather uncomfortable in examining their conscience (hopefully before the election) when they start figuring out what it is exactly that the Coalition stands for. "No" to everything isn't a policy.

    Sing with me Raoul ....

    "Desperado ....... Why don't you come to your senses ...."

  • Mr Creosote

    raoulrules writes...

    Mr Turnbull has said they will keep the NBN and fix it.

    There is nothing to fix. What the Libs will do to it is a word starting with F though ;)

    Trunbull is being very deceptive in saying he will keep the NBN. His version of the NBN will be nothing like the one Labour is proposing, and hence cant be equated to the NBN.

  • Mr Creosote

    raoulrules writes...

    That's your opinion. The NBN is hardly talked about in the press and that's what the aim is as they have other more important issues to interrogate.

    If I read the opinion polls Labor has a primary vote of 28% (Nielson/Fairfax) indicating the Coalition is winning political debate with Mr Turnbull taking NBN off the radar. Not sure what conroy is up to as he seems to be unable to articulate what is happening in NBN Land be it rollout progress or corporate plan.

    See, this is where you seem to have a disconnect again. The NBN is in the media regularly. The problem is, its predominantly only ever reported negatively in the mainstream media. Abbotts mistruths, for example, get big headlines. The corrections of these mistruths appear in small industry publications like Delimiter or Computerworld. Hardly balanced. NBN Co and the govt have put out lots of excellent information. Where is it reported in the mainstream media?

    EDIT: Its also worth considering the importance that the Libs themselves place on the NBN as an issue, before claiming its a non-issue.
    The so-called �speaking notes� document published by Crikey last week (full PDF here) contains an extensive three to four page section on the NBN, marking it a major policy area alongside other areas such as border protection, the �carbon tax� and more. http://delimiter.com.au/2012/07/09/coalition-nbn-notes-some-truth-mostly-fiction/

  • texmex

    Mr Creosote writes...

    There is nothing to fix. What the Libs will do to it is a word starting with F though

    Now be fair, the coalition will 'fix' it all right.

    Just like some people 'fix' a dog or cat.

    Turnbull is being very deceptive in saying he will keep the NBN.

    In fact even more deceptive than that, because his very clever phrase is actually 'We will fulfil the objective of NBN.' Which could mean two tin cans and a piece of string � after all, nothing in that set of words is inconsistent with such an outcome.

  • 2012-Jul-10, 9:12 am
    ltn8317g

    texmex writes...

    In fact even more deceptive than that, because his very clever phrase is actually 'We will fulfil the objective of NBN.' Which could mean two tin cans and a piece of string � after all, nothing in that set of words is inconsistent with such an outcome.

    Exactly so. One must sift the words of a politician to see if there's any way it can mean something other than how you are supposed to take it.

    'We will fulfil the objective of NBN': What does that even mean? The existing objective? His objective? Abbott's objective? What does "objective" mean in this context? The "objective" could be to destroy all NBNCo fibre with firecrackers, for all we know.

    Over time I've not seen anything MT has said about the NBN that is unambiguous in meaning, or doesn't have one comment that cancels out another statement. In short, once one filters out the vague, unclear, qualified, ambiguous statements one is left with nothing that supports the firm idea that the current NBN will be rolled out if Malcolm has anything to say about it, and he says it in such a soothing and reassuring way that many people don't even notice.

  • 2012-Jul-10, 9:12 am
    rhom

    raoulrules writes...

    Mr Turnbull' s job is to simply neutralise the NBN so that Mr Abbott can concentrate on the main issues.

    you dont neutralise issues that have no bearing, its a waste of peoples time and money. it can also backfire.

    raoulrules writes...

    With politics a slip up in any policy area be it industrial relations, job cuts can affect perception of other policies.

    yes, and slipping up while attempting to neutralise a coalition "non issue" is even worse

    Mr Turnbull' s job is to make sure they have no slip ups.

    not doing a very good job

    Mr Turnbull being an ex Investment Banker has accomplished presentation skills and would not expect any slip ups.

    youre typical voter wont appreciate an "investment banker" telling them how to invest their money, were still a bit pissed off about the gfc

    raoulrules writes...

    The NBN is hardly talked about in the press

    pity, its always nice to have educated voters, and not have one party attempting to brush the topic under the carpet. not exactly democratic is it. (note that politicians in general do this sort of thing with any topic they think will make them look bad, its not just a coalition thing)

  • Tailgator
    this post was edited

    texmex writes...

    In fact even more deceptive than that, because his very clever phrase is actually 'We will fulfil the objective of NBN.' Which could mean two tin cans and a piece of string � after all, nothing in that set of words is inconsistent with such an outcome.

    And fortunately Turnbull is revealing himself for what he is. A politician. No more, no less.

    As 'raoulrules' himself posted ....

    raoulrules writes...

    Mr Turnbull' s job is to simply neutralise the NBN so that Mr Abbott can concentrate on the main issues.

    Turnbull has no empathy or specific knowledge of telecommunications other than being an investor/venture capitalist who made a good decision which paid off. Does he 'know the technology or the opportunites'? Other than an as an investment. No!
    And anything else Turnbull says should be viewed through the prism and filter of 'a politician'.

  • DenisPC9

    raoulrules writes...

    Mr Turnbull' s job is to simply neutralise the NBN so that Mr Abbott can concentrate on the main issues.

    Ohh Raoul, really. Please you can do better than that. This is just parroting Lib soundbites. Think for yourself man.

    ... the main issues.

    The NBN was one of the main stumbling blocks that the Independents judged both Leaders on when deciding who they would support. The NBN and his response was primarily responsible for Abbott not lodging in the Lodge!

    ... the main issues

    At approx $36bn, this is a minor issue?

    Please, jest if you must but don't insult our intelligence nor denigrate yours.

  • 2012-Jul-10, 7:51 pm
    Genetic Modified Zealot

    DenisPC9 writes...

    The NBN was one of the main stumbling blocks that the Independents judged both Leaders on when deciding who they would support. The NBN and his response was primarily responsible for Abbott not lodging in the Lodge!

    We can never know what the independents private intentions are, they could say one thing in front of cameras as a decoy.

    At approx $36bn, this is a minor issue?

    A few on this forum say $36 Billion is nothing.

    I see other issues being more critical in next years election. On here WP it's important but on main street there are other issues.

  • 2012-Jul-10, 7:51 pm
    ungulate

    raoulrules writes...

    I see other issues being more critical in next years election. On here WP it's important but on main street there are other issues.

    And no doubt you're happy about Abbott and his merry men lying their tits off about those other issues too :P

  • jwbam

    raoulrules writes...

    NBN is a minor issue.

    Mr Turnbull' s job is to simply neutralise the NBN so that Mr Abbott can concentrate on the main issues.

    I thought his job was to come up with a better plan than Labor's, so the Libs can do a better job when we put them in power?

    Your saying his job is just to make us forget about the nation's broadband requirements and concentrate on issues that the Libs think will win the election for them? He's just an election-winning tool?

    And a MINOR one at that!

    That's sad for poor Malcolm.

  • DenisPC9

    raoulrules writes...

    Mr Turnbull being an ex Investment Banker has accomplished presentation skills .....

    He and they sure do, unfortunately that's not all they have. Along with an almost complete lack of moral or social conscience and all the empathy of a Dung Beetle. But that's about where their good points end.

    What leads me to that conclusion. The GFC that hit the world in 2007 and is still unfolding.

    What was it that Keating said about Turnbull, something along the lines of "He's intelligent but has no judgement"

  • Sir Moi of Aus

    raoulrules writes...

    NBN is a minor issue.

    It does make me wonder that for such a minor issue, why do you continually harp on about a CBA for the NBN?

  • DenisPC9

    raoulrules writes...

    We can never know what the independents private intentions are, they could say one thing in front of cameras as a decoy.

    Ha, got you on the run haven't I ;-)

    A few on this forum say $36 Billion is nothing.

    Not good enough, the Q was in response to your post. NOT a general comment about what others (may) have said.

    You've been rumbled as being disingenuous.

  • CMOTDibbler

    jwbam writes...

    I thought his job was to come up with a better plan than Labor's, so the Libs can do a better job when we put them in power?

    Really?

    Your saying his job is just to make us forget about the nation's broadband requirements and concentrate on issues that the Libs think will win the election for them? He's just an election-winning tool?

    I think that's his job. Let the electorate focus on the carbon tax and the boats.

  • ungulate

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Really?

    See what I mean? endless nit pick. Keep gainsaying in the hope it will all go away.

    Oh and btw, jwbam has a point. The opposition of this country does have a duty to come up with sensible alternate policy.

    You evidently don't think its worth getting into the substance.. Just nit pic.. nit pic.. word games..

  • 2012-Jul-10, 9:38 pm
    zzzyz36

    raoulrules writes...

    I see other issues being more critical in next years election. On here WP it's important but on main street there are other issues.

    Stopping the boats is clearly far more important...why else would Abbott talk about it every week?

  • 2012-Jul-10, 9:38 pm
    Tailgator

    Speaking of Malcolm Turnbull ....

    Why Is Malcolm Turnbull Spending So Much On Global Roaming?
    http://www.lifehacker.com.au/2012/07/why-is-malcolm-turnbull-spending-so-much-on-global-roaming/

    .... for the six-month period
    * $18346.52: Malcolm Turnbull (Lib)

    He must be with a private corporation, like ohhh say Telstra?

    Lol

  • 2012-Jul-11, 7:46 am
    Genetic Modified Zealot

    DenisPC9 writes...

    Ha, got you on the run haven't I ;-)

    So if the Coalition fully adopted FTTH do you believe their primary vote will skyrocket?

  • 2012-Jul-11, 7:46 am
    Genetic Modified Zealot

    Moi.au writes...

    It does make me wonder that for such a minor issue, why do you continually harp on about a CBA for the NBN?

    As a voting policy NBN is a non issue.

    As a financial risk NBN is quite serious and more diligence is required such as a sensitivity analysis and CBA.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 7:50 am
    Murdoch

    raoulrules writes...

    As a financial risk NBN is quite serious and more diligence is required such as a sensitivity analysis and CBA.

    I'm still waiting on a response from you Raoul for this .....

    Murdoch writes...

    If the NBN is expected to make a 7% return, but the Coalition's solution will expect a commercial return (in line with business), and the NBN currently can achieve parity pricing with existing ADSL plans, what do you think is going to happen with pricing for the Coalition's solution? It's a loaded question, but very relevent.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 7:50 am
    Frood

    raoulrules writes...

    As a voting policy NBN is a non issue.

    Wow... you must spend your entire life doorknocking to know what's important for every person in Australia!

    The NBN is ABSOLUTEY a voting policy issue!

    I recall that it had a major impact on last two federal elections.

    For myself, it is definitely one of the major voting decision points.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 8:05 am
    redlineghost
    this post was edited

    look's like turnbull is treading the cherry picking the ftth>fttn debate...

    My opinion for fttn>adsl/vdsl option to be usable they would have migrate the last 1-5 miles onto 0.64mm or better between the node and entry pits, due to the fact there is to much signal loss between anything on a lower grade trunk connection..

    even usinng fttn>hfc you face the same hurdles not to mention pushing telecomms back to the partyline days..

    generally fois/ftth seems to be a better option for the longer term, looking at the libs plan for BB they are pushing a stop gap measure at best and at worst they are regurgitating a policy that has truly been a dead deployable option from over 20+ years ago that has yet to be updated since the original paper was published since the early to mid 1990's where and when fttn was a usable solution fastforward 2012 near on 20 years since that original report was actually created...

    if you look at the whole BB solution in regards to each medium on tabled report from 20 years ago, wireless broadbands and interim sat becomes a usable white elephant, plan of 12/1 is nice and all though reality see 8/1 being a serviced medium as they haven't bothered to add growth to each market since the original report was made, the reality is the cost to wireless and sat vs it's benefits may be a short sighted study to begin with..

    200,000 was a rough coverage estimate tabled 20 years ago, realistically until you add 10%-20% P/A growth you don't have a realistic user base to base the figures on as that would be the average growth rate of the target medium..

    sadly the devil is in the migration from older to newer
    technolgies and in this case what ever benefit the newer tech holds will end up being lost for the simple fact of over subscription combined with migration will always be the burdon on a wireless and sat network..

    my opinion the average home within 10years will have a min of 10 or more devices connected to a home network whether it be wired and/or wireless in origin, a min of 4-6 person house can see as many 50+ devices in use if not more..

    looking at fttn>anything I would fttn is dead as backhaul medium as we a min of 1gb or 10gb now not within 10 years...

    max you would see in context of fttn>adsl/vdsl/hfc 24-48/1-3 (adsl/vdsl/ndsl) within 1km, anything above this average will be no better than 4-12/1-2 pending on signal degredation from node to pit.. unless they plan to drop pvc piping between node on a pits then copper could still be used, laying copper in bare earth will just continue poor connection rates..

    given the rising cost of maintaining copper in general I think and know that fibre may be a better solution as backhaul making copper a dead end solution..

  • 2012-Jul-11, 8:05 am
    CMOTDibbler

    ungulate writes...

    See what I mean?

    No.

    I don't believe the Coalition has a broadband policy. I suspect Turnbull is just trying to neutralise the NBN as an election issue. The words will work now but I don't think they'll work when we get closer to an election.
    whrl.pl/RcVM5D

    What are the Liberal parties objectives? I think they just want to neutralise the NBN as an election issue. In that case I think Turnbull's doing a good job.
    whrl.pl/RcWkZ1

    I've been quite consistent on this.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 8:24 am
    RocK_M

    raoulrules writes...

    As a voting policy NBN is a non issue.

    Really? Last time i checked one of the biggest reasons we have a hung parliament was because NBN was one of the main voting issues that made people vote Labor.

    Of course now that the project is rolling out and there's an actual threat to the project being changed/cancelled its become a "non-issue"? One would think that if a "plan" at the time would make such a difference an on-going physical project would garner more attention!

  • 2012-Jul-11, 8:24 am
    redlineghost

    the libs want to push nbnmk1 ala nbn mk 3 and it is still their agenda when more people know that fttn is dead I think they might realize the the libs outdated cherry pick isn't going to work the way they want it too..

  • Genetic Modified Zealot

    Murdoch writes...

    I'm still waiting on a response from you Raoul for this .....

    I do not factor in current pricing at all of the NBN. Pricing and viability will be based on cash outflows and timing of inflows.

    If NBN will have cash outflows of ~ $55-60 (inc Telstra payments) Billion in the next 10 years and inflows are $20 Billion then the debt off hidden away off balance will be quite quite high. This is one main reasons why it's off balance and we won' t know it's true financial position. As said previously a few times the 7% is a smokescreen to hoodwink that prices will be lower, the alarming challenge is to recoup cash outflows.

    If the Coalition intends to have outflows of $25 Billion and inflows of $20 Billion then pricing will be lower even if return expectations are higher.

    The main variable is cash outflows not X% return.

  • Genetic Modified Zealot

    redlineghost writes...

    the libs want to push nbnmk1 ala nbn mk 3 and it is still their agenda when more people know that fttn is dead I think they might realize the the libs outdated cherry pick isn't going to work the way they want it too..

    A common person will not know what the difference between fttn and ftth.

    Mr Turnbull has said they will retain the NBN and roll it out in a cost effective manner. conroy can hammer this out but will non tech dudes understand or give 2c on the difference between fttn and ftth.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:07 am
    kitykatz

    raoulrules writes...

    This is one main reasons why it's off balance and we won' t know it's true financial position.

    Not sure what you mean by 'off balance'.

    Do you mean the balance sheet?

    MALCOLM TURNBULL: it is definitely on the balance sheet. http://www.malcolmturnbull.com.au/media/transcripts/transcript-2gb-radio-28-feb-2012/

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:07 am
    Sir Moi of Aus

    raoulrules writes...

    As a financial risk NBN is quite serious and more diligence is required such as a sensitivity analysis and CBA.

    And yet you write this...

    raoulrules writes...

    In reality it's impossible to cost these projects.

    raoulrules writes...

    Forecasts past one year is hardly accurate

    It seems the only thing you're "serious" about is the politics behind it and not the actual "financial risk"

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:09 am
    upNdown

    Moi.au writes...

    It seems the only thing you're "serious" about is the politics behind it and not the actual "financial risk"
    Yep and he's stated many times that a coalition govt, will change it to a fttn a few months after getting into office (so a CBA will be useless anyway) .. He's just trolling wish everyone would ignore him or the mods do something.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:09 am
    Murdoch

    raoulrules writes...

    I do not factor in current pricing at all of the NBN. Pricing and viability will be based on cash outflows and timing of inflows.

    And you purport to know about what voters will vote for.

    Here's the thing Raoul. All those lufferly inflows and outflows? The average voter doesn't give a rat's backside about them. What they do give a damn about is how much it costs for them. All the financial gymnastics in the world can't change that.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:14 am
    Genetic Modified Zealot

    kitykatz writes...

    Do you mean the balance sheet?

    The $27.5 billion govt equity injection that is treated like an interest free loan by the nbn. Fully expect Mr Turnbull to order an audit of all finances once he takes over to quantify true financial status of project.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:14 am
    Graeme Here

    raoulrules writes...

    Mr Turnbull

    They have to win first!

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:16 am
    ungulate

    raoulrules writes...

    As a voting policy NBN is a non issue.

    Self delusion is indicative of defeat and denial...

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:16 am
    Sir Moi of Aus

    upNdown writes...

    He's just trolling wish everyone would ignore him or the mods do something.

    Oh I don't know.

    By posting, he's keeping this thread alive so hopefully more people realise the inanity of the Coaltion's NBN position.

    raoulrules comes across as contradictory, but he's providing an important community service by showing us how insane his position, and by definition, the Coalition's arguments are :)

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:23 am
    CMOTDibbler

    raoulrules writes...

    A common person will not know what the difference between fttn and ftth.

    I think that's Turnbull's plan. I think he wants to get to the 'floating' voters with something like ... FTTN will do the job of the NBN, cost less to build than the NBN, be quicker to roll out than the NBN and be cheaper to use than the NBN. How many will know the difference?

    I don't think he's trying to convince Green or Labor voters who are staunch supporters of the NBN. I think he's trying to convince the 42% of people who say they will vote Coalition but support the NBN. He just has to do enough for the NBN not to change their voting intention.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:23 am
    Turkey

    Moi.au writes...

    By posting,

    The same arguments with the same few people vs what seems like hundreds of people has been going on in this forum for years I'm not surprised some people are tired of it.

    There are some arguments that seem to of been going on since 2007.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:55 am
    kitykatz

    raoulrules writes...

    The $27.5 billion govt equity injection

    If you check NBNCo's annual reports, you'll find that the equity injections are included in the financial accounts. (see note 15 on page 69 of the 2011 Annual Report.)

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:55 am
    delphi19

    raoulrules writes...

    As a voting policy NBN is a non issue.

    Nonsense. Since in Australia only a few percent points one way or another decides the elections an issues doesn't have to be a major one to be a decisive one � here:

    NBN contributed to 2010 Coalition election loss: report
    ( http://technologyspectator.com.au/nbn-buzz/nbn-contributed-2010-coalition-election-loss-report )

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:56 am
    Frood

    raoulrules writes...

    A common person will not know what the difference between fttn and ftth.

    Great thing there are people like us around to patiently explain the difference between dirt roads and sealed bitumen roads then, hey?

    but will non tech dudes understand or give 2c on the difference between fttn and ftth.

    Sure will, after we explain said difference between road types and they realise how rorted they will be under the Coalition's current policy.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:56 am
    rhom

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    How many will know the difference?

    does that make it right?

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:56 am
    aARQ-vark

    raoulrules writes...

    I do not factor in current pricing at all of the NBN. Pricing and viability will be based on cash outflows and timing of inflows.

    We saw your assumptions with respect to your copywrited Excel spreadsheet on NBN costs Raoul most of which were shot down in flames with the release of the very conservative business case!

    So you providing nothing but assumptions here with your $60 billion spend whilst the complete reverse will be true given the increase in ARPU and revenue that the NBN will create under their model effectively paying back every cent used to build it and then provide the Government with a cash cow to boot.

    As for the 7 percent return well pure logic dictates that our prices are going to be lower than if Private Industry were to undertake the task given that they want a 27 percent return!

    And we only have to look at the Privatised Model across the Tasman that the Conservatives over there having pissed their hard earned down the gurgler on redundant FTTN (our Liberals preferred model) and found that it simply doesn't deliver are now having to dig deep and rebuild a new FTTH network and the funny thing here Raoul!

    They are paying up to 4 times at the top end per MB downloaded compared to our current NBN per Mb download prices!

    So you see Raoul � Reality � meets your Misleading Unqualified Unsubstantiated Assumption and guess what the two are that far apart they are completely divorced.

    Our costs are much much much lower than NZ and the funnier thing here Raol -

    Malcolm bunging on about the initial take up rate of 18 percent (noting of course that everyone will be swapped over when the copper is turned off) and yet what do we find in NZ compared to here � a less than 2 percent take up rate.

    And Malcolm waffles on about infrastructure competition!

    Its killing them in NZ and he's got the hide to complain about the costs and take up rate here!

    Oh and you wont see him mention the fact that the Kiwi's have dumped their redundant FTTN model into the deep six of the Tasman having found that it doesn't deliver either � as he and Tony plan to attempt to foister onto an increasingly more technical adept Australia that bit of expensive redundant kit that seen its best days last century!

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:56 am
    Genetic Modified Zealot

    kitykatz writes...

    If you check NBNCo's annual reports, you'll find that the equity injections are included in the financial accounts. (see note 15 on page 69 of the 2011 Annual Report.)

    The source (debt off balance sheet) is not and this would be a major concern for Mr Turnbull. Govt raises debt and makes equity injections?

    The bonds raised will have interest repayments thus Mr Turnbull will raise this questions of how much debt is off balance sheet.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:59 am
    U T C

    aarq-vark writes...

    the Kiwi's have dumped their redundant FTTN model into the deep six of the Tasman having found that it doesn't deliver either -

    Actually, a public awareness of this situation would be good at this point of time..
    Not sure how.. the News Ltd mob wont touch it..

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:59 am
    aARQ-vark

    Frood writes...

    Sure will, after we explain said difference between road types and they realise how rorted they will be under the Coalition's current policy.

    And lets not forget Mike Quigley happy to enter the political debate at the next election to shoot down entirely any tripe and FUD the opposition provide on the subject matter.

    In fact I'm expecting people like Vince Cerf (founding father of the Internet), some of Googles best and brightest, some guns from IBM and Intel, Cisco etc all to have some input in the destruction of the Liberals FTTN alternative which belongs back in the last century �

    Coupled of course with the many instances of Malcolm and Tony misleading statements and those being addressed in a factual non partisan way to ensure Australians understand entirely the tripe the Coalition intend to trott out to those who haven't already been connected to NBN Co Fibre

    Might help to mention the price differential between the Privatised NZ model highlighting of course what a return to a monopoly model will mean yet again to the Australian public.

    Oh and those cost benefits that Malcolm keeps waffling about I guess outtakes of the 3 year study into the impact of doubling the network speed (included analysis of Australia) has in terms of GDP which was released after Malcolm's speech at the World Broadband Conference which made a complete mockery of what he was attempting to say and for good measure the Swedish Study which also includes the social and community benefits that FTTH brings �

    All of which simply makes the Coalition's argument for a Cost benefit analysis to be undertaken simply another exercise to employ redundant bean counters to provide us with information that we already know!

  • Sardonus

    raoulrules writes...

    A common person will not know what the difference between fttn and ftth.

    Maybe not now. But as roll-out and take-up of the NBN increases, more people will know the difference. Not just the people on it, but family members, friends and work colleagues of people on it will hear stories, ask questions and see for themselves. This is a snowball effect especially as the pace of connections increases.

    The other big issue for the coalition will be after they win. They can use all the arguments they want to get into power, but once people realise they've been dudded, it doesn't take them long to turn. Look at how quickly people turned on Rudd and Labor � exactly the same thing can happen to the Libs. If you peddle FUD, eventually you're going to get caught out. And when you do, heaven help you.

  • Megalfar

    raoulrules writes...

    A common person will not know what the difference between fttn and ftth.

    Really?

    FTTH � Fibre to the premises.
    FTTN � Fibre to the Node.

    The Government has been using FTTH in it's media and presses.

    So raoulrules now has been reduced his discussion on what will the voters know the difference...

    Kinda revolting? Kinda sad?

  • 2012-Jul-11, 10:07 am
    Frood

    Megalfar writes...

    So raoulrules now has been reduced his discussion on what will the voters know the difference...

    I'll get the metalcrafter to make some new goalposts in preparation...

  • 2012-Jul-11, 10:07 am
    CMOTDibbler

    rhom writes...

    does that make it right?

    Dunno. I can't know if he believes what he's saying. If he doesn't believe what he's saying then it's wrong. If he believes what he's saying then that's how democracy works. The Coalition set out their policies, Labor set out their policies and the electorate chooses.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 10:08 am
    Megalfar

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    If he believes what he's saying then that's how democracy works. The Coalition set out their policies, Labor set out their policies and the electorate chooses.

    That's not as easy as you say it is.

    Both major parties do not generally like each other polices, mainly on political grounds (i.e. Toe the Party Line).

    However, the public has given the approval of this project with the majority of 56% in recent polls, and even greater number would like to see 50mbps or higher at 85%.

    So in reality, what your writing, is complete nonsense in the sense that each party may have it's own policies, but the public and has for some time chosen the NBN.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 10:08 am
    CMOTDibbler

    Megalfar writes...

    So in reality, what your writing, is complete nonsense in the sense that each party may have it's own policies, but the public and has for some time chosen the NBN.

    That'll be why the latest Nielson poll shows a 58-42 2pp lead for the Coalition.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 10:19 am
    Megalfar

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    That'll be why the latest Nielson poll shows a 58-42 2pp lead for the Coalition.

    The polls are irractic atm (as shown by Newspoll at 56-44 this week), but the support for the NBN has been maintained.

    http://delimiter.com.au/2012/02/21/nbn-enjoys-prolonged-popular-support/
    http://delimiter.com.au/2012/06/28/nbn-85-of-australians-want-50mbps-or-higher/

    So when you stop plucking numbers from out of thin air, come back and talk :)

  • 2012-Jul-11, 10:19 am
    aARQ-vark

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    I can't know if he believes what he's saying.

    This is true CMOT its very difficult to judge the veracity of one's belief's!

    If he doesn't believe what he's saying then it's wrong.

    And this is the point here isn't it CMOT!

    How many times has his assertions been refuted by organisations such as the International Telecommunications Union, Vince Cerf founder of the Internet, Cisco, IBM, the global collective of the who's who of Telecommunications, Treasury, Academic Institutions, Luminaries of Industry, even the Liberal Opposition in Tasmania have refuted his opt-out model and Campbell Newman in Queensland has changed his stance entirely.

    Then there was the FUD campaign that was shot to pieces with respect to the Federal Opposition stating that Fixed Wireless was less than what those who were getting Privatised 4G in the city!

    That Wireless could replace FTTH!

    That his redundant version of FTTN is cheaper even the Kiwis have ditched that model into the deep six of the Tasman and gone FTTH.

    His complete failure to grasp reality with respect to Telstra eg
    �Yesterday�s announcement of ACCC approval for Telstra�s Structural Separation Undertaking (SSU) does not, contrary to the claims of Julia Gillard and Stephen Conroy, effect a structural separation of Telstra,� he wrote.

