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Aussie National Broadband Network Will Be Gigabit

schmidty-au writes "NBN Co, the Australian Government company established to build Australia's national fibre-optic broadband network, announced today that, instead of the previously announced 100 Mbps network, it will provide 1 Gbps, within the existing AU$43 billion budget. Meanwhile, the Australian opposition, which has announced that it will scrap the network if it wins the 21 August election, and instead provide incentives to the private sector to improve the existing copper network, and to install wireless broadband (with promised peak speeds of 12 Mbps), does not understand or believe that this would be possible. The man who wants to be Australia's next Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, said today 'This idea that "hey presto" we are suddenly going to get 10 times the speed from something that isn't even built yet I find utterly implausible.'"

258 comments

  1. implausible? it's magic! by kernkopje · · Score: 5, Funny

    The man who wants to be Australia's next Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, said today 'This idea that "hey presto" we are suddenly going to get 10 times the speed from something that isn't even built yet I find utterly implausible.'" "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." -- Arthur C. Clarke

    1. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Plus, by the time it gets rolled out, South Korea will have 10 gig fibre to the home. So, gigabit isn't that unrealistic.

      The problem I have is that I don't know which side to trust. It's another case of the wrong lizard; it feels like it's just a matter of how comfy the handbasket is, and how well entertained we will be during the ride.

    2. Re:implausible? it's magic! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Hey... you know, I could have said that about Tony Abbott.

      This idea that "hey presto" we are suddenly going to get an improved economy, less waste and an excellent immigration policy from someone we haven't elected yet I find utterly implausible.

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    3. Re:implausible? it's magic! by vidnet · · Score: 5, Insightful

      to get 10 times the speed from something that isn't even built yet

      Well, it's much easier to upgrade a design plan than an existing infrastructure.

    4. Re:implausible? it's magic! by sjwt · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Lets put this in its propper context..

      From the second linked artical
      "It's very hard to take seriously a government which suddenly pulls yet another technological rabbit out of a hat just because it's under enormous pressure in the closing stages of an election campaign," the Liberal leader told reporters in western Sydney.

      "This idea that 'hey presto' we are suddenly going to get 10 times the speed from something that isn't even built yet I find utterly implausible."

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    5. Re:implausible? it's magic! by deetoy · · Score: 1

      "it's much easier to upgrade a design plan"
      a design plan that hasn't been proven to be costed properly.
      Lets not forget Abbott isn't proposing to do away with fibre. He is arguing private enterprise be given a fair go to expand their networks. The monopoly that started as a government owned telecoms we now call Telstra has proven to be an inefficient business model. The difference between the two proposals has been railroaded by each promising speeds that more than will not satisfy everybody.
      Last time I looked giving people freedom to choose which business supplier they wanted prompted multiple businesses to offer competing products and let the average consumer choose their preferred product. All other factors equal this has worked well. The missing debate issue is net neutrality.
      Tony is offering us a free market choice. Julia is telling us she will use taxpayers dollars to build a superhighway where her faceless minders say so, plus censor what we are allowed to see.

    6. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "to get 10 times the speed from something that isn't even built yet"

      The 1GB is from the first deployment - so it's not a "maybe we can do 1Gb" - it's "we rolled it out, and BTW it's 1GB".

      (Costs are now pretty much the same for 100Mb and 1G hardware)

    7. Re:implausible? it's magic! by delinear · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It seems he's only calling the leap from 100Mbps to 1Gbps implausible, rather than the plan to lay the 100Mbps infrastructure. I don't know what the cost differences are between 100Mbps and 1Gbps but I would have thought they'd be negligible compared to the cost of putting any infrastructure in place.

    8. Re:implausible? it's magic! by AHuxley · · Score: 3, Insightful

      We gave Telstra a decade and all they did was stall adsl2, milk the international interconnects, keep exchanges difficult to access, charge use up and down by the mb and muddy any NBN press.
      The idea that "private enterprise" will save us is cute but reality shows they kept the rust belt warm, rolling out the min of new tech for the max price.
      Tony is offering Australia more of the worst of a US Bell system.
      Julia is offering a faster internal network with faith based filtering, and Bell international interconnect pricing.
      "multiple businesses" will never get a look in on any Telstra property other than increasing long term rental deals, something that has kept Australian in a digital dark ages for years.
      That is what made the NBN (without faith based filtering) such a good idea, making a Bell just another big telco.

      --
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    9. Re:implausible? it's magic! by dbIII · · Score: 1

      If Abbott gets in NORTH Korea will have 10 gig fibre to the home before we get 10Mb.
      Remember he's the guy that recently said we should trust him because we caught him out in a lie, so by some twisted logic the other side must be better liars and untrustworthy. He's still very much the same man he was before and we should judge him on the mess he made of health care with the STUPID policy of reducing doctor training numbers and taking up the slack with doctors from the third world. His actions there are a good example as to how dumbed down high school economics kills people when applied to the real world.
      Enough ranting, just the guy is so fake he even pretends that getting thrown out of a seminary for sexual misconduct makes him pious. So what, Stalin didn't get thrown out and nobody would call him pious.

    10. Re:implausible? it's magic! by sortius_nod · · Score: 1

      Pretty much. Although A$43b isn't a bad deal to fibre up the country.

    11. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      In theory, a state monopoly can be more efficient since they don't have the overhead that multiple competing smaller companies have.

      In theory, private companies do a better job since competition puts more pressure on doing things efficiently.

      In practise, both are ruined by greedy bastards looking out for #1. Arguing which is the lesser evil seems pointless to me. Toss a coin and focus on effective monitoring/oversight/regulation to keep people honest, instead. That's the best way to get better service.

    12. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Chuq · · Score: 1

      I was about to write a lengthy reply to deetoy's inaccuracies, but you saved me the effort!

      One thing to add.. "Tony is offering us a free market choice".. no, Tony is offering $6b to go to "private sector" which basically means Telstra, a combined wholesaler and retailer. The NBN is a government owned wholesale-only business who already has 4 retailers signed up - all of whom are offering FTTH plans at faster speeds and similar price to ADSL2 plans.

      --
      - Chuq
    13. Re:implausible? it's magic! by mabinogi · · Score: 1

      There's nothing magical about this.

      The fibre was always going to be capable of Gigabit, and beyond. And pretty much any off-the-shelf network hardware will handle gigabit.
      To achieve 100mb in the first place they probably would have had to artificially limit the speed.

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    14. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Jimbookis · · Score: 1

      Hardly implausible, Tony. You're not a techhead, you're not an economist and you certainly aren't Prime Minister material. I'd vote Liberal if Mal' was leader of the opposition but Tony is the Gimp without a mask on. BTW, Billion already have a GPON home router ready to go on the new upgraded NBN.

    15. Re:implausible? it's magic! by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You know, just one network engineer's opinion :

      While I agree that the price difference between 100 mbit and gigabit (both require a fiber network) is small, there is no way to build a nationwide network for a small US state for that budget. This network is not going to get built, no matter who gets elected. A national fiber network for australia with connections to even 10% of houses ... I seriously doubt it could be done with hundred times that budget.

      This is ignoring the obvious fact that the current international internet infrastructure most certainly cannot take a network with even a few million australians connected at 100 mbit, even if they only use 1% of their connection. Total international bandwidth available in Australia is about 1 terabit (theoretical peak capacity for currently deployed infrastructure - not actually operational connectivity, and brining the full capacity online won't be cheap at all). About 8 million Australians have internet service (and that this bill claims to double that), so that's 1 terabit / 16 million = 32 kbit per australian. You're just not going to get above that level. Consider that due to the previous round of government interference, there's barely anything hosted in Australia so to get at anything interesting they're going to need international bandwidth.

      It's just a false campaign promise. Money thrown at a black hole.

      And frankly people who let their votes be decided by "we'll give you more free stuff" deserve exactly what they'll get.

    16. Re:implausible? it's magic! by redemtionboy · · Score: 4, Funny

      Honestly it's just too much speed for Australia to handle. How can you expect the government to be able to censor these high speeds properly. We must protect our citizens from themselves!

    17. Re:implausible? it's magic! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      Actually... he graduated from Sydney University with a Bachelor of Economics (BEc) and a Bachelor of Laws (LLB) and graduated as an Oxford Rhodes Scholar with a Master of Arts (MA) in Politics and Philosophy.

      I don't like him, and I don't feel he'd be great for the economy - certainly I won't be voting for him! - but you can't say he doesn't have a background in Economics. Now if he would actually use that background, that would be great, but he's too busy running cynical political lines like "we'll stop the boats!" to actually do the right thing for Australia.

      Which of course means I don't trust him, and to be honest, neither should anyone else. Sad really. But he has a background in Economics.

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    18. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Jimbookis · · Score: 1

      OK, point taken. He doesn't seem to use he economics training in that case. I think his minders and advisers need to be recycled. At least Mal', even if he was bluffing, gave the impression he knew what he was on about or at least we well briefed.

    19. Re:implausible? it's magic! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm sure that more major network links will be created over time. There's no reason why they shouldn't be.

      Your problem is that you feel that everything is hosted overseas. It's not. Not everything runs through the International links, unless you are some sort of stupid corporation that uses an MPLS network to route your traffic - hi EMC network admins! There are vast numbers of servers and Internet based services within Australia that are required or are extremely useful to Australian organizations. That isn't just businesses, it's Universities, charitable organizations, government services, medical organizations - you name it, it will be used.

      --
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    20. Re:implausible? it's magic! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      Oh, he's using it. Or rather, he's misusing it to try to mislead the Australian public, or hoodwink a lot of people who don't understand economics. Like I say, not trustworthy.

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    21. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Nursie · · Score: 1

      Is wired even the way to go anyway?

      I've just ordered vividwireless WiMAX service over here on the west coast. No idea if it's any good yet, but a next gen wireless network sounds much cheaper and easier to roll out.

    22. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Drakkenmensch · · Score: 1

      The bigger magic still will be keeping out the porn and gory zombie games, as the aussie government seems hell-bent on doing. The great firewall of Australia has a better chance of coming about if they dig a big moat filled with burning gasoline, if you ask me!

    23. Re:implausible? it's magic! by ThatOtherGuy435 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It isn't when you consider that those exact taxpayers get more than they could conceivably get spending individually.

    24. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Techman83 · · Score: 1

      I think a lot more of the money comes from Businesses and Mining

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    25. Re:implausible? it's magic! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      Tony Abbott was never thrown out of the seminary. He left there all by himself. As one who seems so interested in truth, perhaps a little of your own might be a good tonic?

      --
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    26. Re:implausible? it's magic! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      The other advantage of a State monopoly is that it will provide services in areas that may not necessarily be profitable for a private company. That's important for infrastructure where you need universality of coverage to have an equitable society.

      --
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    27. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Megane · · Score: 1

      Too bad we don't have Ted Stevens any more to explain it to him.

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    28. Re:implausible? it's magic! by syousef · · Score: 1

      The man who wants to be Australia's next Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, said today 'This idea that "hey presto" we are suddenly going to get 10 times the speed from something that isn't even built yet I find utterly implausible.'"

      "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." -- Arthur C. Clarke

      Our Australian politicians are all turnips who don't understand technology - syousef

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    29. Re:implausible? it's magic! by dbIII · · Score: 1

      If he was interested in truth he wouldn't have said "it was her back your honour" in court. Maybe that's the Sir Mixalot defence (Baby got back), but he's a seriously slimy character as you would realise if you considered his career. You don't get a nickname from Rasputin (Mad Monk) or called an attack dog by being a good boy.
      You may not have noticed, but at times people are asked to resign instead of being taken out the door by armed gaurds. In both cases they are no longer wanted even if in the former a weasel can pretend they just wanted to go.

