so adsl1 is my option, is there a websites for plans for such?
so adsl1 is my option
If you are connected through the Tophat then you should be able to get Telstra ADSL2+ from Bigpond or any reseller. You need an active phone line.
Are you within the area shown by the map:
http://www.telstrawholes
is there a websites for plans for such?
Most ISPs will have suitable plans:
http://www.exetel.com.
http://www.internode.o
http://ww
http:/
http://www.clubtelc
so adsl1 is my option, is there a websites for plans for such?
All providers resell Telstra ADSL services � usually called 'Off Net' or 'Reach' plans. They are more expensive (Telstra charge more for access to their hardware) and usually include less quota (again Telstra transmission cost is higher).
It really depends on whether you want quantity of downloads or quality of service and support. You can have one or the other but not both. Also quality providers charge quite a bit more so something else to consider.
Yer i am on that map! hiding . i want to spend max $50 until nbn comes , grr this is more annoying. funny thing is i was with TPG and i had to close my account as they stated i could not get internet through them!
i want to spend max $50 until nbn comes , grr this is more annoying
Including phone? That'll be hard to do, but:
$49.95 20GB
http://www.spin.net.au/products/broadband
if im on tat map what service can i get, would this work out cheaper?
if im on tat map what service can i get, would this work out cheaper?
It does mean you can get Telstra resold ADSL2+ so faster!
Cheaper NO � and you still need to pay for phone rental as well as the plan cost so $50 all up is almost impossible for any quota.
would this work out cheaper?
Not sure what you mean.
To get ADSL2+ you need to get an active phone line connected. If there hasn't been one before then it will cost $299. Some ISPs can arrange that on your behalf. Some (like TPG) can't. Once you have an active phone line then you should have access to Telstra-based ADSL2+.
Spintel's plan is supplied on a Telstra port in a Zone 1 exchange at the same price as a non-Telstra port.
i rang telstra, i can get adsl2 but with them and there priiiiiiiicey! ill think about prepaid mobile wireless i thinks
i rang telstra, i can get adsl2 but with them and there priiiiiiiicey! ill think about prepaid mobile wireless i thinks
There are plenty of other providers you can go with who are cheaper. Does not have to be Bigpond.
Coaxial cable conducts electrical signal using an inner conductor (usually a solid copper, stranded copper or copper plated steel wire) surrounded by an insulating layer and all enclosed by a shield, typically one to four layers of woven metallic braid and metallic tape. That's what coax cable has on the inner side of the cable. It is not made completely of copper though.
Coaxial cable conducts electrical signal using an inner conductor (usually a solid copper, stranded copper or copper plated steel wire) surrounded by an insulating layer and all enclosed by a shield, typically one to four layers of woven metallic braid and metallic tape. That's what coax cable has on the inner side of the cable. It is not made completely of copper though.
By that arguement, the "copper" network isnt completely made of copper either, as it also has an insulating layer around it ....
By that arguement
All he did was quote the Wikipedia article that I whimed him, yet he insists Wikipedia is wrong. He doesn't understand that HFC cable can carry phone services (like Optus Cable does)
the "copper" network isnt completely made of copper either, as it also has an insulating layer around it ....
Don't forget the plastic drink bottles and baggies that have reportedly been spotted in use ;)
http://www.dailytelegraph.
http://www.overclockers.co
I'd guess what Dodo was probably referring to was that the RIM in the OP's area was augmented by a Tophat.
25 Oct 2011 Telstra will start rolling out Top Hats in November, to approximately 2000 street side cabinets and expect the project to be completed within 18 months. At the same time we�ll be replacing the connection from the street side cabinet to Telstra�s core network with Gigabit Ethernet fibre.
That's what coax cable has on the inner side of the cable. It is not made completely of copper though.
You're kidding, right?
hmm there all out of price range, with phone line im looking at 60+ and im just awaiting NBN in Setp too
hmm there all out of price range, with phone line im looking at 60+
The Spintel "Connect One" plan is $49.95.
http://www.spin.net.au/products/broadband
im just awaiting NBN in Setp too
When will that be?
the NBNCO guys are everywere in my area, pretty much run over them when there having their smoko break in the middle of the road. They stated in September, with Spin it's on a 12 month contract
They stated in September
So I guess that you want maximum 6 month contract then?