    His now discredited view that Australian's don't want or need 100Mbps internet

    His now discredited view that NBN pricing will be more expensive than what is currently available.

    His now discredited view that infrastructure competition is the best way to go � hasn't worked in America and certainly isn't working in NZ where their take up rate is less than 2 percent on their FTTH network not to mention being 4 times more expensive.

    Etc Etc Etc etc etc etc etc ad naseum ad infinitum.

    So the question you have to ask yourself here is how many times can you be wrong?

    Either the Oppositions Communications spokesperson simply doesn't have the wherewithall to understand the debate and should be replaced given his abject failure on the subject matter.

    Or that he is locked into a position by his own parties politics � which is to provide unsubstantiated, hysterical, prejudicial, and entirely inaccurate fear, uncertainty and doubt (FUD) with respect to the NBN

    A simpler way of putting it would simply to say that he is purposefully lying!

    This is the essence of what everyone should understand with respect to the Coalition's Non Policy in Communications.

    Cheers

  • 2012-Jul-11, 10:25 am
    Darwi

    Frood writes...

    Great thing there are people like us around to patiently explain the difference between dirt roads and sealed bitumen roads then, hey?

    Sure will, after we explain said difference between road types and they realise how rorted they will be under the Coalition's current policy.

    Thanks for pointing me towards this analogy. I was having a terrible time getting my point across to the wife (using too many technical terms that I don't really have a grip on myself). She had that glazed look in the eyes...

    Told her that FTTH is a sealed highway. Multilane and with safe dividers down the middle. You can drive your cars up and down as fast as you like with no problem (Autobahn)... and every house has it's own off ramp. And in the future, as cars get faster, there is no problem as the highway can cope.

    FTTN is a dirt road. In most cases it is single lane, ridiculously windy, and has lots of potholes. If you are lucky enough to live in certain areas the council (private companies) may come in and fill the pot holes, grade the road surface, and even make it double lanes in places... but it is still unsafe to drive much faster. This type of road can never be sealed.

    The wife was much happier with that.

    Somebody really needs to turn similar analogies into an ad / youtube thingy.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 10:25 am
    Sardonus

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    That'll be why the latest Nielson poll shows a 58-42 2pp lead for the Coalition.

    The polling, whilst it has been pretty consistent for a while, is not always so reliable 12 months out from an election. A lot can happen at that time, and the focus which is almost solely on the government will shift a lot more onto to coalition in the 6 weeks before the election. There are some serious policy issues that need to be addressed by the coalition given their statements to date about the NBN, the mining tax and the carbon pricing scheme that, if the media does its job properly, could come out with some uncomfortable answers.

    The other minor factor is that the 4 main states now have Liberal governments. There is always a small amount of bleed in dissatisfaction from state to federal issues, it takes the gloss of the brand so to speak.

  • delphi19

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    raoulrules writes...
    A common person will not know what the difference between fttn and ftth.

    I think that's Turnbull's plan.

    Agreed. But then, 'mudding the waters' and avoiding an informed debate on bases of which the electorate can make an informed decision seems to be Opposition's tactics (witness repeated rejection of advice offered by scientists, economists or other experts) on the whole range of policies.

    Trying to keep 'the masses in the dark' and ill-informed is a mark of autocratic regimes not democratic ones...

  • LagerFan

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    That'll be why the latest Nielson poll shows a 58-42 2pp lead for the Coalition.

    Mainly because of shock jocks and yellow journalism.

    I can't recall a single instance where the opposition have the upper hand in a current debate because the facts are on their side. Can anyone?

  • 2012-Jul-11, 11:42 am
    Sardonus

    delphi19 writes...

    But then, 'mudding the waters' and avoiding an informed debate on bases of which the electorate can make an informed decision seems to be Opposition's tactics (witness repeated rejection of advice offered by scientists, economists or other experts) on the whole range of policies.

    I don't think that's fair. All political parties fudge, obfuscate, prevaricate and outright lie. All of them, Liberal, Labor, Green. Nobody can claim the political moral high ground.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 11:42 am
    Murdoch

    LagerFan writes...

    I can't recall a single instance where the opposition have the upper hand in a current debate because the facts are on their side. Can anyone?

    Exactly.

    To anyone that supports the Liberal's current message (whatever that is), can you please point toward FACTUAL information, not conjecture, FACTUAL information, that the Coalition's plan is the best way forward for the NBN, even economically.

    Not technically, we all know that Labor's plan is technically superior in every way, but economically. "Faster and cheaper" makes for an interesting sound bite, but there's no economic credibility behind it, especially if you factor in long term benefits (which Raoul continue's to dodge by ignoring my calls for him to factor in an additional upgrade from FTTN to FTTH).

  • 2012-Jul-11, 11:49 am
    Frood

    Murdoch writes...

    which Raoul continue's to dodge by ignoring my calls for him to factor in an additional upgrade from FTTN to FTTH

    Why would Raoul bother to factor in the FTTN->FTTH "upgrade" (read: do-over) cost?

    It would completely blow the 'cheaper' bit of the 'faster and cheaper' soundbite out of the water and make FTTN economically unfeasible versus just going straight to FTTH.

    which Raoul continue's to dodge

    Start throwing wrenches instead of dodgeballs.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 11:49 am
    Murdoch

    Frood writes...

    It would completely blow the 'cheaper' bit of the 'faster and cheaper' soundbite out of the water and make FTTN economically unfeasible versus just going straight to FTTH.

    I agree. It's the dirty little open secret that's never acknowledged by the Coalition because they can't use their beloved sound bite any more.

    Start throwing wrenches instead of dodgeballs.

    No. Then I'd just join the rest of you in here. I prefer a little less brute force. It's more civil that way.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 11:57 am
    Frood

    Murdoch writes...

    I prefer a little less brute force. It's more civil that way.

    There wont be anything civil about FTTN.

    Please bring me by bone to gnaw on and my club to thrash around.

    On second thoughts, don't bother.

    I'm still longing to be a multi-cell organism.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 11:57 am
    redlineghost

    if fttn comes to pass i see amin of 60 years on it with nothing better than a 4-8/1 connection and copper replacement every 3-6 years..

    biggest issue with hfc length of coverage of node and upload speed and is a shared service

  • 2012-Jul-11, 12:06 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    Sardonus writes...

    The polling, whilst it has been pretty consistent for a while, is not always so reliable 12 months out from an election. etc

    Yeah, I agree. I'd normally look at Abbott's personal rating and think people will change their mind when it comes to doing the deed in the polling booth. With Gillard I'm not so sure. I know rusted-on Labor voters who can't stand her. It might not be a landslide but the Coalition doesn't need to shift a lot of votes from last time to win this time. The NBN is in the same amount of trouble from a narrow win as it is from a landslide.

    There are some serious policy issues that need to be addressed by the coalition given their statements to date about the NBN, the mining tax and the carbon pricing scheme that, if the media does its job properly, could come out with some uncomfortable answers.

    Haha ... I'll let Mr Creosote tell you about the media :)

    Whilst I agree with what you're saying. I don't think the NBN will be his biggest problem area.

    The other minor factor is that the 4 main states now have Liberal governments.

    We've taken a four year break in Victoria. We don't seem to have a government or an opposition.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 12:06 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    Frood writes...

    It would completely blow the 'cheaper' bit of the 'faster and cheaper' soundbite out of the water and make FTTN economically unfeasible versus just going straight to FTTH.

    This may or may not be the case. Where's the evidence?

  • 2012-Jul-11, 12:11 pm
    delphi19

    Sardonus writes...

    I don't think that's fair. All political parties fudge, obfuscate, prevaricate and outright lie.

    True. But it's not necessarily an existence of something but, rather, the extend of it which is the real problem � since I started following political discourse in Australia some 30 years ago, I've never witnessed such a reliance on 3-letter slogans and dumbing down of a debate by refusal of an expert advice in almost all, not just on the NBN, policy areas...

  • 2012-Jul-11, 12:11 pm
    Arkansas

    It is important to understand the Coalition's NBN strategy.

    The Coalition knows the next election is in the bag already.
    The Coalition knows the NBN is popular.

    Therefore the strategy is simply to say they support "very fast broadband" and to make it *appear* as if they support some *sort of NBN* (~65% FTTN) and hope that most voters wont understand the difference (93% FTTP).

    That's really all they have to do.

    And Turnbull is doing exactly that with his "faster cheaper" & "we wont destroy the NBN" mantra. Saying it over and over again, hoping that the (uneducated) masses believe it � assisted by the main stream media (News, 2GB etc).

  • 2012-Jul-11, 12:23 pm
    Graeme Here

    Arkansas writes...

    The Coalition knows the next election is in the bag already.

    More fool them for thinking this, not that I agree with your statement.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 12:23 pm
    Arkansas

    The more alarming aspect of the Coalition's broadband plans is the *disconnect* between what Turnbull is saying and what Hockey and Abbott are saying.

    Abbott has recently restated he doesn't believe we need the NBN.
    Hockey has recently restated support for wireless instead of the NBN.

    At the end of the day the latter two, once in government, will control the purse strings. And once the election is won, then all bets are off.

    Turnbull is effectively being undermined by his own colleagues.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 12:29 pm
    Frood

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    This may or may not be the case. Where's the evidence?

    Ground Zero:

    Mark Newton of Internode:

    University of Adelaide Professor Emeritus of Communications, Reg Coutts as part of the 2009 NBN Implementation Study:

    • Essentially to go down the FTTN road would mean something in the order of, greater than 50 per cent of the capital being put into digital cabinets in the suburbs," he said. "They then become an obstacle to the final solution� fibre-to-the-premise. Fibre-to-the-node was not a stepping stone to fibre-to-the-premise. In fact, if anything it would put it backwards.
    • http://www.computerworld.com.au/article/346022/nbn_about_ubiquity_just_uptake_speeds/
  • 2012-Jul-11, 12:29 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    Arkansas writes...

    Turnbull is effectively being undermined by his own colleagues.

    Yep. He must know this though. Do you think he will take a policy to the election that he knows Abbott/Hockey/et al won't implement? The general public perception of him seems to be better than that. It'd be a laugh if he quit.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 12:36 pm
    Graeme Here

    Arkansas writes...

    once in government

    There you go again!

  • 2012-Jul-11, 12:36 pm
    Sardonus

    Arkansas writes...

    It is important to understand the Coalition's NBN strategy.

    The Coalition knows the next election is in the bag already.

    The Coalition knows the NBN is popular.

    Of course, it's shrewd politics. Just like Campbell Newman's comments about solar feed-in tariffs before the elections and his actions afterwards. You never admit to scrapping or not implementing something that may be popular but against your ideology, you hedge and do it afterwards.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 12:36 pm
    Arkansas

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Do you think he will take a policy to the election that he knows Abbott/Hockey/et al won't implement?

    If I were in their shoes, I would just continue with the rather vague, but *sounds good* sound bites:

    "very fast broadband"
    "faster cheaper"
    "infrastructure competition"

    blah, blah etc

    and

    "subject to CBA"
    "subject to budget constraints"

    and not make any firm policy commitments at all.

    Based on Abbott's and Hockey's comments I am disinclined to believe much of what Turnbull is saying (not that he is saying anything specific anyway � other than an obligation to honour existing NBN contracts).

  • 2012-Jul-11, 12:36 pm
    Frood

    Arkansas writes...

    Abbott has recently restated he doesn't believe we need the NBN.
    Hockey has recently restated support for wireless instead of the NBN.

    The problem is, the Opposition leader is saying one thing, the Shadow Minister for Comms is appearing as if he is publically saying the opposite and the Shadow Treasurer is caught somewhere in the middle with a personal opinion that relies on the laws of physics not existing.

    If I was a hard-line Coalition voter (which I'm not because I'm moderate to the core) and was also passionate about technology (which I am), I would be seriously torn between wanting the Coalition in government and also wanting better broadband services for my family.

    I'm sure there are many people who, because of their die-hard allegiance to the conservative football team, are in this state of a constant mental tug-of-war.

    I have no sympathy for their inner struggle. It's their own fault for not being objective.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 12:45 pm
    Arkansas

    Graeme Here writes...

    There you go again!

    From my perspective, I think the Coalition will easily win the next election. I expect Labor will regain some ground, but nowhere near enough to win.

    And that's all I will say on the matter.
    (not interested in discussing politics in a broadband forum)

    If I am wrong then no-one will be as pleased as me to see the NBN continue under Labor.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 12:45 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    Frood writes...

    Ground Zero:

    You're going to have to help me out with that one. Which bit is supposed to prove the point?

    Mark Newton of Internode:

    The capex will undoubtedly be higher. Will the overall project cost be higher over (say) 30 years? Quite possibly, but where's the evidence.

    University of Adelaide Professor Emeritus of Communications, Reg Coutts as part of the 2009 NBN Implementation Study:

    No mention there of different funding and revenue patterns that might make up some/all the difference. Also, the comments came before the Telstra legislation and deal.

    I think a bigger issue is one Mark Newton raised, ie. once FTTN is in there will be no incentive for the network owner to upgrade it. It doesn't matter how much it costs if they don't do it.

    My point is, if this argument keeps getting thrown up without the financial modelling (like the NBNCo corporate plan) to back it up it will become a case of 'he said, she said'. Conroy will say the NBN is the way to go. Turnbull will say his policy (whatever it turns out to be) is the way to go. Neither will be able to prove anything without the numbers.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 1:31 pm
    Arkansas

    Frood writes...

    The problem is, the Opposition leader is saying one thing, the Shadow Minister for Comms is appearing as if he is publically saying the opposite

    Right.

    As I said above -

    • "I am disinclined to believe much of what Turnbull is saying"
    • "At the end of the day the latter two, once in government, will control the purse strings. And once the election is won, then all bets are off."

    Abbott seems to be talking about government spending for road infrastructure, not broadband.
    I expect the Coalition wants Telstra to build FTTN as its consistent with private investment.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 1:31 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    Arkansas writes...

    If I were in their shoes, I would just continue with the rather vague, but *sounds good* sound bites:

    That's what got them into trouble at the last election though. Mind you, the polls in August 2009 were ...
    On a two-party preferred basis, support for the ALP is 58% (down 2.5%), while support for the L-NP is 42% (up 2.5%). If a Federal Election were held now the Rudd Government would retain Government according to the latest face-to-face Morgan Poll conducted on the weekends of August 8/9 & 15/16, 2009.
    http://www.roymorgan.com/news/polls/2009/4409/

    Pretty much the opposite of where we are now and the Coalition nearly won that one.

    For me it's a question of Turnbull's integrity. Does he have any? Does he care? If he has and he does then he can't take a policy he knows to be a sham to the election.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 1:33 pm
    Frood

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Neither will be able to prove anything without the numbers.

    This is true.

    To do this, both would have to had started construction at the same time, built to completion and then operated their version of an NBN side-by-side.

    Yes, a ridiculous, and now impossible, proposition given that the current NBN is already well underway.

    Neither will be able to prove that their policy is better without 20-20 hindsight and end-game figures.

    The current NBN is, however, a lot further towards being able to provide hard evidence to support its case and is getting closer every single day.

    Also, each time an NBN Co Coporate Plan is released (now handed to government by the end of May each year), the numbers and estimates are more and more accurate the closer to the end of the rollout the project gets.

    And with every single day that the current NBN progresses and every single metre of fibre that is rolled out to premises, FTTN technology becomes more and more obsolete... FTTN = "I'm Melting! Melting! Oh, What A World, What A World!"

  • 2012-Jul-11, 1:33 pm
    Arkansas

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    That's what got them into trouble at the last election though.

    Sure, but I think you will agree that *this time* the result will be a lay down misere � hence no need to be too specific, when vague *sounds good* sound bites will win the day.

    Does he care?

    Will he even be Comms minister post election ?

  • 2012-Jul-11, 1:40 pm
    Frood

    Arkansas writes...

    Will he even be Comms minister post election ?

    I'm hoping not.

    I'd rather him as leader of the Coalition (regardless of who wins the election).

  • 2012-Jul-11, 1:40 pm
    rhom

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    This may or may not be the case. Where's the evidence?

    evidence? surely you would have to ask the coalition for actual costs and timeframes for their "policy" wouldnt you?

    the current nbn has a timeframe, it has install costs, it has running costs. until such time that the coalition provide numbers for their version i dont see why it requires evidence to negate them being used as a comparison.

    even if we give them the point that theirs will be 'faster' and 'cheaper' to install, i dont see anything about their running costs, or costs to the customers.

    is comparing a projects installation costs and timeframes a valid way to compare projects?

    does it show which is actually cheaper over their lifespans? after all, even if fttns installation costs are one third the price of ftth, its lifespan is one tenth, or less. should we ignore the fact that fttn will need to be upgraded at some point when ftth wont?

    seems a bit economical with the truth.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 1:40 pm
    Megalfar

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    This may or may not be the case. Where's the evidence?

    CMOT, Can we ask you serious question?

    Why haven't you researched this topic? And Secondly have the goals to ask where the evidence is?

    1. It's been noticed in this forum plenty of times.
    2. It's logical to skip FTTN and go FTTH as a cost effective rollout.
    3. Would you put Neighborhoods through hell of upgrading networks twice in someone's lifetime?
    4. The benefit of FTTN is very little vs the cost it.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 1:40 pm
    Mike K

    raoulrules writes...

    Mr Turnbull' s job is to simply neutralise the NBN so that Mr Abbott can concentrate on the main issues.

    rr, I can hardly believe I am saying this, but you've hit the nail on the head.

    That is exactly what Tony wants him to do. He doesn't have a detailed broadband policy and he doesn't want one. He just wants this scary broad brand thing to go away so he can talk about the boats and the carbon tax.

    However, this shouldn't be his job...

  • 2012-Jul-11, 1:42 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    Frood writes...

    To do this, both would have to had started construction at the same time, built to completion and then operated their version of an NBN side-by-side.

    Nope. Both would have to do something like the NBNCo's corporate plan. For the NBNCo that will be their corporate plan at the time of the election. For the Coalition that would be from when they take over and would have to include the cost of transition.

    We have (or will have) the evidence from the NBNCo. We have no evidence that I have seen to prove the Coalition's alternative is cheaper, as they claim, or more expensive, as people here claim, over the life of the project (say 30 years). I consider both to be just conflicting opinions.

    It is up to the Coalition to demonstrate their policy is faster and cheaper than the NBN. I'm sure Conroy will make lots of noise if they don't. Hopefully there will be another Press Club debate where Turnbull can be skewered if he doesn't have the answers. If Conroy doesn't get him Ludlam will.

    edit:

    rhom writes...

    evidence? surely you would have to ask the coalition for actual costs and timeframes for their "policy" wouldnt you?

    Yep. See above.

    is comparing a projects installation costs and timeframes a valid way to compare projects?

    Nope.

    does it show which is actually cheaper over their lifespans?

    That's what it needs to show to be any sort of valid comparison. The Coalition claim they will do a CBA which will show this. Will they do it? Will we get to see it? Who knows.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 1:42 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    Arkansas writes...

    Sure, but I think you will agree that *this time* the result will be a lay down misere � hence no need to be too specific, when vague *sounds good* sound bites will win the day.

    I think that depends on whether people take a long, hard look at the Coalition before voting them in. There's a fair chance enough people are so sick of Gillard and this government that they won't bother. I don't want to agree but I might have to.

    Will he even be Comms minister post election ?

    Where else will they put him? Who would they shift to make way? The only way I can see for him to go is down.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 1:56 pm
    aARQ-vark
    this post was edited

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    I think that depends on whether people take a long, hard look at the Coalition before voting them in. There's a fair chance enough people are so sick of Gillard and this government that they won't bother

    I wouldn't sweat it CMOT the FUD campaign and lies provided by the Opposition over the term of the Parliament will all come home to roost at the next election and obviously they are going to get an absolute pasting with respect to Australia's favourite piece of infrastructure that now is a reality even given the Opposition's best attempts to demolish it!

    Further they are going are going to take huge hits with articles like this making a complete mockery of their position and ability to govern.

    Coalition's NBN criticisms 'absurd' says Phil Ruthven
    Leading futurist and social commentator, Phil Ruthven, has branded as "absurd" any suggestions that the NBN is a huge and wasteful expense.

    "The fact is that the existing sunk cost of all telecommunications in Australia is currently $70 billion, much of it antiquated," Ruthven � chairman and founder of IBISWorld � says in the July issue of the IBISWorld newsletter.

    "At some $36�$37 billion over seven years, or $5 billion per annum average, the NBN investment amounts to just depreciation allowance spending on that $70 billion � hardly excessive or over the top," he argues.

    Nor is he concerned about any wastage during the project. "In the process, the ancient copper wire gets replaced by new age telecommunications.

    http://www.itwire.com/it-policy-news/govenrment-tech-policy/55643-coalitions-nbn-criticisms-absurd-says-phil-ruthven

    Of course Australians could vote to keep their redundant non functional copper that simply doesn't deliver!

    Then again I have my doubts on that entirely and certainly the impact to Regional and Remote Australia who will be left like ;;;;;;;s swinging in the wind to use the vernacular hoeing the road back to the past and facing huge cost increases is something yet to be discussed in the public debate.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 1:56 pm
    Arkansas

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    I don't want to agree but I might have to.

    Thought so

    Where else will they put him?

    He will go where Abbott tells him to go.
    (or else ...... the backbench)

  • 2012-Jul-11, 2:37 pm
    Arkansas

    Mike K writes...

    That is exactly what Tony wants him to do. He doesn't have a detailed broadband policy and he doesn't want one. He just wants this scary broad brand thing to go away so he can talk about the boats and the carbon tax.

    Pretty much.

    In the meantime expect more rather vague, but *sounds good* sound bites

    "very fast broadband"
    "faster cheaper"
    "infrastructure competition"

    blah, blah etc

  • 2012-Jul-11, 2:37 pm
    Timbel

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Where else will they put him? Who would they shift to make way? The only way I can see for him to go is down.

    Thats the problem with the Coalitions position at this time. You have multiple influential people saying contradicting things.

    Malcolm Turnbull � FTTN
    Joe Hockey � 4G
    Tony Abbott � Nothing/FTTN/4G depends when you catch him.

    Any policy needs party support, or at least the support of these people, so discerning the true policy is almost impossible.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 4:32 pm
    Genetic Modified Zealot

    Timbel writes...

    Thats the problem with the Coalitions position at this time. You have multiple influential people saying contradicting things.

    Opposition parties do not release detailed policies a year out from an election.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 4:32 pm
    Timbel

    raoulrules writes...

    Opposition parties do not release detailed policies a year out from an election.

    Perhaps but the inconsistency is puzzling. Also look at their asylum seeker policy and Carbon policy, if it is convenient for them they will release a policy.

  • Genetic Modified Zealot

    Timbel writes...

    Perhaps but the inconsistency is puzzling.

    The wider general public would not know what FTTH/FTTN/HFC is.

    Reading the online press the Coalition are pinpointing more effort on other areas.

    As for what you said on asylum seekers they are veering towards Howard policy, carbon policy it's abolish it and da. These two are main issues not broadband.

  • aARQ-vark

    raoulrules writes...

    Opposition parties do not release detailed policies a year out from an election.

    Given they haven't had a clue since their last debacle eg selling Telstra off we're not waiting with baited breath for the details from someone who doesn't know what peak speed is nor his protege a bloke who can't spot a fake email!

    Cheers

  • 2012-Jul-11, 4:58 pm
    Tailgator
    this post was edited

    raoulrules writes...

    The wider general public would not know what FTTH/FTTN/HFC is.

    Perhaps not. But as the roll out progresses, word of mouth spreads etc, it will become more widely known.

    It's also worth noting that the LP devoted 3-4 pages to the issue in their 'Speaking Notes'. They obviously recognise the potential for it to become a real problem for them.

    And as you have acknowledged, the LP are only trying to diffuse the issue.
    Hang on .... isn't that what you are trying to do .... downplay it's importance?
    Ohhhh dear.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 4:58 pm
    DenisPC9

    raoulrules writes...

    The $27.5 billion govt equity injection that is treated like an interest free loan by the nbn.

    Commonwealth Treasury does NOT hand out interest free moneys. Interest may be deferred but Shylock always gets his pound of flesh.

    Stop trolling mate.

    You've been flushed out so many times that your continued posts are getting embarrassing.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 7:59 pm
    texmex

    raoulrules writes...

    We can never know what the independents private intentions are, they could say one thing in front of cameras as a decoy.

    Well, we could make an informed guess about them, and it might include doing things that will enhance and prolong their lucrative positions.

    A few on this forum say $36 Billion is nothing.

    If you are going to quote people in relation to the coalition NBN position, you should quote what they actually said and not what you have just rewritten.

    They have in fact noted that the cost of NBN will be fully repaid from operating charges, and it is therefore wrong to portray it as 'a $36B cost to government.' This has been explained countless times.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 7:59 pm
    Sir Moi of Aus

    DenisPC9 writes...

    You've been flushed out so many times that your continued posts are getting embarrassing.

    Ah, but he plays the part so well :)

  • 2012-Jul-11, 8:00 pm
    DenisPC9

    Arkansas writes...

    Turnbull is effectively being undermined by his own colleagues.

    That's standard a Political ploy. Menzies used to regularly post serious leadership threats OS as Ambassadors. Bill Hayden was promised DFAt then the GG if he stood aside for Bob Hawke back in the early 1980s.

    He is a threat to Abbott, so Abbott has wedged him with the Comms Shadow Px, knowing full well that what Malcolm has to spruik goes against both World's Best Practice and Malcolm's own thoughts and experiences.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 8:00 pm
    redlineghost
    this post was edited

    fttn was a practical solution back in 1990-95 as an upgrade path, though now in 2012 the reality is fttn is to late to be of any use the reality is we need 1-25gb as a starting point now, as great as the current competing techs are today, reality is that fttn and copper based tech is all but dead..

    the longer we keep it in operation we end up paying more to keep it in service, going the fttn route now is a pointless execise for te simple fact we need higher speed now not in 30 years (near end indicator) and another 60-100 years (far end indecator) of service life with line replacements ever 3-5 years..

    reality is that fttn has be outdated for atleast 10-15 years, so to start a demarcation of deployment of fttn now is a pure waste of money for the simple fact within the next 10 year you would need to rip it out install ftth causing a double cost in deployment..

    fttn turns into a quick fix methodology to repair an ailing network that should been started to be converted from the late 1970's onwards..

    looking where I live at present fttn may improve my speed though not to the point point of it being a usable connection medium, adsl/vdsl/docsis 3 wouldn't improve uploads anytime soon making these methods of connection kind of redundant, looking at 3g/4g-wimax, wimax (700mhz) will be seen as an over subscribed medium making what ever benefits early adopters see being a moot point, sat in general is a last ditch effort though I know they currently base a 200,000 user base from a report when opel was still running in the early-mid 1990's which doesn't take into account of a 10-20% growth within this medium over the last 20 or years, making which every bird they stick in sky a moot point as you have the cost of migration to the newer service to contend with..

    looking at the outset the virgin techs out being deployed within wireless and sat domain, it becomes a viability cost vs usable cost to the consumer, which by the looks of it is going to be a white elephant for usable deployment..

    when you start to look at our home networks and what you may run on them the option of wireless or sat in general will end a limited use option as a backhaul medium...

  • 2012-Jul-11, 8:36 pm
    DenisPC9

    Arkansas writes...

    From my perspective, I think the Coalition will easily win the next election. I expect Labor will regain some ground, but nowhere near enough to win.