    30. Re:implausible? it's magic! by linzeal · · Score: 1

      You know what millions of people on wireless networks look like in EM? Its fine and dandy for a few megabytes here and there but try to stream Netflix to those millions of people and we simply don't have the technology to build a robust enough Wireless infrastructure to make that happen. Streaming, Video Calls and other high bandwidth applications are much easier to implement in a traditional wired network model. We will get there with wireless but it is going to take some serious R&D to make it as cheap as stringing Fiver Optic and Cat 5.

    31. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the fuck are you smokign you damn idiot? The fuckign thing is being built RIGHT NOW, there's new OS links about to be lit up and it's been audited to be able to be built, on spec for 30 billion.

      For fucks sake your not a network engineer, your a wanker who doesnt do any research before vomiting shit

    32. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      Tony Abbott reminds me of a soap opera villan. He always has something cheesy to say about the ruling party.

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    33. Re:implausible? it's magic! by rjch · · Score: 1

      Plus, by the time it gets rolled out, South Korea will have 10 gig fibre to the home. So, gigabit isn't that unrealistic.

      Indeed. Since the idea of the NBN is fibre to the home, I always thought 100meg would most likely be an artificial limit anyway. This "announcement" is simply going to make available more of the capability the network would likely have had in the first place.

      The problem I have is that I don't know which side to trust. It's another case of the wrong lizard; it feels like it's just a matter of how comfy the handbasket is, and how well entertained we will be during the ride.

      I'm becoming more and more convinced that the only sensible option for this election is to vote "None of the above". Whilst I have to vote, I refuse to consider the notion that I may not take the option of voting "None of the above".

    34. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is ignoring the obvious fact that the current international internet infrastructure most certainly cannot take a network with even a few million australians connected at 100 mbit, even if they only use 1% of their connection. Total international bandwidth available in Australia is about 1 terabit (theoretical peak capacity for currently deployed infrastructure - not actually operational connectivity, and brining the full capacity online won't be cheap at all)

      There is a new cable in the making from AU to US capable of 5Tbps, and that does not even include the existing connections that can be upgraded.

      You are incorrect.

    35. Re:implausible? it's magic! by kj4gxu · · Score: 1

      Oversubscription is commonly accepted practice in the ISP industry. There are a couple reasons for that. One is that not everyone will be online at the same time. The other is that even when people are online at the same time not everyone uses 100% of the available bandwidth all the time. Someone browsing the web or checking email doesn't take up a constant data rate or a very high one. Many of those 16 million will only browse the web and check email so they make up an almost insignificant number in your bandwidth figure. You'll have a few power users who like to run torrents which may eat some bandwidth, and others who use streaming media which will be a bandwidth user (Although it won't need a gigabit). It will be a long LONG time before the average user uses anything near a gigabit and I'd bet by then that international bandwidth will be upgraded. I find that probably 60 percent of residential users could honestly get by on a 1.5x256 internet connection and still have room to spare. The only reason they don't is because here in the US the marketing ploy is always to tell people they need MORE. Also keep in mind that in many cases the servers you're connecting to won't have a gigabit connection so you won't be able to download that ISO at true gigabit speeds. Thanks Eric

    36. Re:implausible? it's magic! by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      We do have the technology, but it involves a lot of fiber between a lot of microcells (or APs or whatever you want to call them.) The approach is as always a hybrid one. We stopped using microwave and went to fiber because transmitting that much data long-haul with RF is a PITA and fiber is [relatively] cheap... but you're never going to want to walk around trailing miles of fiber from your cellphone.

      Committing to covering a geographical region with a single kind of access only makes sense if that space is fairly small, unlike Australia. I would choose to use few, high-power installations in remote regions where demand is low, to use fiber to the densely populated residential areas, and something in between for those areas... well, you know. Guarantee 10Mbps, which is enough for any modern purpose for a single household, and provide as much as possible. Put 100Mbps on the timeline as well. Gigabit is unnecessary at this point, but I sure wouldn't turn it down. I just don't think it's necessarily practical to put everywhere.

      --
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    37. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Total international bandwidth available in Australia is about 1 terabit (theoretical peak capacity for currently deployed infrastructure - not actually operational connectivity, and brining the full capacity online won't be cheap at all).

      PPC-1 is 2.5Tb...

    38. Re:implausible? it's magic! by strack · · Score: 1

      the thing about the internet filter is, imho, its to appease the family first senator in the senate (far right wing party) and win over conservative marginal south australia seats. im betting that as soon as the election is over, theyll drop the idea faster than a hotcake.

    39. Re:implausible? it's magic! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      You know this great insight because you were there?

      --
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    40. Re:implausible? it's magic! by timeOday · · Score: 1

      And frankly people who let their votes be decided by "we'll give you more free stuff" deserve exactly what they'll get.

      $43e9 AUS is not free. Also, I am not really clear on what's being proposed... the following quotes give me the impression they're upgrading the backbone, and perhaps to the home in major areas, but not taking on the last mile problem for all of Australia:

      the faster capability was already built into the equipment which the company was installing in homes and Mr Quigley said he decided to enable it after discussions with internet providers and the competition watchdog. ... NBN Co would offer unlimited download capacity at one gigabit per second wholesale rates to retail internet providers, but service provider Internode said it was not reasonable to give consumers unlimited downloads.

    41. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Lachlan+Hunt · · Score: 1

      Tony Abbot's skepticism is easily addressed by giving him a demonstration of the technology. The only problem is that he's such a stubborn fool, he'll probably keep insisting that maintaining the ageing copper lines is fine for now and ignore the future as somebody else's problem. He's an tehnologically incompetent fool who should not be put in a position to make technical decisions on this issue, particularly because he seems incapable of listening to the industry experts on the issue.

      To be fair, though, the Labor party has it's own share of misguided policies (the filtering policy, for one), but having a Labor government would be significnat better than a Liberal government right now. I think the best option is to give preferences to parties like The Greens, The Secular Party of Australia, and the Australian Sex Party ahead of Labor, and to put Liberal, National, Family First and the Christian Democrats at the end (with Labor's Stephen Conroy given the special Dead Last position, for voters in Victoria only), with the rest in the middle somewhere.

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    42. Re:implausible? it's magic! by mikkelm · · Score: 2, Informative

      "This network is not going to get built, no matter who gets elected. A national fiber network for australia with connections to even 10% of houses ... I seriously doubt it could be done with hundred times that budget."

      So you suggest that it would be unlikely to deploy GPON to about 800,000 households for $AUD 4.3 trillion, or approximately $AUD 5 million per household? You knowm just the opinion of one network engineer who has actually been involved in nationwide GPON deployments, the current assessment of about $AUD 5,500 per household is a very sensible budget for this kind of deployment.

    43. Re:implausible? it's magic! by thogard · · Score: 1

      The NBN may be a PON based network running at 2.4 gbps which is shared with 32 or more other subscribers is now going to provide gigabit internet. They are rolling out the same stuff that Verizon is using for their FiOS system and they are only offering 50 mb data links. The current test system in Tasmania is 4 times faster than the existing HFC cable TV system in Sydney and Melbourne and that system is offering some 100 mb connections so I'm not sure how the oversubscription works with either system.

      The largest problem is the near total lack of reasonable priced back haul into most exchanges. The coalition's plan seems to address that issue. That would allow small wireless ISPs to start up in the rural areas which could serve people who have been ignored at this point. They are also removing all the pair gain systems which are mostly no longer needed now that the number of land lines is going down quickly. There seem to be some regulatory things that they are trying to simply as well. Now that the duct network is valued at $11 billion, it means the ACCC can set rates for rent of the existing Telstra ducts that are much lower than the current rates.

      A major problem I see with the NBN is that anyone that has access to more than one ADSL2 provider will be the last to get access to the new network as their focus will be the least severed homes first. Meanwhile there will be very little maintenance done on the existing networks. That means most of the fast internet users from today won't been seeing any speed advantage until after the next election and about 1% will see their speeds go down as problems on the existing network effect their speeds.

    44. Re:implausible? it's magic! by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      Actually half a million per household. But yes, I'm saying 5500 per household (for the entire network, including last-mile, interconnects, electricity, ...) is BY FAR not enough.

      Another poster said that the $46 billion would only pay for a nationwide backbone, without last-mile functionality. Now *that* sounds believable. But they're most certainly not getting a line into every street for that price.

      A good price for laying fiber is $70 per meter (you're certainly not getting screwed for that price). More in the city, less in some types of countryside. Just making a backbone from Perth to Brisbane with 1 drop-off in every major city (most certainly not a trench crossing *every* street), and everything in between, say takes five times the distance between those cities.

      So we're talking $70 per meter * 4300 * 1000 meter * 5 just for the backbone = 1.6 billion AU$. To connect streets in those major cities alone, you'd need 100 times that amount. 1000 if you wish to connect *every* stupid little town.

      Whoops we've already crashed the budget by nearly a factor of 3. So doing what they promised will go about 30000% over budget.

      Seems about right for a government project, of course.

      I wouldn't buy this.

    45. Re:implausible? it's magic! by thogard · · Score: 1

      The base test system is GPON which is 2.4 gig shared with 32 or more users and if you swap out the line card, you can upgrade to 10GEPON and then the CPE needs to be upgraded and you get faster data. At the current subscriber pickup rate, you can give everyone 1 gig and no one will notice. I expect the "1 gig" is that device at the home will have a gigabit ethernet port where the base gear has 100 mb ports. I've seen a picture of a device installed for the Tasmania trial and it appears to have a Verizon asset tag on it.

    46. Re:implausible? it's magic! by mikkelm · · Score: 1

      No, that would be five million per household. Your calculations are way, way off, and what you're saying is so utterly disconnected from national-scale PON deployments existing today that it isn't even funny.

    47. Re:implausible? it's magic! by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

      I would guess that there are about 9M households in Australia, so each household will pay around A$5k (assuming we're using US billions here) whether they want the service or not, and those that want the service will pay monthly too.
      I'm not sure it sounds like such a good deal in those terms, especially if I'm content to use the internet at work and don't want it in my home. How many of those people that want it would still want it if the first bill charged an installation fee of $5000 ?
      Provision of such infrastructure is what cities are for, and if I were a mining enterprise, I imagine I could get connectivity a lot less expensively if I were getting it just for my mine and employees.

      --
      Nullius in verba
    48. Re:implausible? it's magic! by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      A politician doesn't need to convince you. He needs to convince the other ~50 idiots (or ignorants) you live next door to.

      Lying and promising impossible goals will be sufficient for that task. Reminds me of an interview from last year with a typical voter: "I came hear today because I heard the government was handing-out $1000 stimulus checks." Reporter: "Interesting. Where does the government get that money?" "Uh, I don't know. I really don't know. But wherever they got the money, I'm glad. The government is taking care of us." ----- These people are totally clueless. A politician could promise "free 1 terabit internet for everyone!" and the voters would say, "Yeah that's the man I'm voting for."

      BTW:

      Tony Abbott is correct: 1 gigabit is pie-in-the-sky. The world's fastest country is South Korea, and they still only average 0.03 Gbit/s. Japan averages just under 0.02 Gbit/s. A politician promising to take all of Australia to 1.0 Gbit/s is not reality - it's fantasy. Hmmmm. Maybe they think they can hire that fantasy character Geordi LaForge and adjust the gravitational constant of the Aussie space-time bubble and "presto" the 1.0 Gbit/s will appear.