Clubtelco $30pm ($50 effective setup fee, 1 month commitment) + Telstra Homeline Budget $22.95.
Only 10GB at full speed but after that it's shaped to 1Mbps so not totally useless.
Pennytel unlimited ADSL $39 ($100 setup for no contract) + Telstra HLB $22.95
(There are still some question marks over the quality of the broadband product)
He doesn't even understand that HFC cable can carry phone services (like Optus Cable does)
Wow come on NewCrest seriously... HFC does not support phone lines.... Please stop getting information off Wikipedia and ask some of your friends or IT professionals about it.
Digital subscriber line (DSL) is a technology used by traditional telephone.
Hybrid fiber-coaxial (HFC) is a telecommunications industry term for a broadband.
HFC does not support telephone technology.
You're kidding, right?
No I'm not kidding I'm being quite serious. The inner side of the coax has copper lining in it but not a lot.
HFC does not support phone lines.... Please stop getting information off Wikipedia and ask some of your friends or IT professionals about it.
How about you stop posting things which you clearly have no idea about? Optus cable services, for instance, can deliver phone over the HFC cable.
No I'm not kidding I'm being quite serious. The inner side of the coax has copper lining in it but not a lot.
Coaxial cable IS copper (or steel) � the conductor � the part of the cable that actually carries the signal � is made of metal. You seem to be confusing HFC and fibre (and are misleading others, like in your first post when you said "Fiber doesn't use copper it is HFC")
HFC does not support telephone technology.
Of course it does. Both Optus and Neighbourhood Cable (now owned by iinet) provide traditional phone services via the HFC cable. Telstra's copper phoneline network is not used.
Look at the description on the following link: HFC phone
http://www.transact.co
They stated in September, with Spin it's on a 12 month contract
if you go with Spin's $50 20GB ADSL/Phone bundle on a 12 months contract and the NBN goes live in your area then Spin will migrate your plan from copper/ADSL onto the NBN fibre
http://www.spin.net.au/
Of course HFC uses phone line service, but coax cable it self does not and that's the argument I had with you NewCrest for some reason you think coax cable supports telephone line when it doesn't. Yes HFC has copper in it which is why it is used for both broadband/phone use.
How about you stop posting things which you clearly have no idea about? Optus cable services, for instance, can deliver phone over the HFC cable.
Yeah correct but not over coax cable. Don't be nasty next time find other ways of explaining things in a suitable and a respectful matter.
Telstra's copper phoneline network is not used.
You never knew that? Telstra's phone line isn't removed for a while due to people still requiring access to a phone line to make calls. After a couple of months or so NBN Co comes back and then will remove the copper line and the HFC network will be used as a phone line through Fiber to deliver clear and easy access phone line through the same connection.
They're are a lot of things I know NewCrest about Telecommunication technology that you think I don't know.
the HFC network will be used as a phone line through Fiber
HFC IS NOT FIBER (at least in the context of which you speak), and the NBN has NOTHING to do with HFC.
Yeah correct but not over coax cable. Don't be nasty next time find other ways of explaining things in a suitable and a respectful matter.
You are clearly the biggest troll of all time. Never have I found someone so infuriatingly sure of themself and so spectacularly wrong.
.
..-.-'..
Giancarlo writes...
HFC IS NOT FIBER (at least in the context of which you speak), and the NBN has NOTHING to do with HFC.
Think what ever you want I don't care about your opinion, judgements or harsh statements you have to say.
Those are not opinions dude they are facts something that seems to be severely lacking in your posts about HFC and the NBN. I would recommend that you actually learn about these technologies before posting spurious and inaccurate information again.
HFC network will be used as a phone line through Fiber to deliver clear and easy access phone line through the same connection.
Oh geez, you really have no idea what you're talking about. HFC has NOTHING to do with the NBN network.
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