    Think Labor and 1993, they and everyone else knew it was theirs to lose.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 8:36 pm
    ungulate
    this post was edited

    DenisPC9 writes...

    He is a threat to Abbott, so Abbott has wedged him with the Comms Shadow Px, knowing full well that what Malcolm has to spruik goes against both World's Best Practice and Malcolm's own thoughts and experiences.

    Have you considered the possibility that Turnbull does know better (about FTTN etc) and is artfully dissembling?

    Have you considered that the one thing Turnbull might be sincere about is his belief in the market?

    Put the two together. Turnbull would be very happy to flog off NBNco and all the talk about "suitable alternate technologies" is high class deception.

  • Cabidas 22222

    fttn was a practical solution back in 1990-95 as an upgrade path, though now in 2012 the reality is fttn is to late to be of any use the reality is we need 1-25gb as a starting point now, as great as the current competing techs are today, reality is that fttn and copper based tech is all but dead..

    +1

  • DenisPC9

    ungulate writes...

    Put the two together. Turnbull would be very happy to flog off NBNco and all the talk about "suitable alternate technologies" is high class deception.

    Possibly but being both an ex lawyer and merchant banker, he knows that path is pretty well closed. There are too many documents and $ involved. Not to mention the almighty furore that would be raised both locally and overseas concerning the abrogation of parliamentary norms, legal precedences, contract law and probably lots more than I cannot even imagine.

    Don't forget that there is tremendous interest from both Govts and corporates overseas as to what we are doing.

    All politicians know that they can spruik a certain amount of crap as its for local consumption only, everyone recognises that. But once it gets past a certain point, global opinion starts to count. And that can play ducks and drakes with your economy and currency.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 8:39 pm
    redlineghost

    problem is ungalate that the libs in general need realize that thier rose coloured glasses fttn option is to old to deploy now making a bare necessity that ftth is deployed now given the speed requirmetn we need today not in 30-50 years time..

    their imagination vs the reality what we need now is so dumbfounded it will take anything they deploy is going to be dead in the water within 10 years...

    the fttn option only had a shelf life of 20-25 years before it had to be replaced with something better, reality dictates so by 2015-2020 ftth would be the common option making fttn obsolete to start deploying as the cost to goto ftth at a later stage only ends costing us more in the long run..

    by the the end of 2015 they would be need to look at migration to ftth at some point as fttn just doesn't have the guts past 1.5km vs the reality of 2-5 mile node area coverage..

    making the option of fttn a nighmare to deploy...

  • 2012-Jul-11, 8:39 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    How is this for the coalition position:

    "We will remove the carbon tax"
    Yes, and use taxpayers money to pay big business. A TAXpayer funded scheme...

    But hang on, how are you going to fund it?
    Didn't about a million people just get tax cuts paid from said tax?
    Are you going to make them give all that money back?
    Surely nothing can happen until the fiscal year after the next election?
    That would make it July 2014.
    But isn't the ETS that has bipartisan support supposed to come into effect July 2015, just 1 year later?
    Hmmmmm.....

    Are you sure you are going to repeal the carbon tax Tony?

    http://www.abc.net.au/tv/qanda/txt/s3532634.htm

    Back on thread:

    "We will keep the parts of the NBN rolled out but re-negotiate contracts to make it cheaper and rolled out faster"

    But hang on...
    How long is it going to take to re-negotiate any contracts?
    But Tasmaina and Rural Australia are already set to receive between 12-100mbps internet speeds by 2015. Do you think local councils will just except lower speeds when they could easily have faster speeds for the same price?
    Surely, 6-12months after a (August?) 2013 election most of these contracts will already have been initiated?

    Do you think councils signed up in the next 12 months equally would just stand aside and say 'well we were going to get 100/40mbps, ok, we'll settle for 'upto' 80'?
    How long is it going to take to investigate, cost, trial, and implement these 'nodes' that you are so sure are 'adequate'?
    Surely you can't just say 'a node will go there'? Surely investigation into their location is going to take time?

    So if you cant really cancel the current round of contracts, and any new ones released in the next 12 months before the election, you can't cancel any of the roll out until 2016 (2015+1 year), or at the very earliest 2015?
    Isn't 2015 about halfway through the roll out of the NBN?

    You can't do anything to 2015 Tony!

    hmmmmm.

  • Frood

    cabidas writes...

    You can't do anything to 2015 Tony!

    If he is, in fact, elected in 2013, early 2015 is also, coincidently, the first chance he'll get (for a number of reasons) to actually use his long time threat of calling a double-dissolution.

    That would mean calling an election halfway through a term of parliament that he would have won... Is he really willing to risk the last half a term?

    Add that to the potential for inaction on promises...

  • ungulate

    cabidas writes...

    Are you sure you are going to repeal the carbon tax Tony?

    The common (and on topic) link is the Senate. Tony can't pull a DD election until 2015 for a bunch of procedural and constitutional reasons.

    By then the carbon pricing scheme will be irreversible. Nor can the mining tax be rescinded without the Senate.

    And the NBN is in a similar situation. Tony can't legislate.

    So what he's left with is very slow and ugly (and politically costly) process if he dared to "redesign" the NBN under the badge of NBNco.

    And even what I suggest, which is they will simply direct NBNco to in one way or another grant ownership/control to Telstra. Even that is fraught with difficulty and can't happen in less than a year or two.

    You know, its entirely possible that laziness/ineptitude will win the day. Tony might go totally feral (if its possible to go even further feral than he is) and wage war through the shock jocks at Greens/Labor Senators. But if he does chances are there will be a bunch of things that get neglected.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 8:43 pm
    ungulate

    Frood writes...

    Add that to the potential for inaction on promises...

    Agreed. Its politically bad judgement. By 2015, especially if NBNco can continue with its build, if the Libs then can't backflip, Labor will be in an even stronger position with a policy even more people clearly understand is right.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 8:43 pm
    ungulate

    Of course, here's the fun part. Several percent of the gap in the polls currently represents former Labor voters who nevertheless are staunch climate deniers (trust me, I have a few in my family too � all from QLD strangely). These people are led by the emotional response that goes "it can't be us.. it cant be!".

    Its a big demographic to capture so cleanly as Tony has. Problem is, these people are so feral that if Tony were to back peddle, they's actually turn against him. Or to put it succinctly, Tony has jumped the climate denial shark.

    Now, imagine after an election, promising to "axe the tax", the Senate blocks him.

    Its gonna be fun.. in a schadenfreude kind of way..

  • 2012-Jul-11, 8:52 pm
    seven_tech

    Thing that worries me is that Tony DOESN'T actually have a plan.

    From what I've seen since the 2010 election, he is treating Labor like the bully that took his toy and the Australian people like the stupid and thick big brother who will smack the bully and give it back to Tony, regardless of if Tony stabbed him with a fork first.

    I haven't seen anything from the man that warrants an actual attitude of "I can lead Australia better" just "I deserve to be PM" or "Labor doesn't deserve to be running the country". It's almost as if he believes it's his God given right to be PM.

    If this is the case.....dear sweet scientologist alien gods he could royally flap up the state of telecommunications in this country worse than it is now. Can you imagine what would happen if he sold off a 30% FTTH network to Telstra (et al)?? He certainly wouldn't give any money to build the FTTN- he doesn't think Australia needs any better broadband. I doubt he knows what it is at home. His kids probably deal with it.

    Seriously, this guy at the head of the government could do some serious damage, simply because he believes he's right! Cancel the NBN "But it's more expensive than to let it fini..." DON'T CARE CANCEL IT! Rollback the Carbon Tax "But it'll leave a budget blackhole and it'll be off the books next yea...." DON'T CARE BLAME LABOR! Repeal the mining tax "But it'll leave a budget blackhole AND annoy the miners even mor...." DON'T CARE GET RID OF IT!

    I've not seen any rational debate on these things. Or asylum seekers. And the NBN FUD just proves to me he's not interested in what is best for the long term prosperity of the country. He's interested in what buys votes to get him in power. Now, yes, that could be said of any politician at one time or another. But if he's got no policy, why oh WHY is he arrogant enough to think that's ok, we'll vote for him anyway?

    Oh, that's right, because alot will...../epic all-time facepalm

  • 2012-Jul-11, 8:52 pm
    cam067

    seven_tech writes...

    Seriously, this guy at the head of the government could do some serious damage

    ...as opposed to the current government ?

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:12 pm
    aliali

    seven_tech writes...

    I haven't seen anything from the man that warrants an actual attitude of "I can lead Australia better" just "I deserve to be PM" or "Labor doesn't deserve to be running the country". It's almost as if he believes it's his God given right to be PM.

    That about sums up most Liberals attitude dude. A lot of them seem to have the "born to rule" mentality.

    But if he's got no policy, why oh WHY is he arrogant enough to think that's ok, we'll vote for him anyway?

    Oh, that's right, because alot will...../epic all-time facepalm

    Yep unfortunately a large chunk of the AU population just slavishly believe all the bad things about the ALP and none of the good things.
    Not surprising really when the "free, open and unbiased" media as got such a hardon for destroying Labor, no matter what.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:12 pm
    Bugil

    cam067 writes...

    ...as opposed to the current government ?

    Yep.
    Oh, and care to mention are the Labor ones?

    and don't reel out the hoary old BER, etc.

    #2713

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:22 pm
    Megalfar

    cam067 writes...

    ...as opposed to the current government ?

    Seems we still Labor haters on these threads, when NBN isn't built by the government � just like alot of their polices are not rolled out by themselves, it is the same deal when/if a Coalition Goverment comes in.

    Infact it will be alot worse because the Coalition Goverment are wanting the private sector to fully take over the Broadband policy, which will effectively give control to the Private sector allowing lots of delays and stricter contracts on their side.

    Which will result in = no rollout in their first 4 years of Goverment.

    Labor made the right choice in making the NBN a GBE Business.

  • 2012-Jul-11, 9:22 pm
    cam067

    Bugil writes...

    Oh, and care to mention are the Labor ones?

    and don't reel out the hoary old BER, etc.

    Your political leanings are obviously left of centre and mine right of centre. Doesn't make you more right than me. If you think that the current government is perfect then you will vote for them, I wont.

    If you can let me know which mistakes I think the government have made that you don't want me to reel out it would be appreciated.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:28 am
    cam067

    Megalfar writes...

    Seems we still Labor haters on these threads

    ...only coalition haters allowed ?

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:28 am
    Megalfar

    cam067 writes...

    only coalition haters allowed ?

    You said as opposed to current government.

    Currrent = Labor Minority + Greens + Independents.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:39 am
    Frood

    cam067 writes...

    If you think that the current government is perfect then you will vote for them, I wont.

    I don't think the current government is perfect.

    I don't think the Greens are perfect.
    I don't think the Independents are perfect.
    I don't think the National Party is perfect.
    I certainly don't think the Labor Party is perfect.
    I certainly don't think the Liberal Party is perfect.

    I do think that the Labor Party's current policy on broadband is the most superior and forward-thinking policy of any of the parties listed above, and I especially think that it is more superior and forward-thinking than the current Liberal/National Coalition policy on broadband.

    As such, the tick in the "Broadband Policy" checkbox on my mental voting preference sheet currently sits in Labor's column.

    If either Labor's or the Coalition's policies on broadband changes, then I'll definitely be re-assessing my position.

    I don't favour either the left or right side of politics so I have complete freedom of thought and a clear conscience on these matters ;)

    Also, any comments about any other policies are off-topic.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:39 am
    Cabidas 22222

    cam067 writes...

    Your political leanings are obviously left of centre and mine right of centre. Doesn't make you more right than me. If you think that the current government is perfect then you will vote for them, I wont.

    If you can let me know which mistakes I think the government have made that you don't want me to reel out it would be appreciated.

    Being a traditional NLP voter I have to say this:

    The BER and Pink Batts were rolled out by Rudd. Rudd made sure everything went across his desk and that he had the final say. This is why he was ousted.
    Because HE made bad decisions and wouldn't listen to his party.

    The Labor party is lead by Julia Gillard with alot more support from the party as a whole.

    The Carbon Tax will be an ETS by 2015. Labor or Liberal. So this one is null and void.

    Boat people: If you watched QandA on Monday night you will see both sides to a well debated argument (Without Tony Abbot).

    http://www.abc.net.au/tv/qanda/txt/s3537320.htm

    Broadband: Liberals don't have a plan, they are just shouting Faster, Cheaper.
    But still aren't in touch with realities.

    Why, being a Liberal voter, would I vote for a party who from 1996 to 2007 had the cash to invest in a national broadband network, But didn't? Even though it was brought to the attention of the nation before then?

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:55 am
    Murdoch
    this post was edited

    I have a question for all of those people out there supporting the Coalition's .... errr .... "solution".

    If you are intending to vote for the Coalition, ask yourself, what exactly are you voting for? At the moment the Coalition are saying "different", "CBA", "NBN objective". Fine for them to say, but what exactly are the Coalition GOING TO DO? I can understand somebody voting against Labor's plan because they don't agree with it, but if you're choosing to vote for the Coalition, then apply the same damn intelligence you are using on Labor against the Coalition's rhetoric.

    Pro-NBN supporters have been called in the course of the NBN project, zealots, rabid, fanatical, the faithful, stooges, shills and so on (and before the pro-Libs in here start mouthing off, I am aware that you have been called the same), but if you, as a voter for the Coalition, are going to label them as such, then to avoid placing yourself on the other extreme, apply your grey matter and honestly appraise the Coalition's plan (if you can label it as a plan, I simply cannot personally at this stage).

    Then you may realise that the same labels being thrown at pro-NBN people can be equally applied to yourself. At the moment, as a Coalition supporter, you are voting for one of two ideas .... a flat "No", or "Not this way". There's nothing wrong with that, but if you cannot follow that thinking up with an alternative, then all your vote for the Coalition is, is a free pass for them to do whatever they want. In my opinion, that's not holding politicians to account consistently, and you are aiding and abetting the erosion of your own democracy. Take charge and frickin' defend it, otherwise you're just the plaything that each political party wants.

    Take off your ideaological blinkers, apply your intellect, and actually examine what your team is committing to. At the moment, all you've got is faith, nothing else. When it comes to politicians, that's just as bad as Labor supporters blindly supporting their team.

    Excuse the rant guys, I guess what I'm trying to say (in relation to the Coalition's plan, as it is on topic for this thread) is if you're actually going to support it, think, and define to yourself, exactly what you're supporting. Forget about what you're NOT supporting (Labor's plan), but what are you SUPPORTING by voting for the Coalition next election?

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:55 am
    Megalfar

    cabidas writes...

    Why, being a Liberal voter, would I vote for a party who from 1996 to 2007 had the cash to invest in a national broadband network, But didn't? Even though it was brought to the attention of the nation before then?

    Exactly, 100%.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:04 am
    Cabidas 22222

    Murdoch writes...

    If you are intending to vote for the Coalition, ask yourself, what exactly are you voting for?

    +1

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:04 am
    dJOS

    cam067 writes...

    ...only coalition haters allowed ?

    No, although I do hate Tony Abbott, that snake has brought australian politics down below the gutter to the sewer with his constant barrage of lies and complicit mates in "big media"!

    If Malcolm was able to remove TA from the leadership and made a clear commitment that he would continue the NBN as is (no weasel phrases allowed!), I would vote Liberal again but unless both of those things happen I'll stick with Labor � The NBN is too important to this countries future to screw up with half a$$ed obsolete solutions!

  • CMOTDibbler

    aliali writes...

    Yep unfortunately a large chunk of the AU population just slavishly believe all the bad things about the ALP and none of the good things.

    A large chunk of the AU population believe the Howard government left a budget surplus when they actually left a structural deficit. The effects of the GFC were made worse by the actions of the Howard government. Amazingly, the Coalition are thought to be the better economic managers. Why?

    Fortunately with broadband Abbott, Hockey and the Liberal party web site are making very clear what they think. They are going to do what they did last time they were in power. Nothing.

    It's clear Turnbull is being hung out to dry by his party. He was starting to put together what could have been a credible (though unpopular here) policy to take to the next election. All that has been undone by his alleged colleagues. If he had any integrity he'd quit.

  • Sardonus

    cabidas writes...

    Why, being a Liberal voter, would I vote for a party who from 1996 to 2007 had the cash to invest in a national broadband network, But didn't? Even though it was brought to the attention of the nation before then?

    In that case, I'd have to ask why you're a Liberal voter. The Liberal party believes that government cannot provide goods and services as efficiently as the private sector, accordingly it doesn't believe in spending on things like this. The Liberal party believes in cutting taxes so people have more money in their pockets so they can spend that money directly on the things they want, so if they want fibre to the home they can pay the private sector to do it for them. This is why the Liberal party was and still is opposed to Medicare. As a Liberal voter, you simply cannot complain about them being opposed to a big government project like the NBN, it's in fundamental conflict with founding Liberal party ideology. You can't criticise the Liberal party for at least trying to be true to its basic philosophy in the same way as you can't blame the Greens for sticking to their opposition to offshore processing of refugees.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:14 am
    Cabidas 22222

    Sardonus writes...

    In that case, I'd have to ask why you're a Liberal voter.

    I'm not. That's just the point. I was. This being past tense.

    Although I do understand (most of) the things that come with capitalism, I also understand the mentality behind socialism.

    They are the opposite ends of the same spectrum.

    The truth, it seems lies somewhere in the middle.

    You can be far right or be far left, and that is about as helpfull as being far fat and far skinny.

    For most of us, we understand that a little balance goes along way.

    But alas, this is off topic...

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:14 am
    Tailgator
    this post was edited

    Tony Abbott:
    We think there are much better ways of getting better broadband. Precise details will depend on what we find should there be a change of govt but we know that markets work better than govt monopolies and that a mix of technologies makes more sense than digging up every street for fibre to places that don't need it, want it or can afford to pay much, much more for it

    Abbott's live chat blog thingy.
    http://www.adelaidenow.com.au/news/national/tony-abbott-says-carbon-tax-just-bad-socialism/story-fndo1sdf-1226423837507

    Not much FUD. Just plain BS and a lot of it.

    Edit: And it's worth following the live chat, if only to read the 'Dorothy Dixer's' being posted.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:23 am
    CMOTDibbler

    Murdoch writes...

    If you are intending to vote for the Coalition, ask yourself, what exactly are you voting for?

    A recent survey (April iirc) showed 42% of people who intend to vote for the Coalition support the NBN, as opposed to 40% who are against the NBN. People who are intending to vote for the Coalition are not doing it because of their broadband policy. A narrow majority are intending to do it despite their broadband policy. You have to keep broadband policy in perspective.

    Take off your ideaological blinkers, apply your intellect, and actually examine what your team is committing to.

    It's not my team but ... trying to discern Coalition policy from what is being said by them and others and then discussing that just leads to a lot of abuse. This thread is about the Coalition's approach to an/the NBN. This is where we should do what you say (and I agree with you) but that requires everyone to take off their blinkers, apply their intellect and examine what's being said.

    Forget about what you're NOT supporting (Labor's plan), but what are you SUPPORTING by voting for the Coalition next election?

    Discussing the Coalition's plan (or lack of it) is not the same as supporting it. Nor is it the same as not supporting Labor's plan. It's a bloody discussion forum fcs.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:23 am
    Murdoch

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    A narrow majority are intending to do it despite their broadband policy. You have to keep broadband policy in perspective.

    I have CMOT, by specifically addressing their broadband policy as per the title of this thread. My post could be equally applied to other policies of each party, but the title of this thread is the Coalition NBN position. Comparing other polices in my post was not my intention. I took that into account before I posted.

    trying to discern Coalition policy from what is being said by them and others and then discussing that just leads to a lot of abuse. This thread is about the Coalition's approach to an/the NBN. This is where we should do what you say (and I agree with you) but that requires everyone to take off their blinkers, apply their intellect and examine what's being said.

    That's right. There's a little too much abuse from those for the NBN in here at this time, and while I might have the same issue with your style that Ungulate does (nitpicking) I am refusing to get into a sharpshooting match here. Nailing people via thinly veiled abuse for using what could be perceived as incorrect wording (on both sides) is not constructive, I hope everyone in here remembers that. If you're going to question someone's wording, question .... don't attack.

    Discussing the Coalition's plan (or lack of it) is not the same as supporting it. Nor is it the same as not supporting Labor's plan.

    I never said it was CMOT. However given the title of this thread is specifically about the Coalition's NBN position, you should understand that I was speaking specifically to those people who support the Coalition's NBN "plan" in here. If that's you, then yes, I'm talking to you. If that's not you, then the post wasn't meant for you. However the post does belong in this thread.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:35 am
    jwbam

    Tailgator writes...

    Tony Abbott:

    we know that markets work better than govt monopolies and that a mix of technologies makes more sense than digging up every street for fibre to places that don't need it, want it or can afford to pay much, much more for it

    Vote Liberal to stop fibre and stick with mid-20th century technology.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:35 am
    Frood

    Another contract signed!

    Another roadblock standing in the way of the Coalition stopping the NBN juggernaut!

    http://www.nbnco.com.au/news-and-events/news/satellite-ground-equipment-contract.html

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:13 am
    CMOTDibbler

    Murdoch writes...

    I have CMOT ...

    I can understand somebody voting against Labor's plan because they don't agree with it, but if you're choosing to vote for the Coalition, then apply the same damn intelligence you are using on Labor against the Coalition's rhetoric.

    I don't think so. People who are intending to vote for the Coalition are not necessarily against Labor's NBN plan. They have "used the same damn intelligence" and decided that overall the Coalition is the better option. In 42% of cases that's despite Labor's plan.

    However given the title of this thread is specifically about the Coalition's NBN position, you should understand that I was speaking specifically to those people who support the Coalition's NBN "plan" in here.

    I think this bit ...
    If you are intending to vote for the Coalition, ask yourself, what exactly are you voting for?
    ... might have led me to think otherwise. Voting for the Coalition is not the same as supporting their plan or opposing Labor's. If we're just discussing the Coalition's 'plan' then a posters voting intention should be irrelevant.

    I'm not sure what triggered your rant. If you want to know what people like about the Coalition's 'plan' then ask them. If you want to know why people think the Coalition's approach is better than Labor's then ask them. Just don't (not you) abuse them when they answer. Oh ... and consider there might be things to like and dislike in both plans. Disliking one aspect of either plan does not indicate overall support for either plan.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:13 am
    Murdoch
    this post was edited

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    I don't think so. People who are intending to vote for the Coalition are not necessarily against Labor's NBN plan. They have "used the same damn intelligence" and decided that overall the Coalition is the better option. In 42% of cases that's despite Labor's plan.

    On the contrary, they haven't "used the same damn intelligence". If they had, they'd have realised that there is no concete Coalition plan, and, as I previously stated, their basing their vote on faith that the Coalition will do "something". Even before Labor won the election when the NBN was first conceived, they had more than that to go on. What is the Coalition's vision for broadband in this country? "No"? "Not this way"?

    Voting for the Coalition is not the same as supporting their plan or opposing Labor's. If we're just discussing the Coalition's 'plan' then a posters voting intention should be irrelevant.

    With all due respect CMOT, that's rubbish. A reader of this thread who intends to vote Coalition at this time based on their current broadband plan, and my challenge to them to examine this plan using the same critical depth of Labor's current NBN, is VERY relevent for this thread.

    I'm not sure what triggered your rant.

    That the Coalition don't have a concrete NBN strategy, and the only things you can quote them on are so clouded in ambiguity that they could have easily said they'll put in polished execrement as broadband next election and still fulfilled their "promise".

    If you want to know what people like about the Coalition's 'plan' then ask them.

    I'm not asking about what they like. There's nothing to like, or dislike, at this point, because there is no concrete plan for the Coalition. I'm challenging them (Coalition voters) that if they agree with the Coalition's "policy" and outlook on the current NBN (whatever that is) at this point in time, and plan to vote for the Coalition, then they also need to apply the same criticism to what the Coalition will actually implement. Because if they do so honestly, at this point in time, they'll come up short. At that point, they may want to reevalutate what it is they are actually voting for, whether that's Labor, or another party. This is what I'm illustrating.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:16 am
    U T C

    Murdoch writes...

    the Coalition's "policy" and outlook on the current NBN (whatever that is)

    Well im no Noob, but im blowed if i know what it is.. Joe Public would have even less a clue..

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:16 am
    Cabidas 22222

    That the Coalition don't have a concrete NBN strategy

    And this is the truth as far as the electorate is concerned.

    I might add that behind closed doors they do have a strategy for NBN, but like poker, their aim is to 'win', so they are keeping their cards close to their chest.

    It's very easy for them to chant, Cheaper and Faster but I agree with you that the electorate can't judge this to make a quantified decision, because they haven't released any data.

    I can shout, "I can build my house cheaper and faster" but that doesn't reflect any sence of the truth or reality. I might be able to, I might not. But how can anyone truely agree without seeing my plan to achieve this.

    So CMOT and other's that may be Liberal leaning, it's time to take your argument to your representatives.

    If you really want to engage in a proper debate on NBN ALP vs NBN LNP, might I suggest that you write to your constituents and get them to release details so that we can compare truths to the matter instead of having dribble on this forum.

    The point so far is that the LNP have an ideal, they don't have a plan, and until such time as they do, this debate is well and truely futile and wasting all of our times..

  • 2012-Jul-12, 2:50 pm
    Graeme Here

    cabidas writes...

    The point so far is that the LNP have an ideal, they don't have a plan, and until such time as they do, this debate is well and truely futile and wasting all of our times..

    It's like this, do you go out with the chick that has said yes I will put out for you or do you pick the other one that says I might put out for you but in reality the best you may get a kiss.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 2:50 pm
    Murdoch

    U T C writes...

    Well im no Noob, but im blowed if i know what it is.. Joe Public would have even less a clue..

    Precisely. If you're voting for the Coalition based on broadband, and applying some intelligence to your own outlook, at the moment, you're vote is doing exactly squat for Australia. Because your not voting for something. A vote against Labor's plan doesn't automatically mean a vote for the Coalition's. While we do have two dominant parties in Australia, they aren't the only parties out there.

    If there's a statement in all of this, then my statement to current Coalition voters in here is, vote intelligently.

    The most recent example I can think of (and not meaning this to be a personal attack) is Raoul's blind support of a Coalition strategy, and continuing determination to refuse to see anything good about Labor's. Hardly thoughtful, and quite polarising, which is exactly what the parties want.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 3:02 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    Graeme Here writes...

    It's like this, do you go out with the chick that has said yes I will put out for you or do you pick the other one that says I might put out for you but in reality the best you may get a kiss.

    I'd go for the one that is better for the long haul.... :-)

  • 2012-Jul-12, 3:02 pm
    LoosestPing

    Murdoch writes...

    Raoul's blind support of a Coalition strategy, and continuing determination to refuse to see anything good about Labor's

    Including the huge blind spot concerning the appaling state our telco sector mired itself into during those glorious halcyon Howard years. Oh but the market will solve it...Not if it's more profitable to ignore it :)

    That's the big issue with the non existent coalition plan.The NBN as it stands makes it profitable for a RSP to access everyone in Australia. The Noalition semi-policy fails to address this hurdle for the private sector in a way that is in line with conservative political thinking.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 3:03 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    LoosestPing writes...

    Oh but the market will solve it...Not if it's more profitable to ignore it :)

    And this is the very reason why many 'well off' people drive old cars.
    And companies use their server down to the last computer chip.
    It isn't profitable to buy a new one until it has used every last iota of whatever it has to give.

    I'm all for getting the maximum use out of something, but surely people are starting to see that copper has had it's heyday..