      --
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    49. Re:implausible? it's magic! by twoallbeefpatties · · Score: 1

      I'm asking this as someone who isn't an engineer and is just interested in knowing what the logistics are for setting up a large system like this - why exactly are his calculations way off?

      --
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    50. Re:implausible? it's magic! by mikkelm · · Score: 1

      Seemingly because they aren't based in reality. I can't tell you where he gets his numbers from, I can only tell you that his numbers do not at all correspond with the cost involved in currently deployed networks of a similar design. Suggesting a per-installation cost of more than $AUD 5 million (or, as he now suggests, $AUD 500,000,) is downright absurd for very obvious reasons. These technologies are commercially viable, commercially deployed and commercially profitable right now, and they have been for a couple of years.

      Cost of installation of course depends on the circumstances in the area of deployment, but it is able to compete favourably on cost with more traditional ETTH solutions based on local switching. Australia's high urban population of more than 90% makes this kind of deployment even more viable and cost effective than it is in many of the countries currently operating PON networks.

      The parent also makes various tenuous assumptions such as having fiber dug into the ground in the last mile, and a set per-meter cost seemingly regardless of circumstances, that seems more based on medium-haul rural/suburban single-project contract work, than based on the realities of a massively scaled project with dedicated work crews and all of the economic benefits that this kind of scale brings.

    51. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Chris+Tucker · · Score: 1

      "We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things.

      Not because they are easy, but because THEY ARE HARD!"

      Man, talk about pie in the sky! Who does he think he's kidding?

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    52. Re:implausible? it's magic! by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      100meg would most likely be an artificial limit anyway.

      Most people don't have gigabit network cards, switches, routers, etc. In fact, most routers aren't prepared to handle people actually using 100 megs.

      Beyond gigabit, the price of all of these things goes up exponentially -- so about the only way an ISP could handle this is to assume multiple computers in the house, and actually run a different cable to each.

      All of this is hampered by the fact that most people seem to prefer wireless anyway, and 802.11a is, what, 160 mbits?

      ...I have to vote,

      Why?

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    53. Re:implausible? it's magic! by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 1

      That's important for infrastructure where you need universality of coverage to have an equitable society.

      Although that raises the question of whether it's really "equitable" to have person A pay for the extra expense of providing a service to person B, because person B chose to live in an area where it costs much more to provide those services. (See those who move to a place out in the middle of nowhere, and then expect that the government should give them roads, power, internet, or whatever of the same quality and price as those who live in the middle of a dense city.)

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    54. Re:implausible? it's magic! by James_Rolevink · · Score: 1

      Is it really surprising that it seems implausible to a man who doesn't even understand the concept of "peak speed"?

      As Kerry O'Brien discovered on Lateline the other night, Tony Abbott is "no techno-head", "no Bill Gates".

      How scary all this new fangled techno-babble must seem when running for PM and, by his own admission on national tv (another marvel of technology) Tony Abbott's limits of understanding are defeated by the concept of "peak speed".

      Oh for the time when Tony would be right - on penalty of death - just because the Pope said so. The world was so much simpler when it was flat...

    55. Re:implausible? it's magic! by dbIII · · Score: 1

      It was a very good example of how grubby student politics can be and people connected with it drag it up in print every now and again. The court case came down to witnesses from one political faction saying he didn't sexually assault her and witnesses from another saying he did. It's shaped the man you see today that will do things and then deny them later unless he gets caught with obvious proof. As you can tell I think he is untrustworthy to the point of Perjury but form your own opinion - Hansard is on line so you can read what he's said over the years.
      Obvious character flaws aside, cutting the number of doctor training places when he was minister of health should be enough to show that he does not have the judgement for the job.

    56. Re:implausible? it's magic! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      Don't for one instant mistake me for being a supporter of Tony Abbott. But the sexual assault charge that you speak of was thrown out of court - over 30 years ago! You are somehow associating this with him leaving the seminary. I cannot see the connection, especially as the court case happened in 1978 and Abbott joined the seminary in 1983. Methinks that if it was a case that they asked him to leave, they probably would have first asked him not to enter.

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    57. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      This network is being proposed by the same government that is trying to introduce widespread internet censorship. Also the same government that killed off the Human Rights bill. They also refused to comply with Freedom of Information requests about the proposal to have all ISPs record all network activity for 2 years so law enforcement can search the logs looking for "offenders".

      The reason the government won't comply with FOI is because it will cause "premature unnecessary debate" (their words not mine).

      Can we trust the claims of this Government.

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
    58. Re:implausible? it's magic! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I know - those darned miners and farmers! Anyone would think that they provided something useful to the economy, like raw materials for export overseas, or food or natural materials for clothing. Honestly! What do they provide the economy? Total welfare sponges, every one of them. I agree and in fact in the next election that will be my campaign platform: no more roads, telecommunications or electricity for those who "choose" to leave in regional areas. Bludgers!

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      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    59. Re:implausible? it's magic! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      I'll tell you something now: if they can cable up homes to have the potential to go 1GB as technology matures, then it will be a lot cheaper to do it right the first place than do it later. And I'll personally be happy to get 0.03GB/sec - that's still a tremendous data rate!

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    60. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Setsquare · · Score: 1

      Is it really surprising that it seems implausible to a man who doesn't even understand the concept of "peak speed"?

      You could actually explain terms rather being an elitist know it all. I asked a couple of people I know about peak speed and got two different answers, so I still don't know

      Keitha said that Peak Speed is like Peak OIl. That network speeds will increase for a few years before reaching a peak and continue to decline after that. We can push back the date of peak speed further into the future by conserving network speeds with 200MB download limits. This will allow future generations of Aussies an internet so fast that all their slashdot posts will be first posts.

      Bruce said that Peak Speed is like Peak hour traffic, its when everyone gets on the internet at the same time and the data packets crawl along at on tenth of their normal speed. You can get your downloads to speed up by beeping (pinging) your horn and swearing at the data packet in front of you.

    61. Re:implausible? it's magic! by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 1

      Some people live far away from services for reasons that benefit society; farmers are a reasonable example. Many other people live far away from services because they want to. We see it where I live in suburban developments all the time; a new housing development goes up far away from everything (because nobody wants to live near the riff-raff you get in the city), people move in, and the first thing they do is start trying to get the government (read: somebody else) to pay for the lifestyle they chose.

      Claiming that a "give everyone what they want because some of them may deserve it" policy is "equitable" is ridiculous.

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    62. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I knew Tony Abbott, sir. He is no John Kennedy.

    63. Re:implausible? it's magic! by dbIII · · Score: 1

      I never said they were the same incident. It was a lack of chastity that had him thrown out of the seminary.
      The only lesson he learned in those 30 years is not to get caught.

    64. Re:implausible? it's magic! by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      At least his idea was realistic.

      If he had said something stupid like, "We choose to go to visit our nearest star Alpha Centauri in this decade," he would have looked stupid. That's essentially what this Aussie politician is promising. Right now NO country has 100% gigabit internet to all its citizens..... not even close to that numbers. (The fastest country averages just 0.03 Gbps.)

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    65. Re:implausible? it's magic! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      It's funny you say that. Have your taxes increased recently?

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    66. Re:implausible? it's magic! by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>personally be happy to get 0.03GB/sec - that's still a tremendous data rate!

      You can get that right now from Cable. And I disagree with the premise it will be cheaper to run a 1 Gbit/s fiber to everyone's home now, rather than later. Due to advances in technology, the cost of that quality fiber and switches will probably be 1/1000th as much in 2020.

      Also you presume everyone needs 1 Gbit/s..... that's like presuming everyone needs homes made of gold walls. Nice luxury to have but not really necessary. It's really just a waste.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    67. Re:implausible? it's magic! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      Like I said above (before you changed the topic), how do you know that? He left on his own accord - nobody kicked him out. Their is nowhere on record that says he was "asked to leave", or even that we was expelled from the seminary. Where are you getting your information from?

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    68. Re:implausible? it's magic! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      ...I have to vote,

      Why?

      Voting is compulsory in Australia.

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    69. Re:implausible? it's magic! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      You can get that right now from Cable.

      Yeah, cause Cable is ubiquitous.

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    70. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Chris+Tucker · · Score: 1

      Because no country has yet tried to do it.

      --
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    71. Re:implausible? it's magic! by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Years of reading newspapers and Hansard. Have you ever wondered why all those journalists now can say things about Abbott that sound defamatory and don't get into trouble? It's because they are bringing up old news.
      The whole seminary thing was widely reported when he had the press conference where he was going to show a "human" side be reuniting with what he thought was his illegitimate child - sometime around 2005-7. The seminary thing is news because Abbot is always using it as a "holier than thou" tactic.
      Anyway, you should have the idea now that I consider him an untrustworthy hypocrite that should never be allowed to be PM or possibly even an MP.

    72. Re:implausible? it's magic! by HJED · · Score: 1

      Also you presume everyone needs 1 Gbit/s..... that's like presuming everyone needs homes made of gold walls. Nice luxury to have but not really necessary. It's really just a waste.

      Yeah, it's like people 'need' TV, they don't but it is something the majority of people have in there homes.
      Whilst this is not yet true of 1 Gbit/s internet I predict it will be within the next decade. Due to the now popular idea of HD streaming and other increasingly bandwidth hogging applications being sold to Joe Citizen

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      null
    73. Re:implausible? it's magic! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      Fair enough, I'm not trying to convince you one way or the other, I'm just trying to find out your sources. I, also, don't trust Tony Abbott and I won't be voting for him. It's just my lack of trust is based on other things than yours, that's all.

      However, I have to note that Hansard is unreliable in this respect, because anyone can say anything they want as they are under immunity from libel law while in the Parliament, and thus can say what they like without any need to back their statements with fact. Sure, there's the Privileges Committee, but it is rare that anyone is referred to this.

      Secondly, I don't trust much of what is reported in newspapers - they have not exactly been accurate sources of information over time. It's quite possible that Abbott doesn't prosecute as a libel case would look far worse than just keeping a dignified silence. Politicians have thick skins, and and Abbott probably more so than the average.

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    74. Re:implausible? it's magic! by jesset77 · · Score: 1

      Right now NO country has 100% gigabit internet to all its citizens..... not even close to that numbers.

      A> if they are planning out a network that won't go live until the future, it would make sense no to limit one's expectations to today's status quo.

      B> I think everyone would rather they install gigabit switches and fiber to the home than rely on wireless spectrum, whether or not "100% of the population" is "guaranteed" a gigabit of service.

      The only significant cost to having a gigabit network is the last mile lines. The routers can be crap today and still give you terrific speeds (even 30mbps is nothing to sneeze at) and it's cheap to upgrade the routers to handle greater load tomorrow. As long as you've got the lines in the dirt, you are headed in the right direction.

      --
      People willing to trade their freedom of expression for temporary entertainment deserve neither and will lose both.
    75. Re:implausible? it's magic! by jesset77 · · Score: 1

      You can get that right now from Cable.

      No, you mean you can get that from cable. With a bandwidth cap. I live in a place approximately as rural as Australia, and ten miles from the nearest cable coverage.

      Due to advances in technology, the cost of that quality fiber and switches will probably be 1/1000th as much in 2020.

      That will always be true, and that quality of fiber and switches will also be meaningless 10 years from now. At least, it will be so long as it costs one thousand times less, since it's actually pretty reasonable after price drops earlier this year.

      Also you presume everyone needs 1 Gbit/s..

      How do you arrive at that conclusion from the statement "personally be happy to get 0.03GB/sec"? All we're saying is, if you can get the gear in the ground for 43 million that's a great deal and a better idea than Tony Abbot's dumb proposal. 100Mbit? Gigabit? Sure why not. Anything to get the bottleneck away from my welcome mat.