    In saying that it actually comes down to management.

    Capitalists and Socialist methods are a direct result of their management.
    It has little to do with the ideal behind them.
    Both Capitalists and Socialist can create something, or botch something.

    It's directly tied to the captain of the ship, the crew, and the ship itself.

    Thankfully Quigley seems to be a good captain. Let's hope that the crew are up to the challenge of the high seas...

  • 2012-Jul-12, 3:03 pm
    Graeme Here

    cabidas writes...

    I'd go for the one that is better for the long haul.... :-)

    lol true

  • Tailgator

    NBN Co selects ViaSat to supply ground equipment for satellite network

    http://www.nbnco.com.au/news-and-events/news/satellite-ground-equipment-contract.html

    At least the remote areas of Aus will get an upgrade to their services no matter what the Coalition does. ;-)

  • Murdoch

    Tailgator writes...

    At least the remote areas of Aus will get an upgrade to their services no matter what the Coalition does. ;-)

    Yep. Even if nothing else eventuates with regards to the current plans for the NBN, I still think its a great initiative that has and will provide benefits to those worst off with regards to broadband in Australia. Not even Abbott can claim otherwise, despite his poison.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 3:15 pm
    DenisPC9

    seven_tech writes...

    Thing that worries me is that Tony DOESN'T actually have a plan.

    He does actually, It called getting into the Lodge.

    Apart from that, the Policy/Plan vacuum makes deep space look like Mercury (the metal), thick and dense.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 3:15 pm
    ungulate

    Murdoch writes...

    Yep. Even if nothing else eventuates with regards to the current plans for the NBN, I still think its a great initiative that has and will provide benefits to those worst off with regards to broadband in Australia. Not even Abbott can claim otherwise, despite his poison.

    Lets assume the Liberals cannot interfere with it or water it down. What then?

    Most probably the satellite service will be hived off and the price will go up.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 3:32 pm
    DenisPC9

    Frood writes...

    Another contract signed!

    Meanwhile, from http://technologyspectator.com.au/industry/telecommunications/nbn-deal-will-deliver-1bn-net-public-benefits-optus?utm_source=Technology+Spectator+List&utm_campaign=89484a4736-TECH_SPEC_DAILY&utm_medium=email

    Singapore Telecommunications-owned Optus has defended its deal with the NBN Co ...

    However, from the same article

    ... but economist Henry Ergas has written to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) arguing that it should take a second look at the deal on the basis that the regulator has understated the competitive detriment associated with the deal.

    The economist argues that if Optus were to remain a rival of the NBN, the government-owned network would be forced to compete harder, offering better value to users and taxpayers.

    �Preserving competition results is a benefit to all consumers and taxpayers,� he said, according to The Australian.

    Arrrggghh, lets hope commonsense prevails in the ACCC and writes back to Mr Ergas informing him that in their opinion the University system has a monopoly on Tertiary Education and that there should be some competition there.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 3:32 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    ungulate writes...

    Most probably the satellite service will be hived off and the price will go up.

    What ever happens and whoever is in, if the NBN is split up and is open to competition too early, the monopoly is broken, and it's then going to cost the Australian Taxpayer directly.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 3:37 pm
    Murdoch

    ungulate writes...

    ts assume the Liberals cannot interfere with it or water it down. What then?

    I honestly don't know what will happen. But if we're talking hypotheticals, then we can talk consequences ....

    If the NBN doesn't proceed as planned and the worst case scenario comes to pass, that is, the satellite and wireless is hived off, some of the consequences could be:

    1. The prices increase for broadband in those areas and the Coalition government wears the voter backlash against them. Private enterprise cleans up.

    2. The broadband prices increase, but the Coalition government subsidies those prices to retain a reasonable "what the market will bear". That last concept may still be more expensive though. If I could venture an arbitrary opinion, this would be my choice as the likeliest scenario. Private enterprise still cleans up.

    3. In keeping with the Coalition's vague promise that wholesale infrastructure should have competition, they'll float NBNCo (if they can) on the market to allow public shareholders to .... once again .... clean up at taxpayers expense. The may be a promise to allow market competition to overbuild in this area, once again, keeping with the Coalition's promise of "competition".

    4. NBNCo remains government owned, as a provider of last resort, wholesale competition is allowed, other companies build where profitable (and charge premium prices), and NBNCo enters a government drip feed for at least the short to medium term if we're "lucky", long term if we're "unlucky". Private enterprise gets to cherry pick, and NBNCo becomes the "example of Labor's waste" the Coalition always made it out to be.

    5. NBNCo doesn't get sold, enters government care, is slowly starved of funds, and is forced to push up prices in order to maintain it's infrastructure. No subsidies are granted, broadband becomes too expensive for those people so they go without, NBNCo eventually folds.

    I'm sure others will offer other scenarios here, but this is what I can think of off the top of my head. Let me make it clear that I don't consider ANY of these options acceptable, or even unacceptable. I consider them ABYSMAL.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 3:37 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    Murdoch writes...

    On the contrary, they haven't "used the same damn intelligence".

    42% of people who intend to vote for the Coalition have "used the same damn intelligence" and decided they like the NBN. However, overall they think the Coalition is the better option for government. There are things that are more important to them than broadband. They are going to vote for the Coalition despite their broadband policy (or lack thereof).

    ... as I previously stated, their basing their vote on faith that the Coalition will do "something".

    This is where we disagree. They don't have faith the Coalition will do anything on broadband. They are prepared to accept what they get because overall they think the Coalition is the better option for government. It's not about broadband.

    With all due respect CMOT, that's rubbish. A reader of this thread who intends to vote Coalition at this time based on their current broadband plan, ...

    What does the voting intention have to do with it? If someone prefers the Coaltion 'plan' to Labor's NBN then their voting intention is irrelevant. The discussion you want should happen but it should not be linked to voting intention.

    ... and my challenge to them to examine this plan using the same critical depth of Labor's current NBN, is VERY relevent for this thread.

    But that's a question to anyone who supports the Coalition 'plan' or does not support the NBN. It's not just about people who intend to vote for the Coalition. My questioning the NBN policy and/or considering the Coalition 'plan' does not make me a bloody Liberal.

    The same applies here as applies in the other threads in this forum:

    • if you express an opinion then give your reasoning
    • if you make a claim then back it up with evidence
    • if you dispute someone else's opinion then give your reasoning
    • if you dispute someone else's claim then back it up with evidence
    • accept other's right to their opinions, whether you agree with them or not
    • above all, cut the abuse

    That the Coalition don't have a concrete NBN strategy ... etc

    Right. I thought Turnbull had come a long way from where he started and was starting to put together something that could be a credible (though unpopular here) plan to take to the election. I was wrong. It's now clear to me from what Abbott and Hockey have said and from what's written on the Liberal web site that they haven't budged a smegging inch from 2010.

    I'm challenging them (Coalition voters) that if they agree with the Coalition's "policy" and outlook on the current NBN (whatever that is) at this point in time, and plan to vote for the Coalition, then they also need to apply the same criticism to what the Coalition will actually implement.

    The challenge applies to everyone.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 3:48 pm
    aARQ-vark

    Tailgator writes...

    At least the remote areas of Aus will get an upgrade to their services no matter what the Coalition does. ;-)

    Whilst Labor hold office this is entirely true!

    However under the Coalition, given the fact that Malcolm Turnbull has stated and I quote!@

    Turnbull: New satellites unnecessary for NBN

    There is already enough broadband capacity provided by existing satellites, according to Shadow Communications Minister, Malcolm Turnbull.

    http://www.arnnet.com.au/article/414743/turnbull_new_satellites_unnecessary_nbn/#closeme

    Of course this is refuted entirely here!

    Optus chief executive Paul O'Sullivan has defended NBN Co's decision to construct and launch its own satellites, saying his company would not be able to provide the same quality of broadband service on its existing commercial satellites.
    The satellites which NBN Co is building are specifically built to carry broadband traffic, while Optus's satellites are designed to carry television and video services, O'Sullivan explained.

    http://www.smh.com.au/it-pro/government-it/nbn-satellite-stoush-malcolm-turnbull-wrong-says-optus-20120213-1t1hg.html

    In any event the fact is that the Coalition have a 70 billion dollar black hole and they are going to have to add to that to the tune of at least another $20 billion for their redundant FTTN idea just to get it off the ground and then a whole lot more to get Telstra to come and play ball!

    So these Satellites will either be sold off to other international telco's who are all lining up to get on board with 3rd Generation Ka band Satellite � or you might see someone like NewSat here in Australia.

    http://www.itwire.com/it-industry-news/listed-tech/55307-newsat-plans-$us200m-equity-issue-to-fund-jabiru-1-satellite

    Offer to step in and take them off their hands!

    Of course they would want to see a much better return than 7 percent so those in Regional Australia could expect to see substantial cost increases and dramatic cuts to the forcast 100G per month data allocation on the basic plans!

    Cheers

  • 2012-Jul-12, 3:48 pm
    ungulate

    cabidas writes...

    What ever happens and whoever is in, if the NBN is split up and is open to competition too early, the monopoly is broken, and it's then going to cost the Australian Taxpayer directly.

    I don't agree with the present government over selling it off 5 years after its built.

    However, that's 15 years off and I suspect by then it will be politically hard to do so.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 3:50 pm
    Megalfar

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    42% of people who intend to vote for the Coalition have "used the same damn intelligence" and decided they like the NBN. However, overall they think the Coalition is the better option for government. There are things that are more important to them than broadband. They are going to vote for the Coalition despite their broadband policy (or lack thereof).

    Obviously they are people would vote for the Coalition regardless.

    They are prepared to accept what they get because overall they think the Coalition is the better option for government. It's not about broadband.

    Better in Goverment ? On what grounds? Abbott and Front bench are new to Goverment, yes, they (some) have been in howards government, but most are new to their jobs.

    Between lying and Hockneynomics ($70 billion black hole/$11 billion black hole and bad budgeting on NBN Costs, along with Turnbull doing the same).

    Between an evil we know and evil we don't (see QLD/NSW State Governments), next few years is going to be very rough ride.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 3:50 pm
    ungulate

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    This is where we disagree. They don't have faith the Coalition will do anything on broadband. They are prepared to accept what they get because overall they think the Coalition is the better option for government. It's not about broadband.

    This is where I disagree CMOT. Yes, there's certainly a lot of people who don't know and don't care.

    But there's still people who do know and do care, but still want to vote Liberal, and that's pretty clear from reading WP.

    What is important that these people aren't being led into a false sense of security and that its pointed out to them that voting Liberal will almost certainly ruin the NBN.

    (Can almost hear your responding with .. well.. we dont know.. do we.. blah blah blah)

  • 2012-Jul-12, 3:53 pm
    seven_tech

    aarq-vark writes...

    In any event the fact is that the Coalition have a 70 billion dollar black hole and they are going to have to add to that to the tune of at least another $20 billion for their redundant FTTN idea just to get it off the ground and then a whole lot more to get Telstra to come and play ball!

    Which is exactly why they won't do it.

    I truly believe that the Coalition, if they get into government, is likely to do one of 2 things:

    1- Realise that FTTN is RIDICULOUS with the NBN 1/3 done. Stop the NBN anyway. Sell it off and claim Labor waste.

    2- Pursue FTTN for a few years, renegotiating contracts, doing CBA etc. All the while the NBN is halted. Realise at the end it's not going to work. Sell off NBNCo. and claim Labor waste.

    They don't CARE about broadband via government. Turnbull does. The Liberals don't. They're not going to do squat, just like for the 10 years of Howard. They'll "let the market sort it out" and we all pay through the eye teeth and up the wazoo for it.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 3:53 pm
    aARQ-vark

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    This is where we disagree. They don't have faith the Coalition will do anything on broadband. They are prepared to accept what they get because overall they think the Coalition is the better option for government. It's not about broadband.

    However there are a growing number of Coalition voters (my nephew being but just one of those) who intend to vote Labor at the next election because he wants to ensure that he does get optical Fibre and not redundant FTTN.

    Frankly he couldn't give two hoots about emotive boats and other tripe � as long as the budget looks good, his business can continue to grow and prosper, and he can access to a decent communications system.

    And note he would agree entirely with your comments here! Hence his decision to vote Labor.

    It's now clear to me from what Abbott and Hockey have said and from what's written on the Liberal web site that they haven't budged a smegging inch from 2010.

    Nor do I believe the implications of the Coalition's plans are well understood by the majority of those in Regional Australia as yet!

    And these once articulated based on the last 3 year public track record of the Liberal Party � will no doubt influence the outcome at the next election yet again as it did at the last one!

    Only even more so this time around as we have another 3 years of young Australians eligible to vote who do understand the debate and the passing of those older Australians whose functional use of Telecommunications was the phone next to the bed and of course the next 12 months where many those who are wondering what its all about will actually get to see it in use and the functional application it will have on their lives both today and into the future.

    Not that Labor are going to win it but rather I suspect we will return to the status quo eg split house with more Independents taking seats in Parliament with of course the Greens retaining control of the Senate.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 4:42 pm
    seven_tech

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    This is where we disagree. They don't have faith the Coalition will do anything on broadband. They are prepared to accept what they get because overall they think the Coalition is the better option for government. It's not about broadband.

    That's not what the poll was asking. It was asking whether they believed the NBN should be built. 42% of what the poll called Coalition voters said yes (we have no information about this other than the poll identifying them as Coalition voters, not whether they'd vote Coalition no matter what). That DOESN'T mean those people believe the Coalition will, won't or might do something about broadband. It means they agree with the NBN and normally vote Coalition.

    This is the problem. Do these people believe the NBN will "continue" under the Coalition, therefore they agree with it? Do they believe the NBN won't GET built unless it's under the Coalition? Or do, as you say, they believe that broadband isn't important in the overall scheme of things and will accept what they will get voting Coalition anyway? This last one makes no sense though, because the poll asked: Do you agree with the NBN being built? They obviously care about broadband or they would've just stated no or I don't know. That's where your logic falls down.

    MANY Coalition voters are being mislead by the Coalition stating they'll "achieve the NBN objective" When asked about the NBN, therefore, they may believe, by answering "yes I think it should be built" on a poll, that if they vote Coalition it WILL be built anyway. Which it won't.

    Wanna get more nit-picky about it?

  • 2012-Jul-12, 4:42 pm
    Murdoch

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    There are things that are more important to them than broadband.

    Exactly. But that discussion (the things more important to them) is not for this thread is it? As I said CMOT, I took that into account before I even posted.

    They are prepared to accept what they get because overall they think the Coalition is the better option for government. It's not about broadband.

    Once again then, not for this thread. CMOT, if you want to get into the ins and outs as to why people will vote over MANY policies versus the one policy that is relevent in this area of Whirlpool, I suggest you take it there. If I started that up in here, then the discussion starts to veer off topic. I am deliberately trying to avoid that.

    What does the voting intention have to do with it? If someone prefers the Coaltion 'plan' to Labor's NBN then their voting intention is irrelevant.

    If a Coalition voter is voting for the Coalition purely on their "alternative" to Labor's current policy, then I'm advising them to apply their critical thinking. That's entirely relevent to a thread entitled "Coalition NBN Position".

    My questioning the NBN policy and/or considering the Coalition 'plan' does not make me a bloody Liberal.

    And where did I call you a Liberal CMOT? Where did I even frickin' suggest it? Was I even ANSWERING you when I made the original post of mine? Not in the slightest. My post was never directed at any specific person in here. It was directed at people who are choosing to vote Coalition on broadband matters, and attempting to make them realise that "No" or "Not this way", isn't a policy. You've already stated so yourself in your other posts. In which case, what I posted has absolutely nothing to do with you. You are one of those people who is not blinded by the Coalition's rhetoric.

    Right. I thought Turnbull had come a long way from where he started and was starting to put together something that could be a credible (though unpopular here) plan to take to the election. I was wrong. It's now clear to me from what Abbott and Hockey have said and from what's written on the Liberal web site that they haven't budged a smegging inch from 2010.

    Exactly. You're already at the point I was illustrating. Which is why my post was not for someone like you at all.

    The challenge applies to everyone.

    In a thread entitled "Coalition NBN position", in order to keep it as on topic as possible, I am directing it that way specifically. If you'd like to talk more broadly, find or create another thread about critical thinking on both policies, or political critical thinking in another Whirlpool forum.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 4:42 pm
    ungulate

    d jOS writes...

    If Malcolm was able to remove TA from the leadership and made a clear commitment that he would continue the NBN as is (no weasel phrases allowed!), I would vote Liberal again

    I'm not sure why though. It would be a relief to see Abbott go. At least then the Liberal Party can rebuild and maybe in a few years come back with some alternate policy that's worth a look in. And I'm not just talking broadband there.

    My problem with the Liberal Party is that overwhelmingly they stand for a world view that is simply broken.

    That doesn't mean that some Liberal governments haven't done some good works. Even Howard managed to bring about some gun reform for instance (but in his later years he focused more and more populism over good policy)

    But history tells, the party that actually brings about the major reforms has been Labor. This is what we mean about the difference between "progressive" and "conservative". I'm not a Labor vs Liberal person, but I am a progressive. I'd even vote for a Liberal with a "progressive" platform over Labor, but so far in the dozen or so elections I've had a vote, I've not yet seen that.

    The conservatives have a track record of being disinterested in infrastructure. For instance it was Whitlam that saw reticulated sewage being brough into major cities and major road projects such as the F3.

    The conservatives have a track record of seeing certain things such as university education as "being for the elite". Howard starved the universities of funding.

    The conservatives have opposed virtually every major reform, such as universal health care.

    Now, and I could go on but I know this is OT, the question remains, even besides broadband, when you look at the records of the two major parties, and you look what each has achieved objectively, its a bit one sided.

    So, even if Turnbull was Liberal leader, I'd still be faced with the fact that under Labor I get more good governance, more care and attention to education and infrastructure, and credible economic management.. versus what? What's the fantastic reforms the Libs offer? Aside from notional support for the NDIS, we hear nothing. Just a few tidbits here and there and promises to do things they can't afford to do and have admitted as much.

    And before I'm done here let me point out yet again. The real danger for the NBN is not the attacks on the NBN itself � it will do well on its merits. Its the entirely wrong ideas that people have about Labor in general. Indeed the attacks on the NBN are coming from the same sources, using the same propaganda techniques as the attacks on Labor in general. Its enough to make you wonder, if you've come here wondering why if the NBN is so good, why does the media attack it so much, to start wondering if you've been misled over other things Labor.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 4:42 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    ungulate writes...

    This is where I disagree CMOT

    Where?

    Yes, there's certainly a lot of people who don't know and don't care.

    Not there.

    But there's still people who do know and do care, but still want to vote Liberal, ...

    Not there.

    and that's pretty clear from reading WP.

    I haven't thought about that.

    What is important that these people aren't being led into a false sense of security and that its pointed out to them that voting Liberal will almost certainly ruin the NBN.

    Not there.

    (Can almost hear your responding with .. well.. we dont know.. do we.. blah blah blah)

    If you want the government's NBN then don't vote for the Coalition. That is blindingly obvious.

    I'm not sure what you're disagreeing with.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 4:49 pm
    seven_tech

    ungulate writes...

    Its the entirely wrong ideas that people have about Labor in general. Indeed the attacks on the NBN are coming from the same sources, using the same propaganda techniques as the attacks on Labor in general. Its enough to make you wonder, if you've come here wondering why if the NBN is so good, why does the media attack it so much, to start wondering if you've been misled over other things Labor.

    This is the most difficult part.

    Mention the NBN at a party, you get a lively debate....right up until someone says "Labor waste" or "pink batts." Then it devolves into a political showdown and the NBN gets pushed aside. People don't seem to want to find the info or know the truth for themselves. They're happy for the pollies to tell us "the truth" and accept it. And herein lies the problem. They're being told fallacy by the Coalition on the NBN. And on a number of other policies, but that's OT.

    It's all rolled into the "I hate Labor/Liberal" ball. You can't separate it easily for many people. This WILL be the downfall of the NBN if the Australian people aren't very careful. It would be, in my eyes, the worst backwards step we've taken in decades. Would it crush us? No. But we'd be ludicrously behind in internet connectivity and innovation for the next 20 years. And seeing as the internet is THE global powerhouse for growth, where does that leave us?

  • 2012-Jul-12, 4:49 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    seven_tech writes...

    1- Realise that FTTN is RIDICULOUS with the NBN 1/3 done. Stop the NBN anyway. Sell it off and claim Labor waste.

    Who would buy it? If it was in one area they might get a buyer but it's all over the place. imo there is only one company that would buy it and I'm not sure about them.

    2- Pursue FTTN for a few years, renegotiating contracts, doing CBA etc. All the while the NBN is halted. Realise at the end it's not going to work. Sell off NBNCo. and claim Labor waste.

    Is this keeping the NBNCo but switching from FTTP to FTTN? Why won't this work?

    3- Let the private sector build what they will, where they will and use grants and/or subsidies to fill the gaps. Realise the private sector other than Telstra won't build anything anywhere, also realise that if Telstra builds it no bugger will be able to afford to use it, sit on their collective arse and do nothing.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 4:55 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    seven_tech writes...

    That's not what the poll was asking.

    This week�s poll questioned respondents on their voting intentions in the next Federal Election, as well as their approval ratings on the various leaders and the NBN. (my bold)
    http://delimiter.com.au/2012/04/16/strong-nbn-support-amongst-coalition-voters/

    It means they agree with the NBN and normally vote Coalition.

    Nope. These are people who support the NBN but intend to vote Coalition at the next election anyway.

    The questions ...
    Q. If a Federal Election was held today to which party will you probably give your first preference vote? If not sure, which party are you currently leaning toward?
    ... and ...
    Q. From what you�ve heard, do you favour or oppose the planned national broadband network (NBN)?
    http://essentialvision.com.au/documents/essential_report_120416.pdf

    Or are you suggesting the polling company has used voting figures from some source other than the first question?

    This is the problem. Do these people believe ... etc

    I can't see anything in the survey that indicates what these people believe will happen. The fact is, according to this survey 42% of people who would vote Coalition support the NBN.

    MANY Coalition voters are being mislead by the Coalition ... etc

    Quite likely. If they listen to Turnbull they might think they'll get something that's ok. If they listen to Abbot or Hockey or read Liberal party literature they'll know different. Who can tell what they think.

    Wanna get more nit-picky about it?

    If you question one of my posts I'm probably going to respond. Discussions work like that. If that's "nit-picky" then don't read and/or reply to my posts. If you think my posts break the forum rules then use the herring facility.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 4:55 pm
    Tailgator

    aarq-vark writes...

    So these Satellites will either be sold off to other international telco's who are all lining up to get on board with 3rd Generation Ka band Satellite � or you might see someone like NewSat here in Australia.

    Hmmm. I suspect I was a bit superficial in my original post. Thanks for the info.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 5:03 pm
    Megalfar

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    These are people who support the NBN but intend to vote Coalition at the next election anyway

    You can have the most popular schemes developed by another party (like Solar Schemes for example) and still get it changed or even worse � axed.

    The companies involved will eventually/may have financial issues because they were expecting long term contracts with the Goverment.

    Marriage Equality is another issue that faces Coalition Party, they they refusing to support.

    (Toe the Party Line).

  • 2012-Jul-12, 5:03 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    Murdoch writes...

    If a Coalition voter is voting for the Coalition purely on their "alternative" to Labor's current policy, then I'm advising them to apply their critical thinking. That's entirely relevent to a thread entitled "Coalition NBN Position".

    What about Coalition voters who are voting for the Coalition for other reasons but might be swayed by the broadband policies? imo anyone interested in broadband policy who is intending to vote Coalition for whatever reason should "apply their critical thinking".

    I agree with everything you say about the discussion being necessary and about people thinking about the consequences of their voting intention. I just think you're narrowing the audience too much.

    And where did I call you a Liberal CMOT?

    Sorry. I missed out my usual "not you". Apologies.

    In a thread entitled "Coalition NBN position", in order to keep it as on topic as possible, I am directing it that way specifically.

    Only people who intend to vote Coalition solely based on their broadband policy? Can the prospective participants please stand up. Anyone?

  • 2012-Jul-12, 5:04 pm
    Jacketed

    seven_tech writes...

    Mention the NBN at a party, you get a lively debate....right up until someone says "Labor waste" or "pink batts." Then it devolves into a political showdown and the NBN gets pushed aside. People don't seem to want to find the info or know the truth for themselves.

    I get a slightly different conversation.

    Mention NBN, especially if someone already has it, and suddenly the pillock of the group comes out with "Oh isn't it really expensive? And don't you have to get your ENTIRE house re-wired?"

    The NBN connected person explains "No, I save $29 a month, and get better and faster."
    Then "Nope, just plugged in my router � done."

    I generally turn to the pillock and ask "Where do you get your moronic information from, some sort of toilet wall?"

  • 2012-Jul-12, 5:04 pm
    Murdoch

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    What about Coalition voters who are voting for the Coalition for other reasons but might be swayed by the broadband policies?

    Then if they are following this thread, I hope it has opened their eyes somewhat to both the good things about the existing policy currently being executed, and the absolute waffle (there's no other word for it IMO) being spouted by the Coalition at this moment.

    I just think you're narrowing the audience too much

    Considering this is an NBN forum, on Whirlpool, about the Coalition, I'd say the audience is already narrowed. But one thing you cannot narrow, is the limit of people's narrowmindedness. Something that I was hoping to address.

    Sorry. I missed out my usual "not you". Apologies.

    Thank you. It was never my intention to engage in that sort of crap, particularly with you CMOT.

    Only people who intend to vote Coalition solely based on their broadband policy? Can the prospective participants please stand up. Anyone?

    Heh heh, I wonder if anyone will truly identify themselves? If I was voting that way, you'd hear nothing but chirping crickets from me.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 5:26 pm
    texmex

    Megalfar writes...

    Marriage Equality is another issue that faces Coalition Party, they they refusing to support.

    (Toe the Party Line).

    And this is relevant to the coalition NBN position just how?

    Just being my usual helpful self trying to get the thread back on topic . . .
    ;-)

  • 2012-Jul-12, 5:26 pm
    Megalfar

    texmex writes...

    And this is relevant to the coalition NBN position just how?

    As I said, it's about Toeing the party Line...

  • 2012-Jul-12, 5:28 pm
    texmex

    Jacketed writes...

    Mention NBN, especially if someone already has it, and suddenly the pillock of the group comes out with "Oh isn't it really expensive? And don't you have to get your ENTIRE house re-wired?"

    Was going to put LOL to that, but it's more sad than funny.

    It's also very true, and the only thing to add is that not everybody who responds like that is a pillock. There are some quite sensible but non-technical people who could say those things because they have seen reports of the coalition saying them, and they have no way of knowing that the comments are rubbish.

    "Where do you get your moronic information from, some sort of toilet wall?"

    Some toilet, some wall!

  • 2012-Jul-12, 5:28 pm
    Jacketed

    aarq-vark writes...

    Frankly he couldn't give two hoots about emotive boats and other tripe � as long as the budget looks good, his business can continue to grow and prosper, and he can access to a decent communications system.

    Yep, I agree � I am not a refugee, so don't care, let 'em come or whatever.
    I am not looking to have a gay marriage, so don't care, either way is fine by me.
    I WANT NBN � and THAT is going to affect my vote....
    Once I have NBN, then I will switch to something else to care about. Too bad for anyone else who misses out; or you can move to Armidale.