      --
      People willing to trade their freedom of expression for temporary entertainment deserve neither and will lose both.
    76. Re:implausible? it's magic! by agm · · Score: 1

      Not all of those taxpayers though - only some of them, There will be many people who won't use this new broadband network, Is it fair that they be forced to pay for it without choice? No. It is not.

    77. Re:implausible? it's magic! by agm · · Score: 1

      Aren't they taxpayers too?

    78. Re:implausible? it's magic! by rdnetto · · Score: 1

      The explanation is quite simple actually. The current government has done almost no planning at all with regard to the NBN, not even a cost benefit analysis. It sounds like someone only just figured out that the hardware could support higher speeds if configured as such.

      --
      Most human behaviour can be explained in terms of identity.
    79. Re:implausible? it's magic! by deetoy · · Score: 1

      some critical commentry from an ABC reporter.
      http://www.abc.net.au/unleashed/stories/s2983739.htm
      I had hoped someone would pick up on my comment about net neutrality and the censorship issue that many feel strongly about.

      some extracts from the abc reporter

      "There has been no detailed cost-benefit analysis published by Treasury on why the NBN is the best possible use of up to $43 billion of taxpayer's cash. There has been no independent Productivity Commission Inquiry determining the amount of money that the nation should use to subsidise high-speed broadband, and whether, in fact, comparable technology, such as WiMax or ADSL2+, could be supplied at no additional cost to taxpayers via the private sector."

      Upgrading a design plan is easy, building it costs money. I expect these election promises to be costed properly, you should also.

      "this choice does not need to be binary; all or nothing. We can support the private sector in the development of better broadband technology. We just don't need to make a very risky $43 billion punt on one specific solution. "

    80. Re:implausible? it's magic! by deetoy · · Score: 1

      "faith based filtering" = ?? Julia & Conroy are offering us censorship, did you miss the debate on this topic?
      http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/nation/web-filter-to-block-internet-nasties-will-compromise-nbn-say-providers/story-e6frg6nf-1225811143407
      http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/05/07/2893687.htm
      http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/04/21/2879345.htm

      "all they did was stall adsl2, milk the international interconnects, keep exchanges difficult to access, charge use up and down by the mb and muddy any NBN press."

      Telstra was the product of both Labor & coalition governments spread across several terms. The Monopoly that was changed into the system we have today is less than perfect. The reality is we now have other private companies investing in infrastructure and providing competitive service. For example - TPG have invested in exchanges and sell monopoly access to their infrastructure. No security of investment results in no investment.

      Creating a new monopoly (NBN) will result in a repeat of the original Telecom problems. Any investment in infrastructure will demand a return on investment. Any politician/government that fails to subject to accountability will be accused of vote buying (pork barreling their electorate).

      I'm all for open debate. Please justify & expand on your claim "Tony is offering Australia more of the worst of a US Bell system".

    81. Re:implausible? it's magic! by crafty.munchkin · · Score: 1

      How do you arrive at that conclusion from the statement "personally be happy to get 0.03GB/sec"? All we're saying is, if you can get the gear in the ground for 43 million that's a great deal and a better idea than Tony Abbot's dumb proposal. 100Mbit? Gigabit? Sure why not. Anything to get the bottleneck away from my welcome mat.

      /s/million/billion

      I have limited ADSL2 options in my area, sync speed is around 12mbps, actual throughput is about 1.1MB/sec (limited to 100GB of downloads per month). To step up to Gigabit would be fantastic - to take Abbott's proposal (which he has admitted he doesn't understand) means I have no chance of getting an improved speed whatsoever.

      --
      ... wait, what?
    82. Re:implausible? it's magic! by Dr+Max · · Score: 1

      43 billion not million

      --
      Rocket Surgeon.
    83. Re:implausible? it's magic! by F1re · · Score: 1

      It's compulsory to go to the polling place and get your name crossed off the list. You can then hand in a blank ballot paper or draw a cartoon on it - nobody will care.

      --
      ...there is no sig...
    84. Re:implausible? it's magic! by jesset77 · · Score: 1

      43 billion not million

      Yes, I either misread TFS or got an earlier version from the RSS feed that said "million". Tony's "hey presto" comment makes sense if the fiber folk are quoting Million with an M, but Billion with a B sounds on par with the US's government subsidized fiber fiasco from the nineties.

      I will admit I'm less supportive of the measure at 43 Billion. ;D

      --
      People willing to trade their freedom of expression for temporary entertainment deserve neither and will lose both.
    85. Re:implausible? it's magic! by obeythefist · · Score: 1

      Also you presume everyone needs roads..... that's like presuming everyone needs homes made of gold walls. Nice luxury to have but not really necessary. It's really just a waste.

      Fixed that for you.

      Also you presume everyone needs electricity..... that's like presuming everyone needs homes made of gold walls. Nice luxury to have but not really necessary. It's really just a waste.

      Fixed that for you again.

      Also you presume everyone needs telephones..... that's like presuming everyone needs homes made of gold walls. Nice luxury to have but not really necessary. It's really just a waste.

      Fixed that for you again.

      Also you presume everyone needs piped water..... that's like presuming everyone needs homes made of gold walls. Nice luxury to have but not really necessary. It's really just a waste.

      Or maybe, just maybe, Australia does have a need for social infrastructure to enable us to take full advantage of the future, to enable entirely new business models that currently are unimaginable thanks to the stranglehold Telstra has had over the digital landscape of this country.

      10 years ago, youtube simply wouldn't be possible over 56k modems. The provisioning of high speed internet around the world has enabled this new technology to become a household name. I think Australia should be in a position to reap the benefits of the next generation of technology. In the meantime, please disconnect your power, break up your driveway, and turn off your water mains. After a week with no showers, no power and no access to roads, you might start to understand the value of infrastructure.

      --
      I am government man, come from the government. The government has sent me. -- G.I.R.
    86. Re:implausible? it's magic! by obeythefist · · Score: 1

      Not all of those taxpayers though - only some of them, There will be many people who won't use this new broadband network, Is it fair that they be forced to pay for it without choice? No. It is not.

      Is it fair that people have to pay for the road network in the country if they don't own a car? To pay for hospitals if they currently aren't sick? The answer is clearly yes, because that infrastructure, even if it has little personal value, has tremendous value to the nation. This isn't the USA, we're actually not too worried if someone gets something without paying for it personally. Investment in infrastructure will bring about new business, new wealth, and an overall improvement in the quality of life for the average Australian. I know and understand that my success and health as an individual is related to the success and health of the nation and the people in it. For that reason, I am keenly interested in the success of this project and the opportunities it will provide to all Australians.

      --
      I am government man, come from the government. The government has sent me. -- G.I.R.
    87. Re:implausible? it's magic! by obeythefist · · Score: 1

      Very true! But a truly strong economy is diversified, and the building of the NBN will allow all businesses more opportunities, from small businesses leveraging online systems to entirely new corporations that could grow from business models leveraging the NBN.

      This is good news for Australia. It will help free us from the chronic dependency we have on primary industry.

      --
      I am government man, come from the government. The government has sent me. -- G.I.R.
    88. Re:implausible? it's magic! by agm · · Score: 1

      Not all of those taxpayers though - only some of them, There will be many people who won't use this new broadband network, Is it fair that they be forced to pay for it without choice? No. It is not.

      Is it fair that people have to pay for the road network in the country if they don't own a car?

      No, it is not fair.

      To pay for hospitals if they currently aren't sick?

      No, though people should have some form of savings or insurance to pay for such help when needed.

      The answer is clearly yes, because that infrastructure, even if it has little personal value, has tremendous value to the nation. This isn't the USA, we're actually not too worried if someone gets something without paying for it personally.

      I'm keenly interested in polices that provide people with the choice as to what happens with their own wealth and property.
      It concerns me. Forcing someone to pay for something they do not use is not right. Forcing someone to pay for something in proportion to their income and not their use of that thing is not right either.

      Investment in infrastructure will bring about new business, new wealth, and an overall improvement in the quality of life for the average Australian.

      Even if the people paying for this investment have no choice in if they invest and how much they invest?

      I know and understand that my success and health as an individual is related to the success and health of the nation and the people in it.

      Yes indeed - as am I. I don't think that confiscating the property of supposedly free people is the way to go about it. The end does not justify the means. The state is supposed to protect us from harm, not inflict that harm upon us.

      For that reason, I am keenly interested in the success of this project and the opportunities it will provide to all Australians.

      I'm keenly interested in policies that provide people the choice as to what happens with their wealth. Forcibly taking money off people to spend on things they don't want is not ethical.

  2. Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uncensored internet, or fast internet.

    Tough choice. I think I'll go with the Greens - no idiotic net filter, but still a national fibre network.

    1. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and guess who you actually vote for if you vote Greens thanks to Preferences?

    2. Re:Hmm... by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      In the Senate, you can choose where the preferences go. Just vote below the line. There'd be no guessing then!

      If you don't vote below the line, then you will basically find that the major parties watch huge swings in preferences to them, and start getting worried. If the Greens win seats for a number of Senators, then they'll have to deal with them though. I'd say take the risk: it's worth it, as the "risk" is low.

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    3. Re:Hmm... by Pento · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you don't want your preferences going to Labor, vote below the line.

      Greens are currently on course to hold the balance of power in the senate. They've said many times that they're for the NBN, but they will block any attempt to implement the net filter.

    4. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Voting Green means they're likely to get balance in the upper house = NO FILTER!

    5. Re:Hmm... by vlad30 · · Score: 1

      No voting Green means finding their backroom deal includes trading a huge Emmisions Tax (what the greens want) for a internet filter (what labour wants)

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      Your'e all thinking it, I just said it for you
    6. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this is not a realistic possibility. the senate voting form in NSW has 84 candidates each of which must be numbered in order without mistakes. There are 84! ways of figuring out all the different combinations, and this is far too costly on the part of the voter. We end up just voting by the blocks of parties anyway.

    7. Re:Hmm... by Matt_R · · Score: 1

      so go to http://www.belowtheline.org.au/ and sort out who you're going to vote for. Print out the PDF and take it with you on voting day.

    8. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Senate is the green ballot where you fill in all your preferences. The lower house is the big white ballot with the line.

    9. Re:Hmm... by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that it's not going to be seriously a factorial to work this out. If you can work out who you want to vote for in the top 15-20 spots, and the ones you dislike the most (c'mon, I'm sure that the Communist Party, or the Christian Democratic Party must be at the bottom of a lot of people's list!) you put at right down the bottom, the rest you can just number in any way you like.

      And if you can work out the top 15-20, then that's not even 20!, because you'll probably know what order to put it in. And interestingly, you have... "how to vote" suggestions to look at - who knows, they might be useful.

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      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    10. Re:Hmm... by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      True. But the Senate, as the house of review, is really where it all happens. Not to mention they have rotating 8 year terms.

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      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    11. Re:Hmm... by countertrolling · · Score: 1

      I think I'll go with the Greens...

      Please, think twice. Is this guy still on the Greens ticket? Because if this is the kind people they put up, then they don't sound very anti-filter to me.

      --
      For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
  3. Somebody Tell Tony Abbott about Moore's Law by divide+overflow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The man who wants to be Australia's next Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, said today 'This idea that "hey presto" we are suddenly going to get 10 times the speed from something that isn't even built yet I find utterly implausible.'"

    Yeah, and computers will never get faster, cheaper or smaller. What a tool.

    1. Re:Somebody Tell Tony Abbott about Moore's Law by beelsebob · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and computers will never get faster, cheaper or smaller. What a tool.

      Consider that the average consumer doesn't actually see the progression of computer speed and he may look slightly less tool like.

      If all you do is use word, browse the web, check email etc, your computer has likely stayed the same effective speed for the past 15 years... The progression of things getting prettier/more complex/more intelligent is so gentle that most people don't ever notice.

    2. Re:Somebody Tell Tony Abbott about Moore's Law by Thanshin · · Score: 1

      He doesn't need to speak the truth, just to convince the masses. For the masses, a reasoning like "OMG WTF! 10x is UNPOSSIBLE! BBQ!" does work.

      And now the extra piece of my mind that will get me flamed, as always:

      There's no point in you voting. Your vote won't change anything. Voting is not the way of having an effect in a democratic system.

      And now the bad analogy: To found a new religion you start by convincing other people a new god exists, not by convincing yourself and praying to it.

    3. Re:Somebody Tell Tony Abbott about Moore's Law by bertok · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The man who wants to be Australia's next Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, said today 'This idea that "hey presto" we are suddenly going to get 10 times the speed from something that isn't even built yet I find utterly implausible.'"

      Yeah, and computers will never get faster, cheaper or smaller. What a tool.

      It's a particularly stupid statement since the technology selected for the NBN was designed to scale to 1Gbps with only a simple upgrade. Fibre is insanely high-bandwidth, the limitation is mostly around the cost of the transponders and the core network routers, which have to handle huge aggregate speeds. Speeds of 100Mbps are doable now, many Asian countries have already deployed networks that fast, so given the equivalent of Moore's law for networking, I'm not surprised they've changed their targeted initial speed to 1Gbps.

    4. Re:Somebody Tell Tony Abbott about Moore's Law by c0lo · · Score: 4, Informative

      No, he won't understand: according to him, he's not Bill Gates

      --
      Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
    5. Re:Somebody Tell Tony Abbott about Moore's Law by eugene259 · · Score: 1

      Down here in Oz we are already way down the list in terms of speeds, uptake and prices... If Libs and Abott get in power and scrap NBN (they are good at selling public assets off, they have had plenty of practice), we are definitely consigned to being an internet banana republic...

    6. Re:Somebody Tell Tony Abbott about Moore's Law by loki_tiwaz · · Score: 5, Informative

      i don't know how it wasn't obvious it could go to gigabit with very little tinkering. it's OPTICAL right?

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiber-optic_communication#Bandwidth-distance_product

      Through a combination of advances in dispersion management, wavelength-division multiplexing, and optical amplifiers, modern-day optical fibers can carry information at around 14 Terabits per second over 160 kilometers of fiber [4]. Engineers are always looking at current limitations in order to improve fiber-optic communication, and several of these restrictions are currently being researched

      14 terabits over 160km? does tony abbot's advisors do any research? presently, we have a copper network that can manage at best 24mbit at a max distance of 4km, at best. the NBN is an *optical* network, and is likely to be dispersed at network segments of less than 100km per run. lol. do i really need to point out the stupidity of saying it can't be gigabit? do i also need to point out the stupidity of saying a 100mbit network is not gonna be a piece of cake to roll out with optical in australian metro areas? what a retard.

      anyway, i'm voting for the sex party. you can bet they are all on for the NBN. super HD pr0n here we come :)

    7. Re:Somebody Tell Tony Abbott about Moore's Law by fezzzz · · Score: 1

      The problem is getting a fiber in the ground in the first place. Ensure that it is easily upgrade-able and bob's your uncle. Copper sucks against fiber in the long run.

    8. Re:Somebody Tell Tony Abbott about Moore's Law by Haedrian · · Score: 1

      Uh what?

      All you have to do is grab a game which came out 15 years ago - lets say Doom 2 (which came out 17 years ago), and a game which came out lately - take your pick and compare the graphics. Or compare the (non-existant) physics with the physics of some modern FPS.

      Even if you ARE an 'average' consumer who just browses the web (those people exist?) - I'm pretty sure that even flash games have greatly improved.

    9. Re:Somebody Tell Tony Abbott about Moore's Law by beelsebob · · Score: 3, Insightful

      All you have to do is grab a game which came out 15 years ago - lets say Doom 2 (which came out 17 years ago), and a game which came out lately - take your pick and compare the graphics. Or compare the (non-existant) physics with the physics of some modern FPS.

      The problem being that the average consumer sees that as "oh, it got a bit prettier" – they don't realise how many orders of magnitude more processing it requires to make it that much prettier.

    10. Re:Somebody Tell Tony Abbott about Moore's Law by Ash+Vince · · Score: 2, Funny

      14 terabits over 160km? does tony abbot's advisors do any research?

      Sort of. His advisers went and asked Telestra what they thought.

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    11. Re:Somebody Tell Tony Abbott about Moore's Law by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      "Yeah, and we won't have flying cars and cities on the moon by 2010," says a guy from 1969 who everyone laughed at.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    12. Re:Somebody Tell Tony Abbott about Moore's Law by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

      There's no point in you voting. Your vote won't change anything. Voting is not the way of having an effect in a democratic system.

      And now the bad analogy: To found a new religion you start by convincing other people a new god exists, not by convincing yourself and praying to it.

      Do you still hold that view if the voting machines aren't rigged? I live in the US and have been voting third party. I know I can't single-handedly change the outcome of the election. But if enough people voted third party it could actually change things. If the voting machines aren't rigged, which they are.

      --
      "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
    13. Re:Somebody Tell Tony Abbott about Moore's Law by harlequinn · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Great, these gigabit links will be real handy! Especially with Australia having about 8 terabits of cabled overseas bandwidth.

      Lets see, 8000 gigabits divided by 10000000 households with just 1% (100000) trying to have all you can eat = 80 megabits per household with nothing left over for the other 99%.

      We only need 92 terabits more overseas connection bandwidth to meet that insatiable 1% (the ones downloading torrents 24 hours a day).

      Woohoo go gigabit.

      Contention ratio is a bitch.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telecommunications_in_Australia#International

      http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/forum-replies-archive.cfm/1436043.html (post by Duideka)

      http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/6C0F2180158809B9CA2573D20011048E?opendocument

    14. Re:Somebody Tell Tony Abbott about Moore's Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      super HD pr0n? no thanks. I don't think it adds to anything. How about multiple SD streams at once?

  4. I think fibre to the home is insane by MichaelSmith · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Reorganise your spectrum so that you can deliver a gigabit per second over cellular protocols. Roll displaced services into cellular data. By all means pull fibre into the street, but then deploy microcells in high demand areas. The last step is always wireless anyway. In the future people won't install their own wifi if they can get a good service from a telco.

    1. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by Gazoogleheimer · · Score: 1

      The cost of what you propose is not only significantly higher than rolling out fiber as planned but is also partially infeasible scientifically. There are several very good reasons why spectrum hasn't been goofed with to even try to approach speeds like that (partially because such speeds either require some spectrum for almost no range or gigantic piles of spectrum for meager range). Fiber-to-the-home is practical once the models are tweaked around a bit (have all services delivered over fiber--a fiber switch itself, when in proper quantity, is not all that much more expensive than a copper switch when it means you're replacing your entire telecom infrastructure.)

      Finally, I'd like to point out that wireless isn't always the solution, even though that's a popular position here. There is finite spectrum. Wireless transmission is electrically inefficient compared to wired (or optical) transmission. There is no reason to use wireless for stationary devices when they are nonremote.

    2. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you knew how unreliable wireless is, you would not think that is a good idea. What you are proposing is a way back to hub-networks when everyone shared capacity. Not to mention the huge cost to the telcos deploying all that equipment.

    3. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      The things is, I don't think there will be many stationary devices in the home and office environment of the future. The intelligent dishwasher which Abbot was talking about won't have a phone or data cable going to it. It will have a cheap cellular modem. Yeah, spectrum is finite, but we make such poor use of it now, and the wireless step only has to go from the street to inside the building.

      In the future I think many small businesses will use telco data services. They won't install their own networking gear.

    4. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by c0lo · · Score: 1
      Before NBN Telstra Smart Communities: as I live in one, I can tell you that the insanity feeels soooo goooood (phone, public TV and Internet on a single cable). I can't wait the NBN roll-out, though, will sure drive Telstra to lower the prices.

      The last step is always wireless anyway

      No, not in my case. Home with structural cabling - data socket in each room. Yes, I do have a WiFi router, but only my laptop connects to it (rationale: when it comes to transfer files in my LAN, 1Gbps over CAT6 sure beats 50-120 Mbps - at peak - over WiFi).

      --
      Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
    5. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by c0lo · · Score: 1

      The things is, I don't think there will be many stationary devices in the home and office environment of the future.

      In the future I think many small businesses will use telco data services. They won't install their own networking gear.

      Think again. I don't pretend to be representative, but I'm operating 6 computers at home.

      The intelligent dishwasher which Abbot was talking about won't have a phone or data cable going to it. It will have a cheap cellular modem. Yeah, spectrum is finite, but we make such poor use of it now, and the wireless step only has to go from the street to inside the building.

      It will be like sending a fax using telco's terminal (but installed in your home)?

      --
      Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
    6. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by Matt_R · · Score: 1

      Reorganise your spectrum so that you can deliver a gigabit per second over cellular protocols.

      No chance of that happening - as it is we've got people bitching about cell towers.

    7. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      Reorganise your spectrum so that you can deliver a gigabit per second over cellular protocols.

      No chance of that happening - as it is we've got people bitching about cell towers.

      A cellular base station can be as small as the router hanging from the optus cable outside my house. There are plenty attached to traffic signal poles in the Melbourne CBD. Big, long range base stations are definitely on the way out in the city.

    8. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by Crypto+Gnome · · Score: 1

      Sorry folks, but "insane" is expecting "wireless" (of any sort) to be able to compete over the long term against fibre.

      For a start, keep in mind that without fibre, all those "wireless" comms are going to hit a base station/cell-tower and go literally NOWHERE.

      Secondly, "wireless" is a shared-medium, you're limited by available spectrum as well as real-world (ie practical) simultaneous-use limits (eg # channels supported in each cell tower).

      Wireless is *ideal* for low-density/long-distance coverage technologies, and *practically useless* (by comparison) for any real-world high-density inner-city deployment.

      We're *already* , TODAY seeing issues with the number of *purely mobile* users on cellular/wireless networks, imagine HOW MUCH WORSE that would be if *every* "fixed" internet connection today was also trying to use that same (magical) wireless access technology.

      --
      Visit CryptoGnome in his home.
    9. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But here's the thing. Wireless within the home - on a small scale - is doable, because you can organise things to minimise disruption to other services; you can allocate small chunks of spectrum to each home in such a way that there's no overlap in the local area; over the wider area, one chunk of spectrum is used by multiple homes.

      On a larger scale, you can't do this - either you have a hell of a lot of transmission/reception equipment to cover relatively small areas (hideously expensive), or you accept a much slower speed.

      Wireless is an end point technology, not a point-to-point technology in the way that fibre is. If it were, why would telcos be connecting their cellular towers with fibre?

    10. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by MichaelSmith · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      But all those people with fibre into their homes are going to try to distribute their data around the house with wifi anyway, and then you still have bandwidth (channel space) issues. Its more efficient to use the available spectrum for a protocol which can share channel space between adjacent buildings, and for me that means using a cellular network.

    11. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by Johnno74 · · Score: 1

      I read somewhere the other day a response to just that suggestion - wish I could find the link for ya...

      But basically they said with the density of people in cities, to give everyone gigabit connections over a wireless link you'd need a tower in *every* block.