    :-)

  • seven_tech

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    This week�s poll questioned respondents on their voting intentions in the next Federal Election, as well as their approval ratings on the various leaders and the NBN.

    Nope. These are people who support the NBN but intend to vote Coalition at the next election anyway.

    How so?

    Q. If a Federal Election was held today to which party will you probably give your first preference vote? If not sure, which party are you currently leaning toward?
    ... and ...
    Q. From what you�ve heard, do you favour or oppose the planned national broadband network (NBN)?

    So they are likely to vote Coalition and then are asked a second question, do you favour or oppose the NBN. It's not related. Some may not even KNOW the Coalition oppose it, although I admit that's unlikely. Point is, the 2 questions are exclusive, not inclusive. You're trying to connect them when there IS not connection inherently.

    If the question had run:

    Taking into account your voting preference as you reported AND from what you've heard of the 2 party's stance on the NBN, do you favour or oppose the NBN? Would it change your voting preference?

    Then I'd agree with you. But as the poll stood, we have NO way of knowing how many of those who said "I'm a Coalition voter" also understand that when the say "I favour the NBN" they are, in fact, producing a contradiction in terms, because the Coalition DON'T favour it.

    This is why the poll can only be taken, from BOTH anti and pro NBN stances, as a basic indication, not gospel. It does not ask specific enough questions.

  • redlineghost
    this post was edited

    the unmovable elephant (fttn) in rose coloured glasses is what i see in the contention of the last mile (imagination of the libs) the reality is you may may have 2-5 mile radius window of coverage of the existing node in line length making the last mile the butt of the joke of the telecomms industry..

    fantansy vs reality is a funny thing fttn fact as it is stands is a short minded goal that should of be implemented back in the the 1990's by 2010 gearing up to replace fttn with ftth by 2015 the wider area should beed replaced with fibre, due to. current delays by 2020 i see the majority will still be on adsl/vdsl.

    at the libs policy dictates cherry picked ftth estates with the remaining network pigeon holed to fttn, though that reality will see fttn deployed over 1-5 mile radius of the node itself in line length, making it a poor choice for deployment of use..

    I concede that FTTN might be a quicker deployment option from the out set though reality is in terms of actual speed it can provide is very narrow, reality today we need a min of 1gb backbone with the option 10gb and beyond in within the 10-35 years..

    We're becoming a digital society so it is pointless to delay deploying fibre much longer otherwise we will be left behind..

    It shouldn't matter which dipstick party is in power at the time overhauling the comms network with fibre is a good thing.. not a bad thing..

  • 2012-Jul-12, 5:39 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    Murdoch writes...

    Considering this is an NBN forum, on Whirlpool, about the Coalition, I'd say the audience is already narrowed. But one thing you cannot narrow, is the limit of people's narrowmindedness. Something that I was hoping to address.

    Fair enough.

    Taking the numbers from that survey (yeah I know) you're looking at the 40% who intend to vote Coalition and who oppose the NBN. Of those, you're just looking at the ones who are only voting Coalition because of broadband policy. About 0% imo.

    The ones I'd like topics in this thread to address are those who support the NBN but intend to vote Coalition anyway. They are all viable targets imo.

    They can get to understand the NBN more from other threads. This thread can show them what, if anything, the Coalition is offering. It might just change their minds.

    Still, your topic, I'll leave it with you.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 5:39 pm
    Genetic Modified Zealot

    Murdoch writes...

    If the NBN doesn't proceed as planned and the worst case scenario comes to pass, that is, the satellite and wireless is hived off, some of the consequences could be:

    I see the Coalition retaining the sat/wireless parts of the NBN due to the main cost being equipment not Labour.

    It's the ftth component that will be altered as Mr Turnbull/Coalition mentioned they will fix the rollout with cost effective architectures.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 6:55 pm
    Graeme Here

    raoulrules writes...

    It's the ftth component that will be altered as Mr Turnbull

    Slashed you mean!

  • 2012-Jul-12, 6:55 pm
    jwbam

    texmex writes...

    not everybody who responds like that is a pillock. There are some quite sensible but non-technical people who could say those things because they have seen reports of the coalition saying them, and they have no way of knowing that the comments are rubbish.

    Yes, I've found that. If I challenging what they read in the paper, they come back with � "but why would they report that if it weren't true?" "Surely they would know, have checked up, spoken to experts, got their facts straight?" "There is no news of any NBN progress anywhere!". "And where did you get YOUR info, from the INTERNET???"

    In a contest of credibility between Labor and the Coalition, Labor hasn't got a chance with some readers.

  • Cabidas 22222

    Jacketed writes...

    I generally turn to the pillock and ask "Where do you get your moronic information from, some sort of toilet wall?"

    Gold! Spoken like a true FUD fighter..

  • seven_tech

    raoulrules writes...

    It's the ftth component that will be altered as Mr Turnbull/Coalition mentioned they will fix the rollout with cost effective architectures.

    That makes no sense unless they give details.

    What architecture is being used now? The FSA, FSAM architecture is widely accepted, internationally, as an efficient and redundant architecture. Could it be changed and done cheaper? Probably, but then you'd either lose efficiency or redundancy. Or both.

    Or do you mean architecture in terms of FTTH VS FTTN? The point of the NBN is to be ubiquitous. Much of its' value gets lost if you say "oh, well, there's only 2000 people there in 700 houses, they can have FTTN because most of them are within 2km of their exchange" as those people are now relegated to slower speeds by default AND they have to wait x time to receive full FTTH from the government in the further before they can catch up (and you're KIDDING yourself if you think the private market will "upgrade them" without everyone paying every cent for the upgrade). Now spread this out over the width and breadth of the land and not ONLY do you destroy the whole point of EVERYONE having this fast, reliable access, but you also destroy:

    - The funding and pricing strategy behind the NBN
    - The upgradability of any portion of the NBN
    - The RETAIL pricing and offerings of the NBN
    - The support structure of the NBN
    - Any chance to fully homogenise Australians' access to cheap, fast, reliable broadband WHEREVER THEY CHOSE TO LIVE
    - The NBN in general

    You get what some people have called the NOBN.

    So yes, we MIGHT save $2 or $3 Billion doing FTTN in some areas. And, ironically, those areas are ALREADY likely to be the most under-served in broadband as it stands, as they are the least profitable areas and the ones to gain the MOST from the NBN.

    So bravo Coalition, you've saved Australians "HUGE" amounts of waste- what amounts to....well, nothing in the budget, because it's borrowed money that's paid back, so in essence, you've not saved anything- by yet AGAIN underserving those Australians MOST disadvantaged in broadband.

    Yes, that's a MUCH better architecture.....

  • 2012-Jul-12, 7:15 pm
    ungulate

    raoulrules writes...

    It's the ftth component that will be altered as Mr Turnbull/Coalition mentioned they will fix the rollout with cost effective architectures.

    We already know that FTTN is actually wasted money.

    You can't accept that. Reason, you're here purely to plug the Liberal Party.

    I bet if Turnbull backflipped and admitted that FTTN has no future, you'd backflip one microsecond later!

    :D (guffaw, chuckle, flop)

  • 2012-Jul-12, 7:15 pm
    ungulate

    Jacketed writes...

    I generally turn to the pillock and ask "Where do you get your moronic information from, some sort of toilet wall?"

    More specifically, the toilet wall that is frequented by Andrew Bolt

    (duck)

  • 2012-Jul-12, 7:32 pm
    dJOS

    ungulate writes...

    I'm not sure why though. It would be a relief to see Abbott go.

    I just hate Abbott to be honest, personally I'd like to see bob Carr take the reigns of the labor party too as that man knows how to lead, with him in charge I reckon he could sort thru the current bs goin on behind the scenes in the party!

  • 2012-Jul-12, 7:32 pm
    Genetic Modified Zealot

    seven_tech writes...

    - The funding and pricing strategy behind the NBN

    Let's take a look at the Sats. $2 Billion with 106,000 customers (Corp plan) at a cost of $20,000 + per customer finance costs + operational/support costs.

    Now without a cross subsidy these customers will paying through the nose since a sat has limited life expectancy of ~ 15 years once fuel runs out. A lot of the equipment would have to reconfigured/changed in 15 years. There is no chance these customers will pay $20,000 + $Y ISP subscriber fees over 15 years due to the independents.

    I expect Mr Turnbull to fully outsource a stress test of the NBN' s viability. On the face of it with real pricing falling in ISP charges it's a highly risky venture.

    - The upgradability of any portion of the NBN

    Are sats uogradeble since once you launch into space that's it.

    - The RETAIL pricing and offerings of the
    NBN

    The pain of tomorrow is not reflected in today's prices. Mr Turnbull has mentioned the capital that is spent in the tens of billions means higher prices.

    - The support structure of the NBN

    It's still does not have a track record.

    - Any chance to fully homogenise Australians' access to cheap, fast, reliable broadband WHEREVER THEY CHOSE TO LIVE

    Question cheap. ARPU is expected to rise 6% in nominal terms. So if dudes do not take up higher plans the project will be under question.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 7:52 pm
    Timbel

    raoulrules writes...

    I expect Mr Turnbull to fully outsource a stress test of the NBN' s viability. On the face of it with real pricing falling in ISP charges it's a highly risky venture.

    Lets hope they do a better job then the costing of their 2010 election promises, how far were they out?

    A Treasury examination of the Coalition's 2010 costings found errors including double counting and questionable assumptions amounting to $11 billion.

    http://www.theage.com.au/national/lib-policy-costings-exposed-by-ruling-20111130-1o773.html

    So remind me, why is the Coalition so unquestionably superior with proper accounting standard especially when their claims of 'off budget' accounting have been rubbished.

    On-budget and off-budget

    The use of the terms on-budget and off-budget can be misleading and should be avoided. The budget covers the general government sector. The term off-budget is sometimes used to refer to entities that do not form part of the general government sector (for example, Australia Post and the Reserve Bank). However, that does not mean that such entities do not affect the budget. On the contrary, the budget accounts for the inter-relationships between these entities and government, and these inter-relationships are reflected in the general government sector financial statements. For example, the government�s equity in Australia Post is included in the general government sector balance sheet, and Reserve Bank dividends are included in the general government sector operating statement. To sum, the terms off-budget and on-budget are not used in any technical discussion of financial statements and should be avoided.

    http://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/Parliamentary_Departments/Parliamentary_Library/pubs/BN/2011-2012/NBNBudgetStatements#_Toc314147494

  • 2012-Jul-12, 7:52 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    seven_tech writes...

    The point of the NBN is to be ubiquitous.

    Why is FTTN to 93% (if that's what the Coalition offers) less ubiquitous than FTTP to 93%?

    "oh, well, there's only 2000 people there in 700 houses, they can have FTTN because most of them are within 2km of their exchange"

    Distance from the exchange is irrelevant in an FTTN network. The distance that matters with FTTN is distance from the node to the customer premises.

    So yes, we MIGHT save $2 or $3 Billion doing FTTN in some areas.

    Citigroup estimated Turnbull's 'plan' would cost $16.7bn. That's less than half the cost of the NBN. That saves a bit more than $2 or $3 billion.
    http://www.zdnet.com/citi-prices-turnbull-broadband-plan-at-17b-1339325988/

    Yes, that's a MUCH better architecture.....

    It's not technically better. It may be more cost-effective.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 7:53 pm
    Timbel

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Why is FTTN to 93% (if that's what the Coalition offers) less ubiquitous than FTTP to 93%?

    The variable nature of copper based services, also I have not seen a claim of 93% from the Coalition. Nothing official has been released, so anything is assumptions.

    It's not technically better. It may be more cost-effective.

    Big maybe. Cost effective is very dubious, it is cheaper in the short term is the only fact.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 7:53 pm
    DenisPC9

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    It's not technically better. It may be more cost-effective.

    As a stepping stone from Copper � FTTN � FTTP it is neither.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 7:54 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Why is FTTN to 93% (if that's what the Coalition offers) less ubiquitous than FTTP to 93%?

    The coalition is yet to say to exactly how many people an you know this.
    And their initial indications were something like 60% of the population (but you are welcome to refute this as I have been scaled back to dial up speeds and therefore can't look up a link as google doesn't want to play ball).

    Distance from the exchange is irrelevant in an FTTN network. The distance that matters with FTTN is distance from the node to the customer premises.

    Again from my understanding (you are welcome to refute, or someone else is welcome to post a link) that FTTn brings the DSLAM from the exchange to closer to the home (As in, more DSLAMS spread around closer to peoples homes than otherwise would be in an exchange). I think seven_tech pointed this out..

    (And with higher electricty running costs I might add)

    Citigroup estimated Turnbull's 'plan' would cost $16.7bn. That's less than half the cost of the NBN. That saves a bit more than $2 or $3 billion.

    Yes, but it only saves until the first upgrade. And again, you know this.
    So how many billions to ditch all the DSLAMS (and parts of the fibre and HFC) and UG from FTTn to FTTh in 10-15 years time? $16billion in today's dollars?

    16+16 = $32. And all this with little income to pay it back.

    But alas, I theorise as I don't have access to the data...

    It's not technically better. It may be more cost-effective.

    'May' yes 'May'. Cool. Show us the maths and we'll look into it. But at this stage there isn't a consotorium on the planet who is saying that it is cheaper to roll out FTTn and then switch to FTTh other than the Federal Opposition (exclusing a few biased opinion pieces)

  • 2012-Jul-12, 7:54 pm
    seven_tech

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Why is FTTN to 93% (if that's what the Coalition offers) less ubiquitous than FTTP to 93%?

    FTTN is not ubiquitous broadband, because of the copper. As someone has already said. My copper is shocking. I had to reset my modem 6 times in 2 days. Tell me, how will FTTN fix this? Oh, that's right, it won't. So instead of MAYBE getting 80Mbps on FTTN, I'll be relegated to 40, if I'm lucky. As will hundreds of thousands of others. Simply because of the copper.

    Distance from the exchange is irrelevant in an FTTN network. The distance that matters with FTTN is distance from the node to the customer premises.

    Wrong. Distance to the exchange changes the number of nodes put in. If I am 3.5km from the exchange, to get ANY significant change in speed, I'd need a node within 1.5 km. In my neighbourhood, relatively dense, that might require anything from 3 to 10 nodes (we have NO idea of the contention ratios likely on a Coalition FTTN, another problem with ubiquity). THAT means, COST! So yes, distance from the exchange IS very important to the Coalition. If they want any hope of being more "cost-effective."

    Citigroup estimated Turnbull's 'plan' would cost $16.7bn. That's less than half the cost of the NBN. That saves a bit more than $2 or $3 billion.

    Don't patronise me. I'm fully aware of that. Notice:

    1- That's TWICE what the Coalition put it at. And yet we should just believe them that they CAN be more "cost-effective"

    2- Citigroup are market analysts. Not telecommunications experts. They have ESTIMATED it. It could be less. It could also be much, MUCH more

    3- Contracts. There's at LEAST $2 Billion worth of contract cancellation fees. AND all current contracts will be transferred to the budget if they chose to change NBNCo.'s mandate as a GBE, which, to build FTTN, being a NON-wholesale architecture, it would have to be.

    So yes, that's close to $19 Billion JUST with contract cancellations and assuming that Citigroup have factored in everything. Which they haven't. Because their analysis assumes no NBN rollout at all. Look it up. That would add a layer of complexity that, while decreasing the rollout of FTTN (as FTTP is already there) is likely to INCREASE the amount of FTTP they rollout to finish areas, lest they leave half a region with FTTP and half of one with FTTN. One of the biggest barriers to the Coalition plan- would you, as a voter, sit by happily and get charged MORE for FTTN services, while 10km away, for no other reason than a change in policy, your friend got FTTP cheaper??

    It's not technically better. It may be more cost-effective.

    Sorry, you can't separate the 2. Unless you believe FTTN will NOT....EVER need upgrading? It is more "cost-effective" only in the fact that, in the short term it is CHEAPER. Being cheaper is not inherently more cost effective. If I want a car that works I can buy a new car and save with low servicing costs for years. Or, I can keep my old bomb and spend thousands every year or so just to keep it going. Which one is more cost effective?

    And stop bloody jumping around. You go from loving the Coalition plan to hating it. I know you use your "critical eye" on policy, but you have to choose a side. This is not a fence debate. You either agree with it or not. There IS no in between- neither in policy or plans.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 7:55 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    I used to love explaining this definition as most people didn't understand it before I did:

    What is the definition of a bargin?

    The definition of a bargin is something of 'equal' value, but at a lower purchasing price.

    So it's either, the retailer taking a hit as he's selling it to you at a discount,
    Or it's you getting the proper price for you as the seller was trying to rip you off.

    seven_tech writes...

    but you have to choose a side

    Well considering there has been little change in the NLP's stance, I can't see why anyone needs to change their viewpoint once they see the facts.

    ..And that the NLP have yet to release a costed plan..

  • 2012-Jul-12, 7:55 pm
    Tailgator

    raoulrules writes...

    Let's take a look at the Sats. .... blah blah blah .... over 15 years due to the independents.
    Where on earth do you dig up this babble? Seriously, it's the type of read that reminds me of a 4th yr high school student writing an essay about a subject they know nothing about but did a search on Google just before they wrote.
    It's absolute rubbish.

    And it does nothing to support your contention that you expect Mr Turnbull to do anything. He is only running flack to diffuse the NBN as an election issue. Don't you remember?

    On the face of it with real pricing falling in ISP charges it's a highly risky venture.
    Yeah, and my Granny will be on the next front cover of Playboy. Anything Turnbull promises will be to diffuse the issue of the NBN. Once in govt then who knows. Even Abbott on his blog Q&A wouldn't commit, stating that it would have to wait until they got into power and see what was what. So don't try and spin any 'expectations'. Because you and the LP (by their own mouth) can't.

    The pain of tomorrow is not reflected in today's prices. Mr Turnbull has mentioned the capital that is spent in the tens of billions means higher prices.
    And we know that Turnbull is telling the truth. Right? I mean he's not trying to diffuse an issue or anything is he?

    ARPU is expected to rise 6% in nominal terms.
    ?????????? When, how long, .... ???? You really do come up with garbage. Just trying to diffuse the issue? Obfuscate?

    So if dudes do not take up higher plans the project will be under question.
    Yeah dude. Must me you jiving at! I can dig it. Yawn.

    Meanwhile, in the realm of serious discussion and considered opinion ....

  • aARQ-vark
    this post was edited

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Why is FTTN to 93% (if that's what the Coalition offers) less ubiquitous than FTTP to 93%?

    Absolute complete rubbish CMOT got a link that provides where the Coalition of the Noodle network of last centuries technology aka FTTN is going to be rolled out to 93 percent of the Australian Population!@

    Just complete unmitigated unsubstantiated misinformed rubbish IMO

    LINK PLEASE!

    Distance from the exchange is irrelevant in an FTTN network. The distance that matters with FTTN is distance from the node to the customer premises

    This is true and in New Zealand this was pitched at about 1.5Km which provided around an average throughput of 10Mbps on the Network!

    To increase that you have to increase substantially the number of nodes to shorten the distance.

    And without doubt to provide 100Mbps to 93 percent of the Australian population with FTTN is so far off in fairy land its not funny � the cost of which I'm sure you could actually rollout FTTH to about 97.something percent of the population at a rough guess!

    And you then wouldn't have the expense of then having to upgrade the redundant FTTN to FTTH as New Zealand have discovered to their detriment!

    Your statements are nothing short of a massive misrepresentation of the facts so much that its simply unbelievable but then I should remember that most of what the Conservatives have to say with respect to the NBN is both misleading and factually incorrect!

    Abbott, Hockey mislead again on NBN funding
    http://delimiter.com.au/2012/06/20/abbott-hockey-mislead-again-on-nbn-funding/

    Happy to supply endless other examples for you � you only have to ask!

    Citigroup estimated Turnbull's 'plan' would cost $16.7bn. That's less than half the cost of the NBN. That saves a bit more than $2 or $3 billion.
    http://www.zdnet.com/citi-prices-turnbull-broadband-plan-at-17b-1339325988/

    That's not even part of the cost as you well know how much will it cost the Liberal Government to get Telstra to provision its infrastructure under the same structural seperation arrangements that Labor has managed to provision its legislation by threatening to go in direct competition to their network.

    Comon CMOT pick a figure $11 billion and I would say your dreaming mate pissing in the wind entirely more likely close to $20 billion to even get them to play ball!

    And then what?

    They use that money to roll out their own FTTH network to undercut the opposition.

    What a complete travesty and joke this is!

    FTTN is certainly not technically better than FTTH and from a National Perspective it will cost the Australian Taxpayer substantially more than FTTN not to mention the cost of having to underwrite the capital expense of Private Telco's investment in FTTH and then the poor punter ending up paying through the nose in additional costs like his counterparts in New Zealand are having to do!

    But you simply continue to ignore those issues entirely don't you!@

  • Cabidas 22222

    Tailgator writes...

    Yeah dude. Must me you jiving at! I can dig it. Yawn.

    Meanwhile, in the realm of serious discussion and considered opinion ....

    lol. Was waiting to see who would be the first to bite at 'dudes'.

    I will admit that you have to lay off the little man, at the very least, he is an entertaining opponent. I would never have thought of satellitte otherwise
    Although I know the point is moot as we don't have any numbers....
    And so does he..

  • 2012-Jul-12, 8:07 pm
    ungulate
    this post was edited

    cabidas writes...

    I will admit that you have to lay off the little man, at the very least, he is an entertaining opponent.

    Its a somber reminder of what happens to you when you drink the Liberal Kool Aid, but honestly.. do I share some of those genes?!?

  • 2012-Jul-12, 8:07 pm
    seven_tech

    raoulrules writes...

    Let's take a look at the Sats. $2 Billion with 106,000 customers (Corp plan) at a cost of $20,000 + per customer finance costs + operational/support costs.

    Now without a cross subsidy these customers will paying through the nose since a sat has limited life expectancy of ~ 15 years once fuel runs out. A lot of the equipment would have to reconfigured/changed in 15 years. There is no chance these customers will pay $20,000 + $Y ISP subscriber fees over 15 years due to the independents.

    Well done. You completely missed the point of the NBN. Being that the FIBRE SUBSIDISES THE SATELLITE AND WIRELESS. Come back again when you get some knowledge.

    I expect Mr Turnbull to fully outsource a stress test of the NBN' s viability. On the face of it with real pricing falling in ISP charges it's a highly risky venture.

    That's a heap of absolute steaming nothing. Turnbull has ALREADY said he'll do a CBA. Yet he's ALSO said they wouldn't accept a CBA done by Labor....biased much???

    Are sats uogradeble since once you launch into space that's it.

    You choose the SMALLEST part of the NBN. 93% of people use the FIBRE.....3% use the satellites.....and yes, actually, with software upgrades and built in firmware updates, satellites are upgradable actually. That's why some are STILL up there 25 years after they're launched.

    The pain of tomorrow is not reflected in today's prices. Mr Turnbull has mentioned the capital that is spent in the tens of billions means higher prices.

    Read the Corporate Plan. Those "tens of billions" are covered by USER PAYS. There's no "magic" about it that lovely Turnbull can try and hide behind. Next question.

    It's still does not have a track record.

    No, because of delays from the COALITION BLOCKING IT'S BUILDING!!!

    Question cheap. ARPU is expected to rise 6% in nominal terms. So if dudes do not take up higher plans the project will be under question.

    http://delimiter.com.au/2012/06/28/nbn-85-of-australians-want-50mbps-or-higher/

    I want 50mbps. I'd STILL save $10 a month over now. Next question.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:22 pm
    ungulate

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Why is FTTN to 93% (if that's what the Coalition offers) less ubiquitous than FTTP to 93%?

    Haven't you learnt anything since 2007, and thousands of posts, CMOT?

    Within the 93% served by fibre, every one of those addresses will receive the same standard of service. And that will remain so as GPON is replaced by XGPON and so on.

    If the same people got FTTN, their level of service would depend on the luck of the draw as to the copper. And every one of them would be dead ended technologically.

    Seriously CMOT, this forum restrains me from saying what I really think. You've been on here long enough not to spout crap. (bites tounge).

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:22 pm
    ungulate

    raoulrules writes...

    Are sats uogradeble since once you launch into space that's it.

    Is Turnbull going to rely upon the exact same sats?

    Or do you think Turnbull is right in saying we already have enough capacity there and shouldn't launch the new sats.

    What an utterly indefensible position you've landed in raol.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:24 pm
    Timbel

    ungulate writes...

    What an utterly indefensible position you've landed in raol.

    That's unusual, I mean who could not defend a Coalition policy when ironically there is not one.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:24 pm
    ungulate

    Timbel writes...

    That's unusual, I mean who could not defend a Coalition policy when ironically there is not one.

    Yep, but you'd think that raol would at least leap to the defense of Turnbull because Turnbull did indeed say we don't need new satellites.

    Poor sod must be terribly conflicted.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:27 pm
    ungulate

    raoulrules writes...

    Let's take a look at the Sats.

    And I love the way that raol ignores one key point.

    If the satellite component is costing several times more per customer to deliver than the average fibre customer, it is indeed fortunate that for every satellite customer you have to subsidise, there's 20 on a fibre connection.

    That's the whole point of cross subsidisation. It works well when the group you're cross subsidising is relatively very small.

    Of course, raol will never to do the math on that.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:27 pm
    redlineghost
    this post was edited

    aarq and cmot, there is a real big asssumption of the gov the average line from node will be the max 2.4km/1mi from the node (dreamstate) reality the node can have an average of 2-5mi/4.8-12 km radius in line length..

    looking at the situation from the node perspective even installing fttn doesn't guarantee you or anyone will see the likes of 24-48/1-4, reality given the density and conditions copper in the ground I doubt it would guarantee a 12/1 connection on adsl or even vdsl..

    off a 3km node 21/1 is possible as long as the copper grade is kept above 0.64mm, running on lines within the 0.45-0.25mm signal loss is to great to be effective at any speed...

    even with fttn deployment on the cards you still have to make regular replacements to the copper to maintain the signal integrety for adsl/vdsl failure to do that makes any copper based service unusable...

    by the time they finish cherry picking ftth and fttn sites the need ftth will be greater than ever and double dipping doesn't fix the install times..

    the case is this: ftth or bust as you only breed failure leaving the copper in use, you could spend 17.5 bn in deploying a dead tech solution under fttn options and face a 150bn crunch over 30-50 years to deploy ftth..
    sadly the speed is required now not in 30-50 years time..

    either way either option is going to cost money though the longer it is left the more we pay for it..

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:29 pm
    Genetic Modified Zealot

    ungulate writes...

    Is Turnbull going to rely upon the exact same sats?

    If Mr Turnbull were to honour the sats would be a good idea to delay purchase until fixed line revenue is subtantial enough to cross subsidise should he want a cross subsidy.

    These sat customers will lose money thus the cross subsidy delaying should be considered.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:29 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    raoulrules writes...

    These sat customers will lose money thus the cross subsidy delaying should be considered.

    All the while those farmers that breed cattle for people to eat can't access the internet to look up an ailment for their kids.

    Kudos for you

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:32 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    By the way this is how insurance works.

    Everyone puts in for the one person who actually claims.

    It's the stuff of all developed nations...

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:32 pm
    seven_tech

    raoulrules writes...

    If Mr Turnbull were to honour the sats would be a good idea to delay purchase until fixed line revenue is subtantial enough to cross subsidise should he want a cross subsidy.

    Brilliant. You're affecting MORE delays for regional and rural users to get better broadband.

    What a wonderful, thoughtful person you are. Remind me not to vote for you if you ever get into a position like "Mr Turnbull"

  • seven_tech

    cabidas writes...

    By the way this is how insurance works.

    Everyone puts in for the one person who actually claims.

    Shhhhhh!!! Don't say that! They'll be onto us, and try to change the insurance scheme next to the bad drivers paying the most.....oh wait, never mind....

  • Genetic Modified Zealot

    cabidas writes...

    All the while those farmers that breed cattle for people to eat can't access the internet to look up an ailment for their kids.

    They can access it via the ABG or leased sats.

    Fully expect Mr Turnbull to review the terms/timing of sats.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:41 pm
    seven_tech

    raoulrules writes...

    They can access it via the ABG or leased sats.

    Bzzzzz! Wrong answer. ABG is being phased out....because of the NBN. THAT's why the sats were first!

    Fully expect Mr Turnbull to review the terms/timing of sats.

    Actually, he's said he won't. He's said he's likely to let them through, because there's too much planning, time and money gone into it:

    "Mr Turnbull said the Coalition would �look at the options� on whether to change the contracts or even sell off the satellites but conceded there were limits on what he could do. �They are putting contracts in place and it may be that we will have to live with it,� he said. He acknowledged that a Coalition government might have to honour the contracts signed with Loral and keep the satellites."

    AFR 9th Feb, 2012

    http://weknowmemes.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/kelso-burn.jpg

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:41 pm
    redlineghost

    the only issue with cross substidy is that in itself breeds a money pit, reality is you're not catering to alot more than is stated in a report 20+ years ago...

    on a 200,000 use apply a 10-20%P/A growth rate in subscriber over the last 20+years making a base line of reality that you're short sighted coverage goals isn't actually being met.. not mention migration cost's to everyone...

    i think a financial study needs to made on sat projections maintaining and deploying the medium vs doing a 100$ ftth rollout fo the next 50-60 years..

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:46 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    Timbel writes...

    The variable nature of copper based services, ...

    Ubiquity is coverage. FTTN could provide ubiquitous 12/1 coverage.

    Where it falls down, as you point out, is in the consistency of performance. That's the argument that should be used to promote FTTP over FTTN. FTTP wins hands down.

    Someone says "Turnbull says FTTN can do 80Mbps. That's fast enough for me. I don't need 100Mbps." You can counter with "Yes, but it's not consistent. Your friend a few streets away might get 80Mbps but you might only get 12Mbps. How are you going to feel about that? With FTTP you will both be able to get 100Mbps." What do they say next? There's no comeback.

    My point is to avoid dubious arguments and go for the indisputable ones.

    ... also I have not seen a claim of 93% from the Coalition. Nothing official has been released, so anything is assumptions.

    That's not down to FTTN though. Using ubiquity as an argument for FTTP over FTTN (the context) doesn't work. The consistency argument is a killer imo.

    Big maybe. Cost effective is very dubious, it is cheaper in the short term is the only fact.

    Yep. The 'short term' point is another I think should be used. Along the lines of ... "Everyone knows the copper is old and expensive to maintain and will have to be replaced quite soon. The speed some people (but possibly not you) might get now with FTTN might not be enough in the future. There's no step up from FTTN other than to replace it with FTTP. We will need FTTP. Why not do it now?"

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:46 pm
    Timbel

    raoulrules writes...

    These sat customers will lose money thus the cross subsidy delaying should be considered.

    Because pausing construction on satellites halfway through is always a great idea right?

    raoulrules writes...

    Fully expect Mr Turnbull to review the terms/timing of sats.

    You fully expect Malcolm Turnbull to do a great deal of thing, maybe you are superimposing your own borked views onto an idealized politician.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:48 pm
    U T C

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    FTTN could provide ubiquitous 12/1 coverage.

    Same as ADSL? Whats the point? I want 100/50 asap. And i will pay for it..Take my money..

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:48 pm
    Megalfar

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Ubiquity is coverage. FTTN could provide ubiquitous 12/1 coverage.

    TWO PROBLEMS:

    1. SOME PEOPLE can get MORE THAN 12/1.
    2. TO GET ubiquitous 12/1 Coverage, NODES NEED to be placed <500m or less.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:50 pm
    seven_tech

    redlineghost writes...

    i think a financial study needs to made on sat projections maintaining and deploying the medium vs doing a 100$ ftth rollout fo the next 50-60 years..

    Wouldn't disagree with that. I'd say 80-90% of those 200 000 have a copper line. So why can't they have a fibre line? Same as those on wireless.

    But this is digressing from the topic.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 9:50 pm
    seven_tech
    this post was edited

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    That's not down to FTTN though. Using ubiquity as an argument for FTTP over FTTN (the context) doesn't work. The consistency argument is a killer imo.

    Come on CMOT. Ubiquity is a synonym of availability AND consistency in this argument. If 100Mbps is (ALMOST) ubiquitous with FTTH, it is NOT ubiquitous with FTTN. THAT is the argument. Not whether or not you can get 12/1. 12/1 was promised by OPEL in 2005. We're past 12/1 now. No one sees that as a viable goal now. I don't even GET 12/1 and I don't see it as a viable goal. I'd rather wait a few years and get 100/40, then 250/100, then 500/250 thanks.

    Also, the ubiquity of VERY HIGH speed is what makes the NBN worthwhile. Not the ubiquity of "some high speed."

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:16 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    raoulrules writes...

    They can access it via the ABG or leased sats.

    Fully expect Mr Turnbull to review the terms/timing of sats.

    Who are you and why are you posting on WP?

    The idea of the NBN is to position it in such a way that those in rural parts of the country (that until now have likely had dial up) can get decent speeds without mortgaging the farm. I am happy for this. And plenty of others are too.

    Do you want to know why?

    Because we too get cheaper internet prices because the overall return is less than that of a private company and they don't have to invest in the sharemarket to try and dollar/cost mitigate some of their losses.

    I can understand if you don't fully support socialism and I'm sure very few people here do, but can't you possibly for one iota stop and think that you aren't the be all and end all in the world and that sometimes you have to lend a helping hand to someone else?

    Do you have parents/grandparents/siblings/cousins/nieces/nephews?

    Surely you can't think that Adam Smith is still right and it should be 'every man for himself'?

    It's going to be so small it isn't worth farting over and because everyone in the country is paying a dollar, it really won't effect anything.

    And because it is paid back, it then in turn MAKES THE GOVERNMENT MONEY.

    Do you wonder why governments are so addicted to things like speeding fines?

    Because they sold companies like Telecom that brought money into the coffers and therefore have to look for other streams of revenue.

    Do you get some sort of perverted kick out of conflict that you can't seem to concede?

    Again, for the second time in the last hour or so; We can't really judge what the coalition will do until they release figures and until NBN does same.

    All the rest is conjecture and assumption and is totally pointless and futile.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:16 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    cabidas writes...

    The coalition is yet to say to exactly how many people an you know this.
    And their initial indications were something like 60% of the population (but you are welcome to refute this ...

    I don't have any idea what the Coalition is offering.

    The NBN is offering ubiquitous 12/1. That can be done with FTTN. Ubiquity is not a valid argument against FTTN.

    Yes, but it only saves until the first upgrade. And again, you know this.

    Yep, but if someone says "switching to FTTN will only save $2-3bn" then Turnbull's job is easy. Better imo to say "ok so you save $19bn now, but it will cost you $25bn when the copper is past its use-by date and you have to switch to FTTP". Then quote Tony Windsor at them.

    'May' yes 'May'. Cool. Show us the maths and we'll look into it.

    That's what I've been saying. Normally when you have a costed and approved project anyone trying to change the project would have to put up the same information used to approve it. In this case an equivalent of the NBNCo's business case. Unfortunately, this has all gone political.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:24 pm
    DenisPC9

    seven_tech writes...

    Brilliant. You're affecting MORE delays for regional and rural users to get better broadband.

    What a wonderful, thoughtful person you are. Remind me not to vote for you if you ever get into a position like "Mr Turnbull"

    Thankfully NBNCo don't listen to that drivel either. In the Upper Hunter and New England Regions they are starting to ramp up for Wireless and instal it over the next couple of years. Well before those of us in the "urban" areas get Fibre.

    Whilst it irks me that I am not in 1Y3, I am more than happy that those who will be able to access the Wireless 12/1 are getting it pretty smartly.

    And as a dig @ rr, that IS thanks to the Independents.

    So, thanks Tony, Rob and Andrew.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:24 pm
    Timbel

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    The NBN is offering ubiquitous 12/1. That can be done with FTTN. Ubiquity is not a valid argument against FTTN

    Very well, lets not confuse terms.

    • Scalability
    • Long term cost
    • Benefit
    • Variability
    • Effeciency

    All can be used as arguments against FTTN.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:26 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    The NBN is offering ubiquitous 12/1. That can be done with FTTN. Ubiquity is not a valid argument against FTTN.

    But FTTn can't provide 100/40 ubiquitously (almost) across 93% of the population
    with spare fibres for future use (see uses in chattanooga).

    But again, you know this.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:26 pm
    seven_tech

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    The NBN is offering ubiquitous 12/1. That can be done with FTTN. Ubiquity is not a valid argument against FTTN.

    Eh? How so? Unless you are suggesting FTTN will rollout to 93% of the population? The Coalition aren't. Cause they keep talking about "subsidies for HFC expansion and wireless." HFC MIGHT be able to provide ubiquity of 12/1, with enough node-splitting (MORE FTTN!), but there's no guarantee their "wireless" can.

    Also, would you get off the 12/1? This speed is ridiculous. It will be the LEAST used in 5 years time if the NBN continues. Why WOULDN'T you use 25/5, when it's all of $5 more??

    That's what I've been saying. Normally when you have a costed and approved project anyone trying to change the project would have to put up the same information used to approve it. In this case an equivalent of the NBNCo's business case. Unfortunately, this has all gone political.

    Exactly. They don't HAVE a business case like NBNco. for FTTN. Because you can't MAKE a business case for FTTN. So they've just started a smear campaign on the NBN instead. It's the 6 year old equivalent of KNOWING you pulled your sisters hair, but whinging loudly enough that she was being mean, that your parent gives you a lolly just to shutup.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:28 pm
    seven_tech

    DenisPC9 writes...

    Whilst it irks me that I am not in 1Y3, I am more than happy that those who will be able to access the Wireless 12/1 are getting it pretty smartly.

    Agreed. At least I can (sometimes...maybe) get 8mbps. Some people are lucky to get dialup. And satellites and wireless are HIDEOUSLY overpriced compared to ADSL at the moment- hence the NBN.

    So, thanks Tony, Rob and Andrew.

    Hear hear! We salute your efforts in getting your constituents proper broadband access....and giving the rest of us a huge boost too!

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:28 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    seven_tech writes...

    It's the 6 year old equivalent of KNOWING you pulled your sisters hair, but whinging loudly enough that she was being mean, that your parent gives you a lolly just to shutup.

    Another seven_tech golden metahor.

    Now how to make this post on topic so it doesn't get moderated....

    EDIT: NBN is bad... As suggested... lol

    Faster Cheaper, Crawww Crawwww

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:29 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    seven_tech writes...

    Some people are lucky to get dialup.

    Actually, is this still true anymore?
    Does anyone know?

    Or have the wireless rollouts covered them?

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:29 pm
    seven_tech

    cabidas writes...

    Now how to make this post on topic so it doesn't get moderated....

    Lol....hmmm....NBN IS BAD!

    Well, that's on topic. That's the "Coalition NBN position".....

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:31 pm
    DenisPC9
    this post was edited

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Ubiquity is coverage

    Nope, According to my Compact Oxford English Dictionary "ubiquity" means present, appearing, or found everywhere

    "coverage" is the extent to which something is covered. An entirely different thing

    FTTN could provide ubiquitous 12/1 coverage

    But you and I know it wont, be honest, at least on this forum. I reckon Malcolm thinks the "node" is the same as those Telstra Pillars scattered around everywhere. Once he finds out what they actually you will see more fancy footwork (and lies) than you see at the average Irish Dancing class.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:31 pm
    H Simpson

    DenisPC9 writes...

    Whilst it irks me that I am not in 1Y3, I am more than happy that those who will be able to access the Wireless 12/1 are getting it pretty smartly.

    I feel exactly the same way.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:34 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    DenisPC9 writes...

    I reckon Malcolm think the "node" is the same as those Telstra Pillars scattered around everywhere

    More to the point, the argument goes 'that's where the nodes will go..'

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:34 pm
    seven_tech

    cabidas writes...

    Actually, is this still true anymore?
    Does anyone know?

    Or have the wireless rollouts covered them?

    In most cases, yes. But when I say dial up, I don't necessarily mean people ACTUALLY using a dial up modem.

    Several tens of thousands are on Pair Gain still, which gives dial up speeds over ISDN. Alot won't know they can apply for wireless subsidies. Not that they're guaranteed better service on wireless, depending on area. But it might get Telstra upgrading the last of the pair gain if they did apply.

    Some RIM also doesn't allow much more than dialup speeds over ADSL (128 or 256kbps), but again, these people may not know they're eligible for wireless subsidy. Again, if it's available.

    The ABG guarantees 1.5Mbps....but I don't think it stipulates a timeframe once the customer has complained. I could be wrong.

    300 000 people apparently still use dial up according to the ABS though.....I've NO idea why.....

  • CMOTDibbler

    seven_tech writes...

    FTTN is not ubiquitous broadband, because of the copper.

    FTTN is not consistent broadband because of the copper. It can be ubiquitous.

    Wrong. Distance to the exchange changes the number of nodes put in.

    Nope. Demography and the speed you want to deliver changes the number of nodes put in. Exchanges are not relevant in an FTTN network (unless used for POIs).

    Don't patronise me.

    Sorry you took it that way. That wasn't my intention.

    That's TWICE what the Coalition put it at. And yet we should just believe them that they CAN be more "cost-effective"

    We shouldn't just believe them on anything. Let's see the evidence.

    It is more "cost-effective" only in the fact that, in the short term it is CHEAPER.

    Where is the evidence?

    If Turnbull provides as evidence the cost of rolling out FTTN now without the cost of FTTH later (we'll argue about how much later later) then I won't accept it as proof. If people here don't provide any evidence then I won't accept that as proof either.

    You go from loving the Coalition plan to hating it.

    If you get bored and want a challenge, find one of my posts where I love the Coalition plan.

    I know you use your "critical eye" on policy, but you have to choose a side.

    I have chosen a side. I think we should build the NBN, for more reasons than just the NBN.

    There are things I don't like about the NBN. I've posted on them.

    If we ever get to see a coalition policy, I will comment on that. In the mean time, I'll discuss with an open mind anything that comes up.

  • Cabidas 22222
    this post was edited

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    In the mean time, I'll discuss with an open mind anything that comes up.

    You must have one cooked noodle :-)

    What I have observed though is you cover some of the same bases and I think that's why you get visciously debated.

    In today's dollars, it makes sence to roll FTTh out all at once, but granted, no-one can know for sure what a fibre roll out will cost tomorrow.

    Even a coalition CBA can't know for sure.

    But one of the main problems of going with FTTn is the hinderance it will put onto the growth of the economy.

    And this is a big one.

    Mining won't save our skins forever and we should be looking at the next global stage.

    I dare say that if the NLP win the next election, most of the roll out will continue as planned, but some will convert to FTTn in some outer suburbs. But this will be minimal.

    EDIT: This can still happen under a labor government if something went wrong and they had to make adjustments..

    But again, this is still hardly a level playing field.

    All these points are moot and this explains why it is such a heated debate.
    Who can say for sure what wireless will do?
    Who can say for sure what HFC will do?
    Who can say for sure what FTTn wil do?

    What we do know is at all these have significant higher running costs as it stands.

    But again, who can know for sure if energy savings can't be made into the future?

    At the end of the day, every man has to make a decision based on the information of the day, and the prospects for the future.

    This is the course of life.

    As it stands, FTTh is the obvious choice.
    But in 5 years time if a major break through was to eventuate, I'm sure we can adapt that plan to suit the then current needs....

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:36 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    redlineghost writes...

    aarq and cmot, there is a real big asssumption of the gov the average line from node will be the max 2.4km/1mi from the node (dreamstate) reality the node can have an average of 2-5mi/4.8-12 km radius in line length..

    I can't know what an FTTN builder under the Coalition will do. I can only go on what I've seen about FTTN from the G9 and Telstra. In both cases the minimum access speed was 12Mbps (upload speed unknown).

    I'll keep an open mind on the policy debate (though not on my vote). I've seen one NBNCo corporate plan and (hopefully) I'll soon see another. Unless someone can rationally challenge that plan or come up with a better plan then the NBN project wins imo. Unfortunately, I doubt Turnbull will do either.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:36 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    raoulrules writes...

    These sat customers will lose money thus the cross subsidy delaying should be considered.

    The cross subsidy should come from general revenue or a levy like the USO. There's no need to wait.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:36 pm
    DenisPC9

    cabidas writes...

    I think that's why you get visciously debated.

    Freudian slip, eh ;-)

    "viscous" � thick

  • 2012-Jul-12, 10:36 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    cabidas writes...

    By the way this is how insurance works.

    Everyone puts in for the one person who actually claims.

    Good one.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:06 pm
    Paul K

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    The NBN is offering ubiquitous 12/1. That can be done with FTTN. Ubiquity is not a valid argument against FTTN.

    Actually no, FTTN will not deliver 12/1 to those who will be using satellites, and may not deliver to the 4% of those would would be using WiFi. To do the 4% with FTTN would be VERY expensive as in many cases there would be only a few properties to each node.

    If you remove those sections...

    FTTN � 93+% Possible 12/1, but not guaranteed. Back-haul capacity unknown.
    FTTH � 93% can get 1 gig, upgradable into the future. 2TB of back-haul per user.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:06 pm
    Megalfar

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    FTTN is not consistent broadband because of the copper. It can be ubiquitous.

    No it cannot be ubiquitous,

    Being or seeming to be everywhere at the same time; omnipresent: "

    To be ubiquitous, it all has to be the same distance, same topology, same design, same equipment, same costs, same regulation.

    The NBN provides this, FTTN does not.

    If a Node to the premises is connected ~1km away, and another premises is connected at 1.5 km � that is not ubiquitous.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:07 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    DenisPC9 writes...

    Freudian slip, eh ;-)

    "viscous" � thick

    lol. I've been scaled back to dial up so can't google quick enough and the dictionary isn't any quicker... :-) Oh well...

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:07 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    Megalfar writes...

    No it cannot be ubiquitous,

    They do have a point here CMOT, you have to acknowledge that.

    Though, FTTN can be ubiquitous at 12/1 if:

    1) they place the nodes accordingly
    2) they ensure all copper is up to scratch
    3) they ensure all fixed wireless can handle it
    4) they ensure all satellite services can handle it

    It's getting rather expensive isn't it....
    And very similar to the ALP's plan might I add...

    EDIT: Clarity

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:08 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    seven_tech writes...

    Come on CMOT. Ubiquity is a synonym of availability AND consistency in this argument.

    Oh.

    They're not the same though. Ubiquity is arguable. Consistency is not. It is impossible to lose a debate about consistency.

    Also, the ubiquity of VERY HIGH speed is what makes the NBN worthwhile. Not the ubiquity of "some high speed."

    I don't agree. Ubiquity is what makes the NBN worthwhile. Bring some to those who have none rather than better/more to those who have some. Dangerously pinko I know, but there you have it. The NBN is the first policy that's done that.

    I think the NBN is more important for the future than for the speed now. Even Turnbull has admitted we we are going to need FTTP. We have an FTTP project with a viable business case (corporate plan). Let's go. If Turnbull was acting as a businessman rather than as a politician I think he'd go for the NBN.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:08 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    If Turnbull was acting as a businessman rather than as a politician I think he'd go for the NBN.

    They are going to quote you on this till the cows come home.....

  • Megalfar

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Consistency is not. It is impossible to lose a debate about consistency.

    Completely fallacy.

    Constinstancy is part of Ubiquity, Constinstancy in Technology, Network Design, Speeds, Access, Price, Regulation and so on.

    Bring some to those who have none rather than better/more to those who have some.

    This is where you fail the quality post count, it's not bringing "SOME" it's bringing EVERYONE BETTER/MORE.

    93% Fibre
    4% LTE
    3% SAT

    COUNT = 100% COVERAGE.

    Even Turnbull has admitted we we are going to need FTTP. We have an FTTP project with a viable business case (corporate plan). Let's go. If Turnbull was acting as a businessman rather than as a politician I think he'd go for the NBN.

    Turnbull says alot of things, but what he says and do is entirely different, between now and then?

    Turnbull is not kingmaker, the decision maker, Tony Abbott and the rest of the front bench is.

  • CMOTDibbler

    seven_tech writes...

    Eh? ... etc

    Please read what I wrote.

    Also, would you get off the 12/1? This speed is ridiculous.

    I'm sure the 7% will be thrilled to hear it.

    Turnbull has said 12Mbps within 12 months and 24Mbps within 24 months (how?). FTTN, satellite and wireless can do the first. That is "ubiquitous".

    Whether that is fast enough is a question of performance not ubiquity.

    This is not just 'word games'. If the argument against the Coalition is going to stick then, if you mean "consistency" say "consistency", if you mean "speed" say "speed". Make the argument unambiguous.

    Murdoch (ours) wants this thread to change the minds of people who are voting Coalition because of their broadband policy. I think we should aim wider.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:21 pm
    Megalfar

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Turnbull has said 12Mbps within 12 months and 24Mbps within 24 months (how?). FTTN

    Again, Turnbull said alot of things, but what he does and accomplish, is entirely different matter

    A couple of issues.

    1. To renegotiate anything would require Telstra/ACCC Agreement along with Shareholder agreement, since most of Telstra shareholders were happy with the Telstra/NBN Agreement, it would require more in depth (including! Telstra AGM Meeting)..

    2. The Telstra Wholesale Agreement with ACCC Agreement.

    3. Senate delay: can be possible.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:21 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    DenisPC9 writes...

    But you and I know it wont, be honest, at least on this forum.

    I honestly don't know what the Coalition is offering.

    If the argument is FTTN vs FTTP then that's what I'll talk about. If the argument is Coalition 'policy' (?) vs Labor policy then that's what I'll talk about. In both cases I think the argument should be accurate. It's harder to refute that way.

    Once he finds out what they actually you will see more fancy footwork (and lies) than you see at the average Irish Dancing class.

    His options for FTTN are the government-owned NBNCo, which is anathema to the Liberals, or Telstra, which will send the industry ape-spit and drive prices up. Riverdance anyone?

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:25 pm
    Megalfar

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    I honestly don't know what the Coalition is offering.

    You seem to know what they are offering, because you keep repeating it!

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:25 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    cabidas writes...

    It's getting rather expensive isn't it....

    Telstra reckoned (NBN mkI) they could do FTTN to 80-90% with $5bn of their own money and $4.7bn of the government's money. That was 25-50Mbps in about two thirds of that area and 12-20Mbps elsewhere. Dunno what it would cost to get that to 93%.

    That just gives an indication of build cost.

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:30 pm
    Frood

    Megalfar writes...

    If a Node to the premises is connected ~1km away, and another premises is connected at 1.5 km � that is not ubiquitous.

    This is spot on!

    And whilst ever the laws of physics, specifically, electrical resistance, apply to this universe, distance will always be detrimental to telecommunication networks that rely on copper.

    This is not the case for fibre where, in the NBN's case, consistently high speeds are experienced whether you are at the end of a 1 metre fibre cable or a 15 kilometre fibre cable.

    I'm keen to see any FTTH opposers raise their hand if they would prefer to be on the end of a 15 Km copper cable... go on... I'm patient...

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:30 pm
    Megalfar

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Telstra reckoned (NBN mkI) they could do FTTN to 80-90% with $5bn of their own money and $4.7bn of the government's money. That was 25-50Mbps in about two thirds of that area and 12-20Mbps elsewhere

    Link?

    Telstra's policy was 5 cities, so not even the top 20 cities in Australia.

    Again with the "could do, might be" etc....

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:38 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    cabidas writes...

    They are going to quote you on this till the cows come home.....

    No worries. The only material question I have with the NBNCo's corporate plan is their ARPU forecast. Other than that, we have a project with a viable business plan. If Turnbull was acting as a businessman, what else would he need?

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:38 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    Frood writes...

    This is spot on!

    If both get the target 12Mbps then ... no it's not.

    Consistency is not the same as ubiquity.

    This is not the case for fibre where, in the NBN's case, consistently high speeds are experienced whether you are at the end of a 1 metre fibre cable or a 15 kilometre fibre cable.

    See the word you've used?

  • CMOTDibbler

    Megalfar writes...

    Link?

    I can't link. You can find it here ...

    www.asx.com.au

    Announcements ... TLS ... 2008

  • Frood

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Consistency is not the same as ubiquity.

    No, it's not. They do, however, go hand-in-hand when discussing telecommunication services though.

    Under the NBN all Australians will be able to access a ubiquitous Internet service that is consistent across the country for those using the same type of tech. That is, the 93% using fibre will be consistent with each other, the 4% using Fixed Wireless will be consistent with each other and the 3% using satellite will be consistent with each other.

    This harmony does not exist in a telecommunications network reliant on copper because, though the majority of Australians have access to the copper network, it isn't ubiquitous and it sure as hell isn't consistent across everyone using the same technology.

    On the NBN, no longer will there be cases of "My cable is shorter than yours so my Internet is significantly faster/better than yours".

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:49 pm
    Megalfar

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    I can't link. You can find it here ...

    Then that would be:
    http://www.telstra.com.au/abouttelstra/download/document/tls652-NBNtechnologybriefing.pdf

    Which is what we've been talking about previously about how Telstra and Coalition disguised these solutions.

    Page 23/34,

    Wireless access is attractive from cost perspective,
    ? can meet the main RFP requirements of 12 Mbps downstream peak access speed
    ? But does not provide full equivalent capacity, performance & service capabilities
    compared to FTTN

    Telstra chose not to include these in its RFP response as wireless
    broadband is already available commercially to 99% of the population
    and satellite to 100% of the population

    You forgot to mention that Telstra agrees that:

    The cost of deploying FTTN increases rapidly as the service density
    decreases

  • 2012-Jul-12, 11:49 pm
    aARQ-vark
    this post was edited

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    The NBN is offering ubiquitous 12/1. That can be done with FTTN. Ubiquity is not a valid argument against FTTN.

    Really CMOT they tried FTTN in New Zealand and couldn't come up with anything better than an average 10Mbps.

    And they only have a fraction of the geographic footprint that Australia has!

    FTTN didn't work in New Zealand and this is why they have ditched it into the drink and are now rolling out FTTH at I might add even greater expense to the New Zealand Taxpayer.

    As for the NBN offering ubiquitous 12/1 � you forgot to add that can be ramped up continuously over the next 50 years.

    Matter of fact the majority of Telstra's and Optus current NBN plans already start at 25Mbps/5Mbps � with I might add 38 percent of people electing to go to the 100Mbps plans straight away.

    And your completely wrong with respect to your misleading statement eg Ubiquity is not a valid argument against FTTN. eg

    Where in the Coalitions plan is :- NBN's base level speed at 12Mbps available nationally?

    Let alone being able to provision 100Mbps to 93 percent of the population!

    To achieve that you would have to have a FTTN Node cablinet on the corner of every street in the country and the cost would be more than what it would cost to provide Fibre to pretty much everyone including a portion of those on Satellite.