    12. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by KonoWatakushi · · Score: 1

      The pervasive wireless networking you are suggesting is an attractive goal, but the fiber to the neighborhood wireless is not scalable in the longer term. In order to continue to scale bandwidth, UWB wireless will need to be very high-density, low-power, and short range.

      At some point, you will need the full fiber rollout anyway, so it is best to do it right in the first place. Even in the unlikely event that a full spectrum reallocation is achievable, there is no way that it will be cheaper, and would involve massive transition costs as well.

    13. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      I read somewhere the other day a response to just that suggestion - wish I could find the link for ya...

      But basically they said with the density of people in cities, to give everyone gigabit connections over a wireless link you'd need a tower in *every* block.

      Easily. I fully expect to see cellular base stations on every power pole at some point. They will be inside large offices and on every floor of apartment buildings.

    14. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A microcell will cover around 100 residences. Then each gets 10Mbit/s average, no better than their current ADSL. The current cable system would also be comparable to what you propose: a high bandwidth SHARED medium. FTTH is not shared, so each person gets the full rate. Upstream bottlenecks might be addressed with P2P architectures, as demonstrated by Bittorrent.

    15. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Reorganise your spectrum so that you can deliver a gigabit per second over cellular protocols

      OK, done - so now the guy nearest the tower has the bandwidth, but how the hell is anyone else going to get it though with hardware we can imagine today?

    16. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are physical limitations to this idea. 1Gbps wireless requires 1 GHz of bandwidth. Cellphones, wifi etc. operate around the 1-2GHz bandwidth mark... so your single connection is now saturating all of the available bandwidth. You can go to higher frequencies but then you start to need line-of-sight because you're getting into infrared.

    17. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by atamido · · Score: 1

      Wow, you completely missed the point of the GP. It doesn't matter if you redistribute the data in the house. The simple truth is that a single cell tower is likely to reach hundreds, if not thousands, of people. And that cell tower has to use different frequencies than those immediately surround it to avoid interference. Even if you could arrange things so that you could dump 1Gbps down a single cell, you'd still be sharing that among a hundred other people (not even counting in losses from interference, signal propagation problems, or latency).

    18. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by atamido · · Score: 1

      Somebody mod the parent up. Every time fiber comes up some yahoo mentions just putting everything on wireless. Get it through your thick heads people that wireless is a shared medium and it is simply impossible to provide high bandwidth to many users with it.

    19. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by evilviper · · Score: 1

      The last step is always wireless anyway.

      I can't see ever wanting mobile TV, even if it was free, since watching TV while moving isn't terribly pleasant, and for the most part, isn't practical (while driving, walking, etc.).

      So, in the worst case, fiber to the home eliminates all the bandwidth (TONS) that would be wasted by sending hundreds if not thousands of high-def (19Mbps) TV channels over the airwaves.

      In addition, wireless has a chicken and egg problem, which FTTH does not. Until it's installed widely, it isn't useful. FTTH is useful as soon as it's connected. FTTH is cheaper, and gets immediate return on investment.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    20. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by crafty.munchkin · · Score: 1

      I can't see ever wanting mobile TV, even if it was free, since watching TV while moving isn't terribly pleasant, and for the most part, isn't practical (while driving, walking, etc.).

      So... the two hours a day I (and several hundred thousand others here in Melbourne) sit on the train going to and from work aren't applicable? Admittedly I download the tv-shows and load them onto my smartphone of choice prior to getting on the train each day, but I guarantee I'm not the only one doing this. I've seen people watching TV on their phones/laptops/portable DVD players on a daily basis for the last three years. Sure it's not streamed, but there is a demand for it.

      Now give me my GigE to my home, where there is no wireless signal from the mobile networks so I can continue to do this instead of using the crappy ADSL2 technology I currently have :P

      --
      ... wait, what?
    21. Re:I think fibre to the home is insane by evilviper · · Score: 1

      I didn't claim nobody would ever want TV over WiFi, just that the demand would be vanishingly small, in large part because most people would only watch while at home, and also because, as you've illustrated, people already have the option of DVDs, or copying videos recorded by their DVRs. What's the business-case for live, mobile, wireless, cable TV? Everyone desperate wants to watch the crappy shows that just happen to be on while they're on the train? They want to reoutinely miss the start and end of shows because the broadcast schedule doesn't match their train schedule? They want a much more expensive and lower-capacity mobile DVR that will have to deal with routine signal drop-outs as people walt around all day?

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  5. Backbone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What they intend to lay is FTTH. This can theoretically support gigabit speeds (and higher). In practice though it won't be that high as backbone speeds will not be able to support this.

    1. Re:Backbone by Jens+de+Smit · · Score: 1

      Do not underestimate the capacity of DWDM backbones. Also, realize that this gigabit speed is peak capacity, users will scarcely use this capacity for extended periods of time. I also expect that subscriptions will be differentiated with the 1G subscription being more expensive than less demanding plans. 100Mbps will be plenty for most users, but it would be great if customers with higher demands willing to pay the price could get a higher speed.

    2. Re:Backbone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about international links? Majority of content is outside of Australia, that's a bottleneck if I ever saw one.

    3. Re:Backbone by sapphire+wyvern · · Score: 1

      No reason why Akamai, YouTube and Google can't have local caches.

      In fact they would be friggin' crazy not to.

      And Hulu etc apparently don't find the Australian market worth bothering with, anyway.

    4. Re:Backbone by Jens+de+Smit · · Score: 1

      International links are a bottleneck everywhere, which is why people have devised clever ways around them. Seriously popular content is cached by transparent proxies or Content Delivery Networks such as Akamai which reside inside your high-speed network. Also, having a national high-speed network in a country with plenty of space will be very attractive to tech investors to actually move their data to Australia, bringing the data to you instead of having to pull it in from abroad.

    5. Re:Backbone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because Akamai, YouTube, Google and Hulu are the only places people visit on the internet...

    6. Re:Backbone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you seen the costs of having ICT assets in Australia? It's upwards of 3x more expensive. It's extremely uncompetitive compared to the US or anywhere else in the world. Plus, what's the difference to the consumer if it's proper-24 or 10000 MBps if they're going to hit these bottlenecks.

    7. Re:Backbone by MysteriousPreacher · · Score: 1

      Akamai isn't everything, but it's certainly a serious chunk of content.

      --
      -- Using the preview button since 2005
    8. Re:Backbone by Crypto+Gnome · · Score: 1

      No reason why Akamai, YouTube and Google can't have local caches.

      Akamai puts caches pretty much close to *everywhere*, even in Down Under Land.

      I personally dunno to what extent Google and YouTube park infrastructure of any sort Down Below.

      --
      Visit CryptoGnome in his home.
    9. Re:Backbone by Cimexus · · Score: 1

      They park a lot of infrastructure down here (well, the same amount as you'd expect in any developed country, at least). Youtube and Google content all comes from a local server to which I get a 20ms ping to. So it's definitely hosted in Australia.

  6. 1gig of censored internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    No thanks.

  7. Ain Low Oz, Aim Low! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The man who wants to be Australia's next Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, said today 'This idea that "hey presto" we are suddenly going to get 10 times the speed from something that isn't even built yet I find utterly implausible.'

    Abbott then went on to say "And there ain't nobody never going to be able to put a monkey into space, much less a man on the moon!"

    Ahh, regressive cro-magnon morons that would pretend to lead us. We've got one pretending to run Canada right now and I could fucking scream. It's 1910 all over again (only the government's thinking is not as modern).

    1. Re:Ain Low Oz, Aim Low! by Ironhandx · · Score: 1

      Uhg, I know what you mean.

      I wish more people would realize how much of an idiot he is and just vote for **any** other choice. Right now we'd be better off with a figurehead Liberal or even *shudder* NDP leader.

  8. That's why you use fiber by Jens+de+Smit · · Score: 2, Informative

    Tony Abbott apparently doesn't understand a thing about modern networking. Today's optic fibers can support frightening data rates, the limiting factor currenly is what the hardware on both sides is capable of. With the speeds of the high end of the market recently increasing to 40G and 100G (from 1G and 10G) per channel I would not be surprised if that jump suddenly made 1G FTTH possible. Investing in copper technology now is outrageous and a waste of money. Utilizing it for the last mile while you're not done rolling out fiber to each premise is acceptable at best. Wireless broadband might be acceptable for remote locations but even those base stations need a good fiber connection for their uplink.

    1. Re:That's why you use fiber by doktorjayd · · Score: 1

      Tony Abbott apparently doesn't understand a thing about modern networking

      ahh, if it were only modern networking mr. Abbott didnt understand - the reality is that he, like his hero predecessor mr. Howard, and his predecessor's hero mr. Menzies, simply dont understand a world past about 1955.

       

    2. Re:That's why you use fiber by kickedfortrolling · · Score: 1

      Today's optic fibers can support frightening data rates

      I'd never considered broadband speeds could induce fear. Is this why my download speed improves significantly after 9pm?

      its nice to see someone thinking about the children =)

      --
      --AlexC
      Just because I dont agree with climate change doesnt make me a troll
    3. Re:That's why you use fiber by Jens+de+Smit · · Score: 1

      Those data rates are more frightening for RIAA and its friends than for little kids...

  9. Australia's Current Networks by qazadex · · Score: 1

    Hopefully we do get the 1 Gbps internet. It was a good move, considering the fact that in 2018 100 mbps will be seen as sluggish compared to the world. Anything would be better than what we currently have though. Most people in the cities have around 2mbps, and the highest you can get (at a large premium) is around 30 mpbs. Plus the fact we have download caps of around 5-20 gigabytes on average, Australia's internet is horrible and in good need for a rehaul.

    1. Re:Australia's Current Networks by Cimexus · · Score: 1

      The average cap is 5-20 GB because that's what people mostly need. Every major ISP these days offers caps of 200 GB or higher if the customer wants it. It's simply that most don't need that much. But that's not indicative of a problem with Australia's Internet in general.

      The way you phrase it makes it sound like these low caps are the only choice, and people are being forced to buy those plans. There are much larger caps available.

      Similarly with the speed: that 2 mbps average is correct, because many people remain on low end 1.5 Mbps ADSL plans. But it's not like they ~can't get~ faster plans (usually). They just choose not to. The actual average sync speed that a typical Australian phone line gets on a non-speed-limited plan (i.e. ADSL2+) is in the 10-11 Mbit range (although yes, some people are stuck at the end of a long line and get a lot less).

  10. Sex Party by duk242 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There's always the Sex Party, they've got decent enough policies, no internet filtering, no internet spying, R Rating for games... What more could you want? http://www.sexparty.org.au/index.php/policies

    1. Re:Sex Party by qazadex · · Score: 2, Informative

      Why is Slashdot so pro Sex Party and not greens? They have around 15% of the primary vote, compared to the 1% or so of the Sex Party, and have very similar, left leaning policies. http://greens.org.au/policies

    2. Re:Sex Party by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      Why is Slashdot so pro Sex Party and not greens? They have around 15% of the primary vote, compared to the 1% or so of the Sex Party, and have very similar, left leaning policies.

      http://greens.org.au/policies

      Probably because its funny. The greens are pretty mundane sounding by comparison. In the senate I am going to put both ahead of labour and the libs.

    3. Re:Sex Party by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Free boobies on demand?

      What... you asked what more i could want...