    And guess what having pissed your hard earned down the gurgler on redundant tech that's going to cost more than the current FTTH program � you would then have to move to FTTH anyway at and wait for it � yes even more expense!

    The only place where FTTN is becoming Ubiquiteous � is on the worlds technological scrap heaps of redundant idea's from last century!

    Still waiting on that link that provides the Coalition's FTTN plan running at 93 percent btw.

    *Hint last time I looked it Turnbull was suggesting that it only be rolled out in Metropolitan Australia, � with Outer Metropolitan areas and Regional and Remote Australia being provided with ADSL where possible and where not then privatised wireless whatever that means.

    PS Interesting to note that prior to the last election in 2010 � Paul Fletcher Liberal was stating that should they win Government they would cancel the NBN � when asked what their policy was he stated that they were putting a policy response together that would specifically address that question.

    Seems nothings changed from the Opposition with respect to Communications Policy just hot air mired with misleading statements and fluff!

    Better imo to say "ok so you save $19bn now, but it will cost you $25bn when the copper is past its use-by date and you have to switch to FTTP".

    Hello knock knock � Copper is well past its used by date already CMOT. Sort of makes a complete mockery of Malcolm Turnbull's FTTN proposal.

    And there's no saving here at all the $19 billion you refer to would have to offered to Telstra as a carrot to get them to allow others to use their FTTN infrastructure to provision services across it.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 2:10 am
    seven_tech

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Turnbull has said 12Mbps within 12 months and 24Mbps within 24 months (how?). FTTN, satellite and wireless can do the first. That is "ubiquitous".

    May I ask where he said this? I'm not disputing it, but I'd like a reference if you have one.

    I find it incredible he would say this, because, for example, in my area, that would be impossible. It would require replacement of the copper and/or nodes put in. That is a YEARS long process. AND that doesn't take into account the legislature required AND the contracts to be renegotiated.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 2:10 am
    seven_tech

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Telstra reckoned (NBN mkI) they could do FTTN to 80-90% with $5bn of their own money and $4.7bn of the government's money. That was 25-50Mbps in about two thirds of that area and 12-20Mbps elsewhere. Dunno what it would cost to get that to 93%.

    + $15 Billion for the copper.....

    They've said now, they'll take less. But it'll still be in the ballpark of the $11 Billion paid by NBN in total for migration and duct leasing. Otherwise, they'd lose out overall. And Telstra DON'T do that.

    So that's $5 Billion from them, plus $10 billion for the copper, plus $5 billion from the government. And that is to 60%. NOT 80-90%. Read the submission.

    So $20 Billion for 60% FTTN....or $27 Billion (government money) for 93% FTTH, 4% wireless and 3% satellite.

    Hmmmm.......yes, very cost-effective FTTN is. Build it we must.

  • redlineghost
    this post was edited

    I suspect if FTTN was to forward from its current position fttn cabs would replace the existing pillar box d/a's servicing most with pstn and xsdl services...

    you have answer the line density question from the d/a to get 12/1-48/2...

    I saw a line degredation when they replaced between the pillar to the pit..

    so going from exchange to actual node with adsl/vdsl cards off a fibre tail doesn't guarantee you will see 12/1 or even 24/1 as the copper doesn't have enough dense in de cable to cover enough for signal loss....

    I see 4/1 now i may see 6-8/1 if i'm lucky...

    this is going to be the comon case from now on until copper is fazed out..

    the d/a i'm on has min of 2-4 mile radius from the actual node..

    making anyone past my home with weak xdsl connection, fttn>xdsl a piss poor iternet connection..

  • seven_tech

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Wrong. Distance to the exchange changes the number of nodes put in.

    Nope. Demography and the speed you want to deliver changes the number of nodes put in. Exchanges are not relevant in an FTTN network (unless used for POIs).

    I'm sorry, you're wrong CMOT. A FTTN network does not EXIST without exchanges.

    The exchanges, in some instances, house the FSA's- point where the current NBN pulls new fibre from to the FSAM's, the FDN and then to the premises. NBN hardware is housed in these exchanges in many of them, making up the FSA. That's why NBNCo quite regularly liken FSA's to exchanges; they do the same job and in some cases, their geography can overlap. But otherwise, they're entirely separate BECAUSE they do they same job and NBNCo is building new architecture.

    However, in an FTTN, the exchange is the ONLY point where the fibre to the node is pulled from. You can't just ignore the exchanges. They make up one of the largest parts of the "fibre" in the FIBRE-to-the-node system, because unlike in the FTTH system, where FSA's are used (sometimes housed in exchanges) the FTTN system uses ALL the exchanges, because those are the cheapest and quickest points to enter the fibre network backhaul- ALL backhaul goes to exchanges, via fibre.

    This is the biggest difference between the NBN and FTTN- NBNCo. are building entirely NEW architecture, that connects to existing networks. FTTN uses EXISTING architecture to connect to existing networks. The exchanges are an integral part of the FTTN system. They are only inconsequential for geographical and existing fibre purposes in the NBN.

    I repeat, an FTTN system would NOT exist without exchanges. The exchanges, as I've explained over in the FUD thread, are the aggregation point OF FTTN. You cannot ignore them and they DOMINATE the planning surrounding the FTTN.

    EDITED for Clarity

  • Graeme Here

    RR is Mr TurnBull!

    He comes out with a lot Bull as well.

  • Paul K

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Turnbull has said 12Mbps within 12 months and 24Mbps within 24 months (how?). FTTN, satellite and wireless can do the first. That is "ubiquitous".

    I'd be interested to see where this was said as well (link?)

    But, does anyone suspect that if it was said it would have wiggle room?

    Turnbull has said that it may, might, could, would be a target etc to have 12Mbps within 12 months and 24Mbps within 24 months.

    Every "announcement" he makes is the same, nothing more then a wishlist.

  • DenisPC9

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    FTTN is not consistent broadband because of the copper. It can be ubiquitous.

    But it wont be. If FttN will be rolled out as per the LNP's "thinking" it certainly wont be "ubiquitous". As it will be mixed with FttP/H, Cable and god knows what else bubbles to the surface of those febrile minds.

    To my mind, the more we discuss the possibility of FttN, the more entrenched it will become in the minds of those politicians pushing it. Whilst the LNP and their supporters don't appear to have the intellectual wherewithal to look to Australia's future, they certainly have the rat cunning to garner opinion and information from all sources and given certain exceptions, WP is a good source of free, quality technical advice and informal polling.

  • Mr.Wizzard

    If the coalition wins the next election they have these options

    1/ Buy the copper network form Telstra for $25 Billions.

    2/ Give Telstra $25 Billion to build a FTTN/FTTH network.

    3/ Continue on the NBN FTTH.

    4/ Give Telstra a small amount say $1 to $2 billion to fix black spots.

    5/ Do nothing.

    As they don�t like the NBN so I do think it�s going to be do nothing with maybe a small black spot programme.

    Mr.Wizzard

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:22 am
    DenisPC9

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Dangerously pinko I know, but there you have it.

    Only if they use the Multi Wave format. I believe, initially NBNCo are using only white light signals, so your honour has not been compromised :-P

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:22 am
    DenisPC9

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    I honestly don't know what the Coalition is offering.

    Then don't be generous, assume the worst. If they run true to form, you wont be disappointed. If they have a brain fart and actually produce the goodies by keeping what we have currently being rolled out, we can all be pleasantly surprised.

    Those who believe that the markets will provide all the answers are as deluded as those who believe that Govts will do the same. There are some things Govts do better than Private Enterprise and there are other things that PE do better than Govt. Nation building is the Govt's bailiwick; resource development and consumer items belong with PE and so on. A Nation's Communications are best left to the nation.

    However, don't assume the outcome of Elections 2013 is a foregone conclusion. 1993 was Keating's to lose.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:50 am
    Mike K

    raoulrules writes...

    Mr Turnbull has mentioned the capital that is spent in the tens of billions means higher prices.

    That's not strictly true, since pricing is a function of capex, opex, rate of return, etc. Higher capex but lower opex and rate of return can mean lower prices.

    And, of course, that statement is vague.

    Which prices? How much higher? Higher than what? When? etc.

    Entry level pricing, or average pricing? If the pricing is the average pricing, and it is above the entry level, have the reasons for consumers choosing higher plans been considered? The comparison would otherwise be meaningless.

    Are we talking 0.1% higher, or 200% higher? The significance of the statement would be much lower towards one end of that scale.

    If higher means "higher than 2020 ADSL pricing with zero upgrades between now and then", then the comparison would be stupid because that would be a horrible outcome. It is well understood by members of the general public that it would be cheaper to never bother upgrading roads or rail lines or electricity infrastructure, but no developed country would seriously consider stopping all infrastructure upgrades to try and keep hypothetical future costs down.

    If higher means "higher than what would happen under the Coalition", then that statement is invalid because nobody knows what would happen under the Coalition. Capex is undefined. Opex is undefined. Rate of return is undefined. Everything is undefined.

    Theoretical policies may exist where pricing is lower, but such policies would have to make sacrifices in some area, if not every area other than pricing.

    Going with the opposition's statements so far, they want the private sector to be involved, and they want to re-use existing infrastructure. That means commercial rates of return and maintaining the copper network. Both of those are inputs to the pricing function mentioned above. It is impossible to predict the outcome with any degree of accuracy, but to blindly believe that pricing will be lower purely because of lower capex is just wishful thinking.

    Of course, it also contains the built in assumption that whatever the Coalition does will be "enough" for whatever time period is being considered. (Which is often conveniently shortened to roughly the useful life of FTTN...)

    It may be normal for an opposition to not bother releasing policies until a week before the election, but that doesn't make it right. People who continuously point that out seem not to realise that they are highlighting a flaw in our democracy.

    The Coalition doesn't want to release policies until the last possible moment, so they can maximise criticism of Julia while deflecting all criticism of themselves with "herp derp, we don't need policies yet!".

    This is not the action of an organisation that genuinely wants better outcomes for the general public.

    Labor isn't that much better, but our current opposition is the worst offender in this department in living memory.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:50 am
    Mental as Anything

    Graeme Here writes...

    RR is Mr TurnBull!

    I think you'll find it's Sophie M.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 8:00 am
    U T C
    this post was edited

    I am prepared to pay $5000 for fibre from premise to Node if need be. Can it be done?

  • 2012-Jul-13, 8:00 am
    Mr.Wizzard

    U T C writes...

    I am prepared to pay $5000 for fibre from premise to Node if need be. Can it be done?

    Telstra at present charges $1,000 per metre for customers who want fibre, so a 1km of fibre will cost you $1,000,000.

    Properly under the NBN they won�t charge that much, but will be in excess of $50,000.

    Mr.Wizzard

  • 2012-Jul-13, 8:07 am
    U T C
    this post was edited

    Mr.Wizzard writes...

    but will be in excess of $50,000.

    Ouch!
    Im only 500mtrs from Exchange too.. and i guess by the time i pay for the Ftth i will also be paying a premium for a Broadband package as well. No doubt Telstra will be wanting their slice and will be way above the 7% rio..
    grr..
    I can see Greenfields developments popping up all over place..
    From a consumer end user perspective, its impossible for fttn to be 'Cheaper or Faster"

  • 2012-Jul-13, 8:07 am
    CMOTDibbler

    seven_tech writes...

    May I ask where he said this? I'm not disputing it, but I'd like a reference if you have one.

    First a correction. It was 24Mbps in 48 months not 24 months. I still don't know how this 'upgrade' happens.

    It was said in his Press Club speech last year ...

    Network Co would be required to ensure, as far as is practicable, that Australians within the designated areas have access to a rapid upgrade in broadband services to at least 12 mbps as soon as possible � ideally within twelve months � and should have access to 24 mbps within forty eight months.
    http://www.malcolmturnbull.com.au/media/speeches/address-to-the-national-press-club-australia/

  • 2012-Jul-13, 8:08 am
    Cabidas 22222

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Telstra reckoned (NBN mkI) they could do FTTN to 80-90% with $5bn of their own money and $4.7bn of the government's money. That was 25-50Mbps in about two thirds of that area and 12-20Mbps elsewhere. Dunno what it would cost to get that to 93%.

    That just gives an indication of build cost.

    Yes, and Citibank (or citylink or whatever they're called) said it is likely to cost $16 odd billion. And the coalition? How much are they saying it is to build?

    The point is that to cover 93% of the population with FTTn it is going to be expensive. There isn't a doubt. Where the argument lies is in the definition of expensive. What dollar figure is expensive?

    Either way it's going to be billions. And 10s of Billions once we factor in the population en masse.

    And then the billions later down the track to upgrade to whatever we need in the future.

    So I agree, the devil is in the detail. Detail we don't yet have. And detail that is still likely to illustrate that FTTn is 'cheaper' for the time being, but more expensive for the long term. But again, we cant know for sure. But all signs point to this being the case.

    Now:

    Ubiquity vs Uniformity or Consistancy

    CMOT is right in saying that ubiquity doesn't necessarily mean consistant.
    However it really depends on how the statement is formed:

    'All Australians will have access to fast internet' � ubiquitious and consistant

    'Some Australians will have 12mbps and some will have none' � Not ubiquitious and not consistant

    'Some Australians will have 12mbps, some will have 40mbps and some will have 80mbps' � The 'coverage' of 'internet' is ubiquitious, but the 'bandwidth or speeds' aren't ubiquitious and the 'bandwidth' isn't consistant.

    It's a total play on words and THIS IS WHAT POLITITIONS (AND CAR SALESMEN) DO so it's good to be aware of this.

    So I agree with CMOT in what he is trying to do as I think by being overly analytical and specific you help to form very valid arguments against the opposing party and cover all bases.

    In that, I'm assuming this what he is trying to do. Otherwise he's just being a douche who gets a thrill out of wasting peoples time by creating disunity where otherwise there would be none.

    And in that case I would ususally just smile and agree, fart, and casually leave the room...

  • 2012-Jul-13, 8:08 am
    Cabidas 22222

    DenisPC9 writes...

    Those who believe that the markets will provide all the answers are as deluded as those who believe that Govts will do the same.

    Hear hear!

    There are some things Govts do better than Private Enterprise and there are other things that PE do better than Govt.

    +1 trillion bazillion

    A Nation's Communications are best left to the nation.

    DenisPC9 For PM!!!

  • 2012-Jul-13, 8:19 am
    aARQ-vark

    U T C writes...

    I can see Greenfields developments popping up all over place..

    True but given the Coalition's policy with respect to doing it cheaper! �

    This doesn't mean they will get FTTH more likely where Fibre isn't readily available you will see them provisioned with Privatised Wireless.

    Its a lot cheaper!

  • 2012-Jul-13, 8:19 am
    Mike K

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    First a correction. It was 24Mbps in 48 months not 24 months. I still don't know how this 'upgrade' happens.

    Turnbull will pass new laws of physics in which the effective channel capacity is doubled, and all lines will run twice as fast!

    Of course, the legislation could get blocked in the senate, or the universe could refuse to follow it...

  • Mike K

    U T C writes...

    I am prepared to pay $5000 for fibre from premise to Node if need be. Can it be done?

    Theoretically, it would become cost effective if you got your whole street connected.

    Telstra would need to implement a process for small scale copper->fibre, but they won't do that unless the demand is very high or they are forced to by legislation.

    Turnbull might talk about FTTN->FTTH upgrades overseas, but discussing it at a theoretical level is a long way from legislating to make it happen.

  • CMOTDibbler

    seven_tech writes...

    + $15 Billion for the copper.....

    That's if someone other than Telstra builds FTTN and they buy the copper. If they lease the copper (as mentioned by Thodey) then it will be opex and shouldn't be added to the build cost.

    And that is to 60%. NOT 80-90%. Read the submission.

    This?

    However, if the government is able to commit the full $4.7B as a loan at concessional interest rates, the full NBN footprint will be between 80% and 90% of the Australian population.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 12:04 pm
    U T C

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    That's if someone other than Telstra builds FTTN a

    Well there would no longer be an NBNco in that case, because Telstra will own it all.
    Deja Vu..
    Here we go again..sigh..

  • 2012-Jul-13, 12:04 pm
    aARQ-vark
    this post was edited

    seven_tech writes...

    May I ask where he said this? I'm not disputing it, but I'd like a reference if you have one.

    I've asked twice already no response!

    I find it incredible he would say this, because, for example, in my area, that would be impossible. It would require replacement of the copper and/or nodes put in.

    Quite True CMOT selectively ignores Mike Quigley's advice to Malcolm Turnbull that he simply can't transpose what New Zealand did with their FTTN network (now being decomissioned) as the two redundant copper networks are entirely different- In Australia you first have to reconfigure all of the copper here to allow it to run FTTN!.

    And what's the point of doing that when FTTH is cheaper than copper!

    Further in New Zealand (Malcolm's favourite FTTN model that he used to refer to before they saw the light and ditched it) � their FTTN network couldn't even average 10Mbps across the network.

    The speeds Malcolm refers to with respect to FTTN are in high density Metropolitan suburbs where you have a Node out the front of every apartment block!

    The problem Malcolm has is that the majority of Australians live in "suburbia" and the cost of provisioning that service to the majority of Australian's exceeds the cost of providing FTTH.

    So Malcolm's mantra of doing it "Cheaper" is nothing more than simply lying to the Australian public!

    His solution will on average � only marginally improve the existing ADSL2+ speeds in Metropolitan area's � that's his version of what he considers cheaper which of course then has to be dug up like they are doing in NZ and be replaced with FTTH not to mention the lost revenue to GDP by installing redundant technology that adds nothing to the national economy.

    Or if he is going to provision faster FTTN eg 50Mbps then that is going to cost substantially more than FTTH in which case its more expensive so he's lying and further it still will have to be dug up and replaced with FTTH anyway � noting of course that 38 percent of Australians connecting to the NBN now are already electing to use the 100Mbps service.

    So much for his misleading misinformed statement that No one in Australia needs anything more than 12mbps.

    Shadow communications minister, Malcolm Turnbull, has claimed a 12 megabits per second (Mbps) connection to the home is enough for anybody, with no applications existing today that require additional bandwidth.

    Obviously he forgot about the next day when making that statment and of course simply cannot project into the future!

    and his statement here!

    �People in the industry will tell you that they cannot get people to pay a significant premium for an increase in speed. That is partly because, that for a residential user, there isn�t much, if anything, you can do with 100 [Mbps] that you can�t do with 12 [Mbps

    Well the 38 percent of people connecting to the NBN have simply made a mockery of Malcolm misleading misinformation haven't they@!

  • 2012-Jul-13, 12:07 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    Paul K writes...

    But, does anyone suspect that if it was said it would have wiggle room?

    He'll need it. There's not a snowball's chance in hell the first bit can be achieved. What magic trick is going to make the speed go from 12Mbps to 24Mbps? Maybe he can do 12Mbps in 48 months.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 12:07 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    �People in the industry will tell you that they cannot get people to pay a significant premium for an increase in speed. That is partly because, that for a residential user, there isn�t much, if anything, you can do with 100 [Mbps] that you can�t do with 12 [Mbps

    HD skype anyone?
    Nah, never use that.
    "Seriously who would ever sext? Who would ever text?"

    Ahemmmm....

  • U T C

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Maybe he can do 12Mbps in 48 months.

    Well thats easy enough to do, its already ADSL speeds..
    In any case, its not just about downloads.. Uploads are very important as well..

  • aARQ-vark
    this post was edited

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    This?

    No link there CMOT.~!

    That's if someone other than Telstra builds FTTN and they buy the copper. If they lease the copper (as mentioned by Thodey) then it will be opex and shouldn't be added to the build cost.

    But this isn't Coalition Policy CMOT is it! its Telstra's dictating to Government!

    And you fail to mention the fact that its the Australian Taxpayer that provides the capital write down costs on Telstra's infrastructure rollout!

    That is simply misleading the debate entirely with respect to costs!

    The fact is and I quote!

    �Malcolm Turnbull has today revealed that he plans for NBN Co to buy Telstra�s copper loops from nodes to customer premises to deliver his broadband plan and structural separation

    And the reason the Coalition are steering clear of this is yet again they have put their foot in their mouth and growing budget black hole � and the simple reason is that if the Commonwealth acquire an Asset then under the legislation they are required to pay reasonable compensation!

    The ACCC have set the framework for that in which Telstra has in various regulatory proceedings valued the copper network asset at $20 billion and $33 billion dependant with the latter dependant on future earnings rulings as I understand it.

    So down to tin tacks here.

    Its going to cost the Australian Taxpayer approximately $20 billion to roll out redundant FTTN which at best will deliver maybe 10Mbps to 60 percent of Australia.

    Coupled with an additional payment of 20 billion to buy the Copper network off Telstra!

    So we are up to how much now $40 billion in expense at the minimum however it could be $53 billion and then some � (noting costs of gone up since the original build estimate so lets add another several percent and make it $60 billion given that we have probably at least 3 years of pissing about with the legislation and additional costs and legal arguments being launched left right and centre to deal with before it even gets off the ground.

    So much for the Liberals lying about their network being cheaper and faster to roll out!

    The fact is its going to cost the Australian Taxpayer considerably more than the current FTTH not to mention substantially more in telecommunication costs as the opex on FTTN is also � substantially more than FTTH just to start with and then there is � the at least 27 percent return that Telstra wants on their investment!

    Its no surprise that New Zealand under their privatised model were are and will continue to pay some of the highest costs per MB downloaded off the internet in the world.

    And we will also get to join them in that only at an average of 10Mbps for those on FTTN.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 12:15 pm
    ungulate

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    That's if someone other than Telstra builds FTTN and they buy the copper. If they lease the copper (as mentioned by Thodey) then it will be opex and shouldn't be added to the build cost.

    Either which way its unnecessarily costly to the end user.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 12:15 pm
    aARQ-vark

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Maybe he can do 12Mbps in 48 months.

    Really CMOT on what basis is this statement made!

    Do you have a developed business plan aligned with a detailed project with milestones put in place that detail the rollout.

    Do you have the legislative instruments that have passed both the House of Representatives and the Senate that enable the Coalitions pie in the sky proposal to proceed.

    Has Malcolms plan to conduct a full and frank Cost Benefit analysis been completed and what are the time lines to achieve that.

    Have Telstra signed the relevant Agreements with the Coalition as to the compensation that they will get for the copper network and structurally separating.

    Have all the other Private Telco's agreed to this and have all their legal actions been resolved with respect to that

    Has the Productivity Commission approved all the necessary legislation and provisioned it with respect to all the High court challenges projected.

    Have the ACCC provided their oversight and agreement with respect to the above.

    Mmmmm

    Maybe he can do 12Mbps in 48 months.

    Really I don't see how?

    You obviously do perhaps you would like to share that!

  • 2012-Jul-13, 12:17 pm
    seven_tech

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    That's if someone other than Telstra builds FTTN and they buy the copper. If they lease the copper (as mentioned by Thodey) then it will be opex and shouldn't be added to the build cost.

    No....it'll just be a constant subsidy on budget instead. How is this better??

    This?

    I was actually referring to the Citigroup submission, but I made that unclear.

    See what I find interesting is the original Telstra/government FTTN was going to be $4.7 billion (plus copper, but we won't go into that) to 98% at 12/1. And yet Citigroup's analysis gives 40% FTTN (not 60- I was getting my numbers mixed) plus subsidies and wireless at $16.7 billion.....that's an AWFULLY big gap. $5 billion to 98% or $17 billion to 40%.....somebody is lying. And seeing as Citigroup are PAID to analyse the situation for stock purposes....they're not likely to lie....

    This is the problem. The Coalition have given no details. Does their '$6.7 billion' include 40% or 60% or 98% FTTN? Will it guarantee 12/1, or 24/1 or 50/1?? We don't know and I'm sorry but I literally give absolute ZERO thought or credit to these 'alternatives' until I see details.

    Are you willing to defend a submission that is from 6 years ago and seems to contradict current analysis and costings?

  • 2012-Jul-13, 12:17 pm
    seven_tech

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    It was said in his Press Club speech last year ...

    See, I don't buy this for 1 minute. I get (sometimes) 8mbps. To solve this, you'd have to shorten my copper. And everyone else's in the same position. That is a MUCH bigger job, putting in nodes, than 12 months. Note he doesn't say its a guaranteed 12/1. So, because my exchange is ADSL2+ enabled, and therefore I COULD get 12/1 (or 24/1 for that matter) does that mean I get nothing??

    This is the ridiculous nature of EVERYTHING Turnbull says without details. He says '12/1 within 12 month's (which rings very well in the ears by the way- soundbite anyone?) and yet gives NO details on how he'd achieve this.

    And I'm sorry, but 4 YEARS for 24/1??? Almost half of Australia would have 100/40 by then??! That's just useless. I bet he's regretting saying that now.

  • Paul K

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Whirlpool Forum Rules
    REPLYING TO
    CMOTDibbler...

    That's if someone other than Telstra builds FTTN and they buy the copper. If they lease the copper (as mentioned by Thodey) then it will be opex and shouldn't be added to the build cost.

    Yes, but how much will it add to the users costs? Personally I care nothing for the cost to build, only on how much it will cost myself as a user. Saying it's opex and therefore cheaper is only true from a single point of view, the person providing the capital.

    The end user has to pay for a return on both the capital and the operating costs.

    Say its $15 billion to build and Telstra's leased assets are valued at $15 billion. The (LNP) gov says ... we saved 20 billion dollars...

    Lets assume 7 million connections. As the liberal gov believe everything should receive a commercial rate of return... Lets pick 15% (yes, that's very low)

    $2.25 billion ($15 Billion to build, at 15% a year)
    $2.25 billion (Telstra wants 15% of the value (15 billion) of their leased infrastructure) per year
    $1 Billion (operating costs)

    $1.5 billion based on 10 years (to repay the 15 billion build before its expected to be replaced by FTTH)

    Total cost $7 Billion a year

    Cost per user $1000 a year or $83 a month

    And that's before the delivery of any data, the cost to cancel the NBN and the addition of the GST.

    Suddenly $100 for a basic connection is looking possible...

    Welcome to New Zealand prices.

    The NBNs lack of a "commercial rate of return" doesn't seem like such a handicap...

  • Timbel
    this post was edited

    http://www.itnews.com.au/News/308585,telstra-to-gain-8b-under-coalition-plan-analysts.aspx

    Can anyone make heads or tails of this article? Are they saying that in addition to payments for the ducts, dark fibre and USO obligations ($11bn) a Coalition government would need to pay $8bn for the copper network, making it ~$19bn?

    Telstra stands to gain $8.2 billion in compensation for selling its copper network to a future coalition-led Federal Government, according to Deutsche Bank analysts

    It cannot be instead of the current deal of $11bn NPV considering that it does not make logical sense to pay less for the use of the copper network in addition to ducts/dark fibre etc so basically the case that FTTN is cheaper is on shaky ground. Furthermore it is entirely in effecient in its design.

  • Mike K

    Timbel writes...

    http://www.itnews.com.au/News/308585,telstra-to-gain-8b-under-coalition-plan-analysts.aspx

    Can anyone make heads or tails of this article?

    They got one part right:

    The analysts suggested that even accounting for an expected cost-benefit analysis of the current NBN in the event of a coalition win, a FTTN rollout could begin by the 2015 financial year and be completed within four years.

    A hypothetical FTTN rollout won't be finished before 2019, at which point the NBN is projected to have passed over 9 million premises.

  • Timbel

    Mike K writes...

    A hypothetical FTTN rollout won't be finished before 2019.

    At best, assuming no delays. So at best a completion time of two years difference?

  • 2012-Jul-13, 12:53 pm
    Mike K

    Timbel writes...

    So at best a completion time of two years difference?

    Pretty much.

    A few million premises get connected faster, but to an inferior service.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 12:53 pm
    seven_tech

    Timbel writes...

    Can anyone make heads or tails of this article? Are they saying that in addition to payments for the ducts, dark fibre and USO obligations ($11bn) a Coalition government would need to pay $8bn for the copper network, making it ~$19bn?

    Yes and no I think. It depends if they buy the copper outright or lease it. Leasing it would fulfil the goal of the Coalition of it being 'cheaper' on budget. But it'd cost WAY more in the long run.

    They'd be stupid NOT to buy it....but then again with the myriad of analyses around, they'd be stupid not to do FTTH....and they're not....

  • seven_tech

    Timbel writes...

    Can anyone make heads or tails of this article? Are they saying that in addition to payments for the ducts, dark fibre and USO obligations ($11bn) a Coalition government would need to pay $8bn for the copper network, making it ~$19bn?

    Ugh, I just read this:

    'The project also had a 23 percent chance of continuing with delays of up to two years, according to the analysis, while the coalition plan had a 30 percent likelihood.

    The notion of the NBN being suspended as-is was also marked higher than the project moving forward, at a 25 percent chance.'

    This is really annoying me now. Why oh WHY would Labor CANCEL the NBN if they got re-elected???? It costs them ZERO dollars from the budget!!

    I hate economic analyses like this. They tell less than half the story and that half biased. THESE sorts of analyses are what give the Coalition such crappy ideas.

  • CMOTDibbler

    Timbel writes...

    Can anyone make heads or tails of this article?

    It looks like they're expecting the CAN Co (NBNCo?) to buy the copper for $11.4bn. That would be instead of the decommissioning payments in the current NBNCo-Telstra deal. Somehow they get that to be a $8.2bn gain to Telstra. afaik the decommissioning payments are ~$4bn so that's close. There must be some other unexplained number in there.

    Telstra gets an extra $8.2bn and the CAN Co gets instant revenue from ~9.5 million ULL services. Dunno if that's a win or a loss for either of them.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 3:25 pm
    Timbel

    CMOT,

    upon reflection I think you are right, a total payment of $11.4bn take the unneeded $4bn from decommissioning the which comes to $7.4 and obviously some other assumptions are made in regards to the balance. So with FTTN I think it is safe to assume Raoul was wrong with assuming that the outright purchase of the copper would amount to the same as the decommissioning payments.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 3:25 pm
    CMOTDibbler

    Timbel writes...

    So with FTTN I think it is safe to assume Raoul was wrong with assuming that the outright purchase of the copper would amount to the same as the decommissioning payments.

    I don't know. As soon as the copper was sold Telstra would have to pay to use it. The money Telstra and everyone else paid to use the copper would go to the CAN Co (NBNCo). That would then have to be offset against the sale price for both CAN Co and Telstra. I don't have enough information to know how that works out in comparison to the current deal.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 4:51 pm
    U T C

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    As soon as the copper was sold Telstra would have to pay to use it.

    Then watch them roll out competitive FTTH .. alongside canco..

  • 2012-Jul-13, 4:51 pm
    dJOS

    U T C writes...

    Then watch them roll out competitive FTTH .. alongside canco..

    Exactly, it'll be Cable wars all over again with us the consumers losing just like last time!

  • 2012-Jul-13, 4:54 pm
    Megalfar
    this post was edited

    http://www.itnews.com.au/News/308585,telstra-to-gain-8b-under-coalition-plan-analysts.aspx

    So an $8billion (that is going to be ONBUDGET MONEY) to be given to Telstra as Compensation (where no compensation given to DSLAM Providers at all) so that Coalition version of the BB Plan can run a FTTN style network.

    It's all becoming too expensive.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 4:54 pm
    seven_tech

    U T C writes...

    Then watch them roll out competitive FTTH .. alongside canco..

    BINGO! We have a winner!

    The Coalition and supports are kidding themselves if they think Telstra will just sit back after they've sold on the copper and NOT put in FTTH by cherrypicking.

    And yet they STILL want FTTN....actually, that's probably because they don't understand ANY of this we just talked about. The supporters that is.....I think the Coalition know EXACTLY what they're doing...

  • 2012-Jul-13, 5:08 pm
    aARQ-vark

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    I don't know. As soon as the copper was sold Telstra would have to pay to use it

    I N F R U S T R U C T U R E C O M P E T I T I O N!

    Haven't you been listening CMOT!

    Telstra won't pay to use FTTN they will cherry pick areas and roll out their own FTTH network leaving Malcolm and the Liberal Party wallowing in their wake!

    Just a complete nonsense of an idea and moreover your assumption that Australia's biggest Telco would be paying the Government to use "Redundant" Technology when they can provide a better faster service using FTTH.

    Not to mention dropping the price of their existing redundant HFC Fibre with its already sunk costs to sink the boot in even further.

    There would be no money in the Can Co NBNCo under the Liberal Government it would be the biggest white elephant in Australia's history!

    I don't have enough information to know how that works out in comparison to the current deal.

    Nor obviously the understanding of the strategic game that Telstra is playing whilst making completely unsubstantiated claims as to the outcomes under a Liberal Conservative Government!

  • 2012-Jul-13, 5:08 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    aarq-vark writes...

    Telstra won't pay to use FTTN they will cherry pick areas and roll out their own FTTH network leaving Malcolm and the Liberal Party wallowing in their wake!

    And Telstra will have billions of dollars in the bank to get the ball rolling.....

  • U T C

    aarq-vark writes...

    Telstra won't pay to use FTTN they will cherry pick areas and roll out their own FTTH network
    precisely..
    And they will have a Taxpayer Warchest of at least $8-20billion or more to do it with..

  • Frood

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    As soon as the copper was sold Telstra would have to pay to use it.

    U T C writes...

    Then watch them roll out competitive FTTH .. alongside canco..

    seven_tech writes...

    The Coalition and supports are kidding themselves if they think Telstra will just sit back after they've sold on the copper and NOT put in FTTH by cherrypicking.

    cabidas writes...

    And Telstra will have billions of dollars in the bank to get the ball rolling.....

    Oh my! what a pickle the Coalition will have put themselves in if they choose FTTN using Telstra's separated infrastructure...

  • 2012-Jul-13, 6:04 pm
    aARQ-vark

    seven_tech writes...

    BINGO! We have a winner!

    The Coalition and supporters are kidding themselves if they think Telstra will just sit back after they've sold on the copper and NOT put in FTTH by cherrypicking.

    I agree entirely and am quite bemused at the complete ignorance of some people with respect to the musings on the future impact of the Coalition's policy.

    At best you could say that they are simply supporting the Coaltion's line in providing completely misleading information without an ounce of supporting evidence!

    And yet they STILL want FTTN....actually, that's probably because they don't understand ANY of this we just talked about.

    No its their intention not to discuss the specifics but rather make unsubstantiated misleading statements that provide pie in the sky alternatives without any qualification whatsoever.

    I think the Coalition know EXACTLY what they're doing...

    To quantify this the term Outright lying to the Australian Public' is an apt description given the overwhelming evidence of the numerous failed public statements from Wireless is a suitable alternative to No one needs more than 12Mbps.

    Cheers

  • 2012-Jul-13, 6:04 pm
    seven_tech

    aarq-vark writes...

    Telstra won't pay to use FTTN they will cherry pick areas and roll out their own FTTH network leaving Malcolm and the Liberal Party wallowing in their wake!

    Just to add emphasis, cause everyone else sees this as the most likely outcome....

    Maybe if we say this often enough it'll get through.....maybe not too....

  • 2012-Jul-13, 6:14 pm
    aARQ-vark

    cabidas writes...

    And Telstra will have billions of dollars in the bank to get the ball rolling.....

    Its pretty simple to see the end game from Telsta CEO should a Liberal Coalition Government be elected in fact he is quite up front in terms of its impact to his shareholders and the companies future profit base!@

    But you won't see Malcolm Turnbull or Tony Abbott discussing those particular outcomes in public

    You wouldn't to advertise the fact that their policies will see every Australian paying substantially more and then some especially those in Outer Metropolitan, Regional and Remote Australia than they will under Labor's current NBN program!

  • 2012-Jul-13, 6:14 pm
    aARQ-vark

    U T C writes...

    precisely..
    And they will have a Taxpayer Warchest of at least $8-20billion or more to do it with..

    You have to wonder why CMOTdibber continues to provide misleading unsubstantiated claims with respect to Coaltion Policy � and when asked for supporting links � he simply refuses to provide them or refers to redundant links.

    With respect to their WarChest � The ACCC valued the copper network at $20 billion as a going concern and up to $33 billion if you were to account for future earnings so the "Warchest" essentially could be as large as what the Government is spending on the current NBN Co program.

    Then you have to add additional price increases between the original estimate and at best a start date possibly in 3 years after they manage to deal with several other issues eg

    A cost benefit analysis as proposed by Malcolm Turnbull
    Legislative amendments
    Negotiating an Agreement with Telstra that Telstra are happy with
    High court challenges lodged by other interested parties who may be effected by the Liberals legislation
    Another complete review of the legislative changes by the Productivity Commission
    And of course further oversight by the ACCC
    Etc
    Ad nauseum
    Oh I forgot the Greens will control the Senate so I guess we can throw in the time taken for a double dissolution as well

    That essentially could take the spend to plus $60 billion for the Coaltion's alternative.

    Compared to the existing program which is currently being rolled out eg
    93 plus percent of Australia with FTTH a couple of percent with 4G LTE Wireless and the rest with 3rd Generation Ka-Band Satellite.

    And what have the majority got to look forward to under the Coalition's noodle network

    10Mbps average on their FTTN Network
    Highly contented Privatised Wireless
    Expensive and much reduced caps using the existing Satellite's

    Oh and all those Cost Benefits identified in the Swedish Study on FTTH @ about $4 billion per year � down the proverbial gurgler.

    Forgot to mention as soon as they rollout the FTTN network we will then have to reinvest in a FTTH network as FTTN will edit sorry is now redunant anyway!

    Cheers

  • U T C

    aarq-vark writes...

    With respect to their WarChest -

    Its actually possible for Telstra to use that money and start rolling out their own FTTH network, even before the FTTN build gets off the ground?

  • jwbam

    Frood writes...

    And whilst ever the laws of physics, specifically, electrical resistance, apply to this universe, distance will always be detrimental to telecommunication networks that rely on copper

    And even if the physicists were to come up with a new process for making copper super-conductive tomorrow, they would still need build superconductive copper factories, to pull up the old copper and relay the new copper and replace all the nodes to handle the huge bitrates and currents.

    Any suggestion they could change the properties of copper in the ground without pulling it up is just too magical.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 6:20 pm
    seven_tech

    aarq-vark writes...

    With respect to their WarChest � The ACCC valued the copper network at $20 billion as a going concern and up to $33 billion if you were to account for future earnings so the "Warchest" essentially could be as large as what the Government is spending on the current NBN Co program.

    Actually, I think it's been valued at around $8-11 Billion now by the ACCC- it's how they set wholesale prices. That $20 Billion was back when Telstra was suggesting FTTN in 2006.

    I could be wrong though.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 6:20 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    I know this is more fighting the FUD but it's in direct responce to The Coalition Position:

    Does anyone have a media contact?

    These questions/facts need to be brought in front of Turnbull so that the public can see it. It's that important. How can the coalition justify what they are promising?

    Someone needs to ask it in front of a huge media room!

    whrl.pl/Rdfyyg

    "Then watch them roll out competitive FTTH .. alongside canco.."

  • 2012-Jul-13, 6:21 pm
    seven_tech

    cabidas writes...

    These questions/facts need to be brought in front of Turnbull so that the public can see it. It's that important. How can the coalition justify what they are promising?

    They are. Nick Ross over at the ABC does it all the time. He just gets called a Labor Patsy because he approves of the NBN....

  • 2012-Jul-13, 6:21 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    seven_tech writes...

    He just gets called a Labor Patsy because he approves of the NBN....

    Anyone else....?

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:13 pm
    Tallweirdo

    cabidas writes...

    Someone needs to ask it in front of a huge media room!

    Before we get too carried away with this you might want to read this first:

    The NBN Access Act also introduces Parts 7 and 8 into the Telecommunications Act. These new Parts apply to fixed-line local access networks, or parts of such networks, that are built, upgraded, altered or extended after 1 January 2011 so that they are capable of providing a carriage service where the download transmission speed is normally more than 25 megabits per second to residential or small business owners. The effect of the new Parts is that such networks must be wholesale-only and operators of such networks must offer a layer 2 bitstream service on a non-discriminatory basis.

    Unless the Coalition repeal these provision of the Act (and get the repeal through the Senate) then any FTTH overbuild of a FTTN network would have to be wholesale-only and offer a layer 2 bitstream service like the NBN.

    The Act provides overbuild protection for the NBN by removing any competitive advantage that could be gained by overbuilding it and the Act would provide the same protection to any alternative FTTN build undertaken by a Coalition Government. As there would be no advantage to removing overbuild protection for a FTTN build I cannot see a reason why the Coalition would try to repeal these provision.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:13 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    "The NBN Access Act also introduces Parts 7 and 8 into the Telecommunications Act. These new Parts apply to fixed-line local access networks, or parts of such networks, that are built, upgraded, altered or extended after 1 January 2011 so that they are capable of providing a carriage service where the download transmission speed is normally more than 25 megabits per second to residential or small business owners. The effect of the new Parts is that such networks must be wholesale-only and operators of such networks must offer a layer 2 bitstream service on a non-discriminatory basis."

    I'm usure exactly how that prevents someone from building a 2nd network..

    If Telstra provides a 'wholesale only' FTTh right down the street past any FTTn...

    Is there somethingin there I'm misinterpreting?

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:27 pm
    U T C

    Tallweirdo writes...

    then any FTTH overbuild of a FTTN network would have to be wholesale-only

    Well i dont see how half this stuff will apply after intensive renegotiations with Telstra.. NBNco wont exist, but will become CanCo. Even if Telstra was required to Wholesale, i doubt if it would make any difference to their opportunity to overbuild. It wont be compatible with CanCo, so it could still be a lucrative opportunity for Telstra..Imagine if Competitors decided to dump CanCo and buy Wholesale Access from Telstra FTTH instead?
    Even a 50% loss to Canco would be disastrous for them.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:27 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    Will become Can'tCo

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:28 pm
    seven_tech

    U T C writes...

    Well i dont see how half this stuff will apply after intensive renegotiations with Telstra..

    Because it's legislated. A deal with Telstra doesn't change law. That's what he's saying.

    However, I don't see this as good enough protection for an FTTN network overbuild. The FTTH has a specific clause that doesn't allow ANY competitor to over-build in the next 10 years....why would that be necessary if the legislation was airtight?....

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:28 pm
    U T C

    seven_tech writes...

    The FTTH has a specific clause that doesn't allow ANY competitor to over-build in the next 10 years...

    Telstra will just retail where NBNco has already laid Ftth, and wont overbuild in those areas when Canco takes over, but whats to stop them overbuilding FTTN only areas?

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:30 pm
    seven_tech

    U T C writes...

    but whats to stop them overbuilding FTTN only areas?

    Legislation requiring it to be open-access and wholesale. But again, the clause is in the agreement with Telstra. WHY, when it's already in legislation, would they bother....unless they see the legislation as not enough protection, as I believe they do.

    Hence, the legislation is not likely to completely stop any threat of a FTTH overbuild by Telstra with FTTN. Only mitigate it. Telstra have shown to be VERY shrewd- I'm sure they can figure out a way around it....

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:30 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    Media Alert Media Alert...

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:34 pm
    seven_tech

    cabidas writes...

    Media Alert Media Alert...

    It's been mentioned in the media several times. That won't stop the Coalition or their supporters. It's ideology driving them....not ideas.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:34 pm
    Cabidas 22222

    seven_tech writes...

    It's ideology driving them....not ideas.

    Yes but it the electorate can see it and realise what it'll mean, the coalition have no choice but to respond...

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:41 pm
    aARQ-vark

    seven_tech writes...

    Actually, I think it's been valued at around $8-11 Billion now by the ACCC- it's how they set wholesale prices. That $20 Billion was back when Telstra was suggesting FTTN in 2006.

    In response!

    Abbott should ask Mr Turnbull how much he proposes to pay Telstra for its copper.

    �Valuing assets is always tricky. In this case it comes down to either what price Telstra is prepared to accept or what price a court would consider �just terms� for the acquisition of property,� Senator Conroy said.

    The ACCC considered the question of valuing the copper network in its report to the Expert Panel in January 2009. The full report, rather than the redacted report, was accidently tabled. That report noted there are two ways to value an asset, saying �cost-based approaches relate the value of the asset to the cost of purchasing or building the asset, whilst value-based approaches determine the value of an asset from its future net income earning capacity."3

    The report went on to note that Telstra had in various regulatory proceedings valued the copper network asset at $20 billion and $33 billion.

    http://www.minister.dbcde.gov.au/media/media_releases/2012/023

    Obviously in 2009 they were suggesting a price of $33 billion for the network which when you consider CMOT's completely misleading unsubstantiated statement provided here eg

    Citigroup estimated Turnbull's 'plan' would cost $16.7bn. That's less than half the cost of the NBN. That saves a bit more than $2 or $3 billion. whrl.pl/Rdfvbx

    Where he hasn't included the costs to reach that point entirely! aka up to an additonal $33 billion on top of that!

    Not to mention inflationary costs beween 2009 and obviously 2015 which is the earliest that the redundant FTTN rollout could occur!

    Cheers

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:41 pm
    seven_tech

    aarq-vark writes...

    Obviously in 2009 they were suggesting a price of $33 billion for the network which when you consider CMOT's completely misleading unsubstantiated statement provided here eg

    Hmmm, interesting. I was sure I saw an article that listed the ACCC valuing the CAN at, as I said, between $8 and $11 Billion.

    Time for a reference hunt!

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:44 pm
    rhom

    33bn down to 8bn is some serious asset value degradation.

    is the valuation now significantly less because the government is building ftth?

    if the government switched to building fttn instead shouldnt the valuation go up?

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:44 pm
    Genetic Modified Zealot

    rhom writes...

    if the government switched to building fttn instead shouldnt the valuation go up?

    Nope.

    Valuations are based on cashflows.
    You could spend $20 Billion on an asset but if cashflow does not meet expectations then market valuations of that asset would substantially drop.

    The NBN could spend $40 Billion on FTTH but if cash receipts is below expectations a future buyer will not pay $40 Billion for the asset.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:46 pm
    aARQ-vark

    rhom writes...

    is the valuation now significantly less because the government is building ftth?

    Yes

    if the government switched to building fttn instead shouldnt the valuation go up?

    Yes and then a whole heap more on top because your effectively also extending the life of the coppernetwork as well!@

    Go straight to the $33 billion mark as previously mentioned (just as a starting point)

    CHeers

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:46 pm
    aARQ-vark
    this post was edited

    raoulrules writes...

    Nope.

    Your own unsupported misleading opinion entirely here RaoulRules!

    Valuations are based on cashflows.

    True and the ACCC ruled in 2009 that if you included future earnings into the mix then the value of the Copper network would be $33 billion! See previous link provided.

    Of course if NBN Co built their FTTH network in competition with Telstra's redundant copper network then obviously its asset value would drop substantially, they knew that entirely! Hence Telstra's agreement with NBN Co for the use of their pits, ducts and dark Fibre Network.

    They get nothing for their redundant copper which will be decommissioned as Fibre is rolled out.

    The Copper Networks future earnings capacity is ZERO zilch nothing in fact the Government have to pay them to keep it running in the 7 percent section at this point in time as it is a simply unsustainable service at a commercial level.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:48 pm
    Mr Creosote
    this post was edited

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    FTTN is not consistent broadband because of the copper. It can be ubiquitous.

    It can only be considered ubiquitous in the roughly 50% of premises that will have it. 7% will have fixed wireless or sat. 30% will be in the HFC footprint,and then there will be some FTTH. They all provide ubquitous coverage in their areas only. Hardly ubiquity when compared to 93% FTTH.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:48 pm
    seven_tech

    Mr Creosote writes...

    It can only be considered ubiquitous in the roughly 50% of premises that will have it.

    50%!!!??!!?!?!?

    *laughs uproariously and then slips over*

    You're kidding yourself if you think the Coalition will rollout FTTN to 50%. Not even Citigroup think that (they reckon 40%) and that's for $17 Billion.

    But yes, it WON'T be ubiquitous.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:49 pm
    DenisPC9

    rhom writes...

    33bn down to 8bn is some serious asset value degradation.

    I don't think the Copper in situ is in exactly pristine condition ;-)

  • 2012-Jul-13, 7:49 pm
    Mr Creosote

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    I'm sure the 7% will be thrilled to hear it.

    The 7% need to keep in mind that 12mbps is only a starting point. After my discussions with reps on the NBN Discovery truck, its clear that NBN has a road map for increasing the speed for fixed wireless to 24mbps in the next 12 months, and higher in the following years. When their satellite comes online, the 3% will enjoy better services too.

    This is not just 'word games'. HA! Semantics be damned hey? LOL :)

  • 2012-Jul-13, 10:16 pm
    Mr Creosote

    seven_tech writes...

    50%!!!??!!?!?!?

    You will find I said roughly 50%, and that was because I have had a few bourbons and couldnt be stuffed doing the math to be more precise. ;) You will find its probably not too far off � but on the high side.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 10:16 pm
    seven_tech

    I just found this little gem:

    "104. Whilst a fibre to the node network will not provide the same service quality as fibre to the premise, there have been strong indications from parties of willingness to invest large amounts of capital. For example, Telstra originally proposed to Government a $5.7 billion fibre to the node network deployment (made up of $3.1 billion from Telstra and $2.6 billion from Government) to deploy a network capable of 6 Mbps. Telstra indicated that an additional contribution from Government of $2.1 billion would allow services of around 12 Mbps for 98% of the population.
    27.Assuming Telstra would not make any further contribution, the total incremental capital cost would have been $7.8 billion. "

    http://www.accc.gov.au/content/item.phtml?itemId=896705&nodeId=b11402f1a8c023efbe6cff423adf67d1&fn=Optus+Attachment+2A+-+CEG+Report+Contestable+market+asset+valuation.pdf

    So THAT's where Turnbull get's his $6.7 Billion FTTN from. Obviously the government would have to pay MORE now as compared to then in respect to what Telstra pays, because of the FTTH.

    Yeah.....so, how many people reckon 12Mbps for 98% of the population is likely???

    Wow, have a read of that ACCC report. There's some GREAT numbers for FUD busting in there:

    "Adjusting our new entrant fibre asset valuation
    above, we reduce the copper network valuation to between $22.9 billion and $17.9
    billion"

    This was in 2009, when FTTH was getting going. They calculated a FTTH would add $10-$15 Billion to the value (so $27-$38 Billion total) of the whole country's network. So a full FTTH network would be worth say $32 Billion, while the copper would be worth $20 Billion.....yeah, I can see it's MUCH better to keep the copper network....

  • 2012-Jul-13, 10:21 pm
    seven_tech

    Mr Creosote writes...

    You will find I said roughly 50%, and that was because I have had a few bourbons and couldnt be stuffed doing the math to be more precise. ;) You will find its probably not too far off � but on the high side.

    True. When you add in the extra backhaul already run for the FTTH beforehand, it'll probably increase the amount of FTTN overall. Not that that is a good thing. It just need to be all FTTH.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 10:21 pm
    Mr Creosote

    seven_tech writes...

    To solve this, you'd have to shorten my copper. And everyone else's in the same position. That is a MUCH bigger job, putting in nodes, than 12 months. Note he doesn't say its a guaranteed 12/1.

    Turnbull needs to come out and say how close to premises nodes will be. 1500mtr? 1000mtr? 500mtr? The numbers of nodes involved for each shortening of the copper increases dramatically. If he is planning on guaranteeing speeds of 24-48mbps then he will at least have to look at nodes within 500mtrs.

    And I'm sorry, but 4 YEARS for 24/1??? Almost half of Australia would have 100/40 by then??! Which is why FTTN cant be considered ubiquitous.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 10:23 pm
    seven_tech

    Mr Creosote writes...

    Turnbull needs to come out and say how close to premises nodes will be. 1500mtr? 1000mtr? 500mtr?

    He won't. Cause he doesn't know. They haven't done any studies or planning. They're going off what Telstra is telling them behind their hands, while publicly Telstra are lauding the NBN, or sitting on the fence.

    VDSL1 can give 50Mbps from 800m, otherwise....screwed...

  • 2012-Jul-13, 10:23 pm
    Mr Creosote

    CMOTDibbler writes...

    Telstra gets an extra $8.2bn and the CAN Co gets instant revenue from ~9.5 million ULL services. Dunno if that's a win or a loss for either of them.

    WOuld nearly have to be a loss for Can Co (looks like the name is changing yet again), because they would also then acquire the maintenance costs of an aging copper network with a customer base that is going to be reduced by FTTH and HFC, leaving the longest copper runs and poorest maintained areas to be serviced with less revenue.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 10:25 pm
    Mr Creosote

    seven_tech writes...

    He won't. Cause he doesn't know. They haven't done any studies or planning. They're going off what Telstra is telling them behind their hands, while publicly Telstra are lauding the NBN, or sitting on the fence.

    This is where journalists let us down badly. Its simple questions like that that Turnbull should be pressed on,and all too often they are more interested in how he lost weight than comms policy.

    VDSL1 can give 50Mbps from 800m, otherwise....screwed... Yep. And given that the average speed requirement in a few years (2015 I think) was forecast to be 39mbps, Turnbulls "solution" will be running at the upper end of capacity as soon as it is built.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 10:25 pm
    seven_tech

    Mr Creosote writes...

    Yep. And given that the average speed requirement in a few years (2015 I think) was forecast to be 39mbps, Turnbulls "solution" will be running at the upper end of capacity as soon as it is built.

    Yes and when he's asked about that future capacity....he changes the subject to "Have you seen how much work I can get done on my iPad!?"

    I REALLY wish Turnbull wasn't a Liberal at the moment...

  • 2012-Jul-13, 10:28 pm
    Mr Creosote

    seven_tech writes...

    I REALLY wish Turnbull wasn't a Liberal at the moment...

    Given Abbott and Hockeys regular foot in mouth episodes, I suspect Turnbull wishes he wasnt a Liberal a lot of the time either ;)

    It wouldnt be the first time.
    http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/malcolm-turnbull-wanted-to-join-labor/story-e6freuy9-1225765239758

  • 2012-Jul-13, 10:28 pm
    seven_tech

    Mr Creosote writes...

    It wouldnt be the first time.
    http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/malcolm-turnbull-wanted-to-join-labor/story-e6freuy9-1225765239758

    Interesting.

    I'd say from what I've seen he's a VERY left wing Liberal.....

  • 2012-Jul-13, 10:28 pm
    Mike K

    raoulrules writes...

    Nope.

    Valuations are based on cashflows.

    That is wrong.

    If you had said:

    Yep.

    Valuations are based on cashflows.

    Then you would have been correct.

  • 2012-Jul-13, 10:28 pm
    rhom

    raoulrules writes...

    Valuations are based on cashflows.

    how do you explain such a massive drop from copper when im fairly sure telstra havent reported any such massive drop in their cashflows?

  • Defaulty
    O.P.

    Continues in Part 7

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