    4. Re:Sex Party by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    5. Re:Sex Party by duk242 · · Score: 1

      1. They're hilarious! 2. Their Policies page doesn't have a tl;dr section (seriously, it's a trillion pages long) The Sex Party states their aims really simply, they say R Rating for games, No Internet Filtering/Spying. Perfect. That being said, I'm voting greens after the sex party. Getting sick of both the Liberal and Labor governments :(

    6. Re:Sex Party by doktorjayd · · Score: 1

      Victorians: Vote [61] Stephen Conroy

      please - consider that the internet filter shenanigans has been an elaborate charade to woo that nufty 'family first' senator steven fielding, and as soon as he's gone, labor can drop the charade entirely.

      in that regard, if you must vote below the line, reserve the last couple o spots for family first.

      ( oh, and given there are 60 candidates for the senate in victoria, a 61 for anyone will render your vote null and void...)

    7. Re:Sex Party by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      Victorians: Vote [61] Stephen Conroy

      please - consider that the internet filter shenanigans has been an elaborate charade to woo that nufty 'family first' senator steven fielding, and as soon as he's gone, labor can drop the charade entirely.

      in that regard, if you must vote below the line, reserve the last couple o spots for family first.

      ( oh, and given there are 60 candidates for the senate in victoria, a 61 for anyone will render your vote null and void...)

      Believe me, Family First are going down too. I downloaded the CSV file for the senate in victoria and counted lines. Maybe I got it wrong. I will check. Thanks.

    8. Re:Sex Party by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the greens preferences are going towards labor, which means that at the end of the day, a vote for the greens is still a vote for censorship, tracking and oppression of the population.

    9. Re:Sex Party by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you seriously think that the ALP (or the Libs for that matter) will back down on internet censorship? The shitstorm that would result would be all encompassing. It doesn't matter whether it works or not, it just matters that the government is seen to be responding to calls that "WON'T SOMEONE THINK OF THE CHILDREN?!?"

      Same goes for R18+ rating for videogames.

    10. Re:Sex Party by vlad30 · · Score: 1

      How about the liberal democrats

      --
      Your'e all thinking it, I just said it for you
    11. Re:Sex Party by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      I would be happy if the greens (+ sex party, say) have the balance of power in the senate, which might keep internet censorship off the table.

    12. Re:Sex Party by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      the greens preferences are going towards labor, which means that at the end of the day, a vote for the greens is still a vote for censorship, tracking and oppression of the population.

      The kind of people who vote green are likely to specify their own preferences, IMHO.

    13. Re:Sex Party by ChunderDownunder · · Score: 1

      Well if the how-to-vote card volunteers at the by-election last year were any guide, sex sells. Smelly tree-huggers are no match for jail-bait in tight yellow t-shirts.

    14. Re:Sex Party by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      I agree, I have been saying that the whole thing is a "Yes Minister" episode since the first Conroy story appeared on slashdot. However I don't think Liberal and Labor will stop playing the game (that started with Howard in the late 90's) and if the libs get in then you will see them swap roles (again). It's simply a ruse by the two majors to keep nutjob independents chasing their own tail, neither party are serious about mandatory filters even though BOTH SIDES have put forward legislation advocating it, BOTH SIDES have also blocked those bills.

      I wouldn't worry about Fielding, his nickname is "Mr 2%" due to the fact he only got 2% of the primary vote, he won his seat because both the majors directed their preferences to him so as to keep the greens candidate out. He hasn't got a snowballs chance in hell of being re-elected since labour have cut a preference deal with the Greens that will most likely give them the balance of power in the senate and will definitely leave Fielding out of a job.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    15. Re:Sex Party by srodden · · Score: 1

      hmmm, I think I'll find out which polling boothes are in my electorate and drive around looking to see which one has the best sex party volunteers :)

      --
      Why can't we let people believe whatever they like? It's not like a little religion has ever hurt anyone.
    16. Re:Sex Party by Rookitown · · Score: 1

      The Greens nuclear policy's, are ridiculous especially if they want to reach the goals described here.

    17. Re:Sex Party by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because of this douche bag: Clive Hamilton

    18. Re:Sex Party by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish we could vote for them here in the US.

    19. Re:Sex Party by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      In an effort to push their environmental agenda, Australia will topple. The green's have policies that are one sided, and quite stupid when you look at it on the whole. They are a very important party. They need to be right there having the "debates" in parliament, but they shouldn't ever have complete power.

    20. Re:Sex Party by rdnetto · · Score: 1

      The Greens have nice policies, but terrible implementations. Most of their ideas are completely unrealistic. e.g shutting down coal plants without a viable alternative, which would dramatically increase electricity costs.

      --
      Most human behaviour can be explained in terms of identity.
  11. Hmmm... (GPON...) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    GPON and Ethernet are so new that Tony Abbott's stuff has no clue they exists or is it a kickback thing?

  12. Re:I don't think aussies want to fork up that much by beelsebob · · Score: 5, Insightful

    $43bn for speeds faster than what the internet naturally provides... There isn't a need for gigabit connections when the average pipeline of a website is less than a megabit. I suppose if you want to watch 75 HD porn videos at a time, now you'd get the chance

    You're right, instead of spending $43bn on gigabit network now, we should spend $30bn on 1Mb now, then $30bn in 3 years on 5Mb, then $30bn in 6 years on 10Mb, then $30bn in 10 years on 100Mb, then...

  13. They'll likely get the Gigabit bandwidth... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it'll just be for a lot more than the alloted 43 billion ASD budget.

  14. my Agency built a 200 user LAN segment for $40.000 by kubitus · · Score: 2, Interesting
    they used the "Industry Standard" to last for decades. (TR)

    -

    I built in our Lab a 200 user multisegment LAN for $ 10.000, but for 600 nodes

    as we have more computers than staff!

    -

    It was called Ethernet! -

    Bob Metcalf - one of my heroes along with R.P. Stalman, R.Knuth, L. Thorvald and many many others including Richard P. Feynman.

    For keeping Ethernet free I forgive you many design errors at 3COM ;-)

  15. Re:I don't think aussies want to fork up that much by Thanshin · · Score: 4, Funny

    $43bn for speeds faster than what the internet naturally provides... There isn't a need for gigabit connections when the average pipeline of a website is less than a megabit. I suppose if you want to watch 75 HD porn videos at a time, now you'd get the chance

    Are you trying to say that "1Mb should be enough for anybody."?

  16. Who cares about speed by initialE · · Score: 1

    when they have to deal with download quotas?

    --
    Starbucks, Harbuckle of Breath.
    1. Re:Who cares about speed by lachlan76 · · Score: 1

      Residential quotas for NBN-delivered service go up to 200GB, at least through my provider. This is no longer an issue for even heavy users (that are willing to pay, of course).

    2. Re:Who cares about speed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope it increases student limits at universities. I just arrived from the US, and was shocked to discover that students using their accounts through the university are limited to 6MB per day before being billed. Mobile broadband plans using dongles seem to charge about $20/month for 1GB download limits. Luckily I have access to a wired computer on campus (postgrad office) that does not seem to have a quota.

    3. Re:Who cares about speed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's the issue, though: 200 MB may be good for one user, but what about for a family?

      Out of curiosity, do you know how much data you download per day? I personally average around 2 GB/day, and that's just average use web browsing, video watching, stuff like that. For someone who does a lot of video watching, that number can easily jump to 5 GB/day or more. Now, that's still well withing the bandwidth cap, but now multiply that over a few users.

      Let's say that Bobby and his sister Jane are both still living at home, in their teenage years. They go to Facebook, YouTube, download songs from iTunes, etc. Conservatively, this takes 2-3 GB/day. Now add in the parents - maybe they do less network intensive tasks like email checking or downloading a few songs. They'll probably average 1-2 GB/day. Now, each user easily gets under that 200GB cap, but taken together the network usage averages 240 GB/month. Even the low end of that estimate is 180GB.

      So yeah, the plan works for even heavy SINGLE users. However, put a family on that link and even 200GB starts to seem pretty constrictive.

    4. Re:Who cares about speed by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      While I don't use 200GB per month on my 3Mbps connection, I can GUARANTEE you that on a 1Gbps connection I'd use that up in a few days.

      A 200GB cap on a 1Gbps connection means that if you used your connect to it's full potential you'd expend your total allowance in less than 30 minutes. While some limitation might be justified, it's pretty obvious that 30 minutes of being able to use your full speed is just unrealistic. The monthy cap on such a connection should be AT LEAST 20TB. That's still barely over 2 days of full utilization, but it's a lot more reasonable.

      Usage will expand to fill whatever capacity is present.

      I can't help but think "I told you so" when my brother complains about his 5GB cap on his cellular access. The salesman who sold it to them assured them that it was "virtually unlimited", and even he when I explained the issue to him thought it would be plenty when I told him how much data that was.

      18 months later he's complaining every month about not being able to download TV shows from iTunes or use the streaming services of his Netflix service out of fear of hitting his cap.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
  17. In other news... by mrv00t · · Score: 0

    ...Finland announced some months ago that it will build "broadband network" of 1Mbps to cover whole country. Pathetic.

  18. NBN vs Abbott: by Arancaytar · · Score: 1, Funny

    NBN: Over 1000 Mega!
    Abbott: O RLY?
    NBN: YA RLY.
    Abbott: NO WAI
    NBN: WAI

  19. Vote Greens, then Sex Party, then bash Abbot by qwerty8ytrewq · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I am very happy, there are now two parties that are talking sense in OZ, and the leader of Labour is not to bad either, I can but hope we move forward at the next election... in the meantime, it is fun and commendable to join the cheefrul political bashing of Abbot: http://www.theage.com.au/opinion/bible-bashing-the-homeless-abbott-style-20100215-o2tj.html http://www.news.com.au/money/money-matters/no-more-dole-tony-abbott-warns-the-under-30s/story-e6frfmd9-1225856181945 http://www.samesame.com.au/forum/showthread.php?t=14437 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WSPc5UTcwHQ What an embarrasing tool!

    --
    Waiting for the other shoe to...
  20. Re:my Agency built a 200 user LAN segment for $40. by martin-boundary · · Score: 1

    Bob Metcalf - one of my heroes along with R.P. Stalman, R.Knuth, L. Thorvald and many many others including Richard P. Feynman.

    WTF? Knuth is a Republican? Nobody tells me anything anymore! I always thought he was a Democrat!

  21. it should be expected by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a perfect example of the complete lack of foresight that Mr Abbot has.
    Anybody who has been using technology for more than 2 years should realise that when it's built in 2 years or so if it's not getting 10 times what we could promise today, then it is essentially already a failure - already oudated.
    Just like his religious ideas are outdated.

    1. Re:it should be expected by Crypto+Gnome · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Tony is a luddite, that's the correct term for people of his nature.

      That he's pretty much a religious nutcase and general embarrassment to the country is a well known fact but every political party *must* have a leader.

      Unfortunately Stephen Conroy is also a religious freak. Not to mention a complete WHORE for votes.

      Yes, that's right, I said it -> Stephen Conroy is a complete whore for votes.

      That's where The Great Internet Censorship Program comes from - The Party sold their political soul to a pack of self-righteous religious extremists who believe that "Teh Innnertubes R EVIL". LITERALLY promised to FORCE the censorship regime on this country in return for a steaming pile of religious freak votes.

      A vote for Labour and Stephen Conroy is a vote for a Theocracy, a vote for Terrorism.

      If that's the kind of country you want go and live in Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Israel they're all for Theocracy there, you'll be welcomed with open arms.

      --
      Visit CryptoGnome in his home.
  22. Re:I don't think aussies want to fork up that much by vlad30 · · Score: 1
    The problem is the $43B when its not an urgent expense now and will still not make that much of a difference to real speeds. 70% of internet traffic in australia comes from overseas through what is essentially small pipes. Additionally the pace of technology change is such that wireless is a more desirable solution for consumers already. And from someone who has watched technology for at least 30 years, Get your upgrade when you absolutely need it as technology only gets Cheaper, Faster, Better.

    As a point of interest in my Sydney home I've had a optical fibre line ready to run since 1985, we found it when we added extra lines in 1995 (only needs final installation and connection) to date the only reason I haven't done this is the cost and charges quoted by Telstra (51% government owned formerly 100%) are ridiculous. Anyone who believes after we pay $43B for Gigabit fibre it will free or even cheap is smoking the funny stuff

    --
    Your'e all thinking it, I just said it for you
  23. Re:I don't think aussies want to fork up that much by delinear · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Considering we've gone from, what, 14.4k to approaching Gb speeds in the space of less than 20 years? I don't think it's unreasonable to build in some future redundancy - after all, the majority of the cost is going to be physically putting the cable in place, the cost to increase the capacity of said cable is likely to be close to incidental.

  24. Oh dear... by aiht · · Score: 1

    Tony, please go back inside. You're embarrassing us in front of our international friends!

  25. Re:I don't think aussies want to fork up that much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's the point in a Gbps line when your living in a country that only lets you use your connection to view Facebook?

  26. Meanwhile... by John+Pfeiffer · · Score: 1

    ...the only connection OFF their little island will still only be carrier pigeons with Post-It notes. Enjoy your highspeed internet access! (To the rest of your little country.)

    --

    Friend: "The NIC is misconfigured..." Me: "No prob, I'll just telnet in and fix it." *Silence*
    1. Re:Meanwhile... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey John, come and sit on this for a minute.

  27. Stars and Stripes? by MichaelSmith · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Not sure why we have a picture of the US flag, in an article about Australian politics.

    Also I wonder why we aren't talking about Oracle taking google to court over patents in Java. Are the slashdot editors waiting to see if the topic goes away?

  28. Re:I don't think aussies want to fork up that much by Issarlk · · Score: 1

    Not 1mb, but 12mb should be plenty!
    There is certainly not going to be any use in the future for more than 12mb. So Australia is in no danger of handicaping itself economicaly in a world that increasingly work with them intertubes.

  29. Re:I don't think aussies want to fork up that much by srodden · · Score: 1

    If it was left to Telstra (as I believe is Abbot's plan), they'll just roll out 10b2 down every street. Guaranteed 10Mb to every home. I wonder what the contention rate will be like?

    --
    Why can't we let people believe whatever they like? It's not like a little religion has ever hurt anyone.
  30. Last km by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe the implausibility he's thinking about is having Gigabit speeds consistently throughout the whole network, all the time, for all users? Either way, it denounces a typical ignorance of technology. Ignorance by itself is not bad, particularly if it's involuntary; but it'll be concerning if he (or anyone else) makes statements without getting the facts right beforehand.

  31. finally by gedw99 · · Score: 1

    as an Aussie that lives in Sweden i can say this.

    Oz has been held to ransom by Telsta for years.
    finally they are getting a decent network and the opposition is playing politics with it.

    46 billion AUD = 20 billion Euro about.
    Its allot of money but ITS WORTH IT, because it means that that ALL industries can reap the benefits.
    Being connected and having a good connection is MANDATORY to do anything in todays world.

    Not only that but i know for a fact that it also means all the other over the air networks get cheaper too.
    For example a wimax network is going into Victoria as we speak. I know because my brother is in charge of that.

    Having all that fibre available, means that so many other services also get better too is my point. Its like a catalyst.

    i Sweden they have an OpenNET. which is a fibre backbone which is free.
    So other companies can innovate on top of it. It allows everyone to get fibre if they want it.

    So politicians down there in opposition get FUCKED (aussies swear allot).
    People in OZ, you should write the everyone that will or wont listen demanding this stays on course and goes ahead.
    Its a lifeline to allow Oz to jump ahead in terms of a civilisation !!!!!!

    1. Re:finally by fredan · · Score: 1

      i Sweden they have an OpenNET. which is a fibre backbone which is free.

      You don't know nothing about OpenNet as I do. I'm struggling with the everyday. Nothing is free on their network. And if you are lucky, you can order an Adsl but not an Vdsl, even tough they have an agreement that say they should.

      So, no. You do not want to have anything to do with OpenNET.

    2. Re:finally by gedw99 · · Score: 1

      mh good to know. good on paper, but odes nto work in practice ?

      ged

    3. Re:finally by mjwx · · Score: 1

      46 billion AUD = 20 billion Euro about. Its allot of money but ITS WORTH IT

      I think of it as a loan, (of tax $) so I amortise it over it's expected life time, the copper network has been in place for 40 years, 20 for the internet. So we can reasonably expect this network to last 20-30 years which reduces the cost to 2.3 Billion a year at most.

      Plus we get the boon of increased commerce when a 10 Mbit fibre line reduces in cost from it's current A$1500 per month.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  32. Wow... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now you can exhaust that 50gb cap almost instantly

  33. Ahh a REtard speaks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    always good when someone who is running for office knows nothing about this shit. I agree with everyone that says he is REtard, cocksmoker, and of course tool. I am sure if we dug deeper he has been bought by what ever company stands to lose in the process of upgrading, just like here in the US descisions are bought and sold everyday in everyway.

  34. Which typical home user needs Gigabit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Someone want to tell me what applications need 1Gigabit??? And don't come with that cr@p about applications magically appearing - they just haven't been invented yet. I had plans to build something like the ipad 20 years ago but the tech wasn't there yet. The point is I knew what was wanted, I just had to wait for the performance. I canno think of anything that neeeds 1Gb/s - at least not for home applicaions and certainly nothing for aunty Jo or granny Smith.

    Show me the need and then I'll agree that $43 billion dollars ($2000+ per person) are worth it. Teil then it is really expensive and provides nothing beyond the 'cool' factor. It would be far better to focus on the growing segment - mobile/wireless.

    1. Re:Which typical home user needs Gigabit? by Cimexus · · Score: 1

      It's not really about applications that need 1 Gbit. The network might be theoretically capable of that, but ISPs are highly unlikely to offer that speed on residential plans any time soon.

      Consumers in the NBN pilot areas (in Tasmania) who are already using the network are being offered plans from ISPs ranging from 25/2 Mbit, to 100/16 Mbit. Most people are choosing the 25 or 50 Mbit plans ... few need 100 Mbit at this point in time, and Gbit would be ridiculous overkill.

      But in 10, 20, 30 years time, it's nice to know the network can handle Gbit to the home, because it will be needed then. I mean even in my small three person household, we have 7 internet connected devices already. If all of them need data at once, you can definitely feel the slowdown, even on my relatively fast ADSL2+ connection. So I think there will always be a need for higher speeds as more and more devices in the home rely on Internet connectivity.

    2. Re:Which typical home user needs Gigabit? by wilko11 · · Score: 1

      You have to remember that the NBN isn't just about home users; it will be available to the vast majority of business premises as well. Our company already uses 1GB network connections between our offices and our data centre. We are located in state capitals so we can get that bandwidth at reasonable prices, but if we had an office in a smaller town we would be out of luck. Having 1GB/s available means that smaller businesses will have access to lots of new services; hosted/cloud servers, off-site backup, HD video conferencing...
      As other posters have said, most home users don't even need 100 Mb/s but there may be some who do and there will certainly be some businesses that do. The major cost component of the NBN is physically installing the fibre. Installing copper would cost about the same. Arguing against the cost of the NBN based on the speeds it supports being unnecessary is like arguing against the cost of building a suburban street because someone says it can support a 65 ton tank at its maximum design capacity. Although the maximum capacity will never be needed, a lower capacity road would cost the same.
      While I am not convinced that a government can manage a project of this size without cost blow outs, at least the Labour government has a vision to provide a universal level of infrastructure. The Liberal plan will leave us with the same patchy mix of over-serviced cities and under-serviced rural areas.
      As for why focusing on wireless is a bad idea, refer to the very informative posts in this thread on the relationship between speed and the spectrum required. If we can't deliver better than 20Mb/s over a few kilometres using copper. how can we expect wireless to do better when it is a much more restricted medium.

  35. There's a reason by QuantumG · · Score: 1

    He finds it implausible because he's going to close our borders to the skilled immigrants required to build it.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  36. Incentives to the private sector by JabrTheHut · · Score: 1

    Let me guess: $10billion a year for 10 years - that should make it cost effective and entirely private.

    Note he doesn't mention what 12mbit (I have that now in London) will cost the end user. It must be fun to be a Telco in Australia - both the government and the people pay you.

    --
    Work like no one is watching. Dance like you've never been hurt. Make love like you don't need the money.
  37. Sounds great.... by lattyware · · Score: 1

    But you can only browse government approved sites.

    --
    -- Lattyware (www.lattyware.co.uk)
  38. I don't want either major party by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Sadly, I cannot recall an election where I was so opposed to both major parties.

    It seems I'm not alone, with:
    • so many marginal seats; and,
    • independents / smaller parties commanding more importance
  39. Expensive, if done right by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    So in terms of just building a big 'ole WAN, no probably not too much more. Enterprise grade gig equipment still carries a non-trivial price premium over 100mb, but it isn't near the cost that actually laying the fiber will be. However remember that's only half the battle. There are two very other important things when you are talking an ISP:

    1) Internal pipes. While you can, of course, oversubscribe lines and you'll do that, you cannot do it to an infinite fashion. What this means is if you have a switch full of people on gig, and you want them to see that gig a reasonable amount of time, you need to go 10gig for the uplink from that switch. Then that switch with all the 10gig ports is going to have to have something bigger up the chain, and currently there isn't anything on the ethernet standard. You find that the prices for this can go up extremely fast. Gig is cheap, 10 gig is not very cheap, faster is really expensive. When talking something on the scale of a nation, it means you will need some extremely heavy hitting high end connections. This is doable, but you are talking massive infrastructure. Like say you wanted to have all 1.6m people in Perth to have access, and you wanted to do an over subscription of 1000:1 at the high end. You'd need 40ish OC-768 lines headed out to the next level of your net to maintain that. Also that oversubsctiption rat might be a bit too aggressive for people to get their speed, and in that case you'd have to increase this.

    2) Internet connections. The really expensive part, if you want this to be actual 1gbps network connections and not just some massive WAN, would be connections to other ISPs. This is particularly the case in Australia which is located out in the middle of nowhere. Massive, massive amounts of bandwidth would need to be purchased to other carriers in Asia and Hawaii and probably new cable run for it. This would incur a massive monthly charge since as it stands, Australia isn't going to get peering rates, there just isn't enough there to want to peer with (ISPs peer when they are roughly equal in terms of traffic needs).

    If these aren't done, then what you has is a massive WAN, or perhaps even a massive collection of LANs. Delivering gig signaling to the house isn't hard. I could even be done over cable modem if people wanted, and fiber isn't a problem at all. The problem is then backing that gig up high up the chain and making it mean something, other than just a massive signaling rate.

    Like at work, I have a gig to my desktop, however it'd be disingenuous to say I have a gig Internet connection. Why? Well that gig switch is shared with about 6 other people, all of whom have gig. It only then has a gig out to the floor switch for the building, which is shared with a bunch of room and servers. That has a redundant gig connection back to the building switch. That building switch has a gig connection to the distribution switch, one gig for hundreds of people in the building. That has 10 gig back to the core, and has probably 40-50 buildings on it. Then going off campus? About 500mbps (they may have upped it a bit) to the Internet and 2.4gbps to Internet 2. Not a slow connection, but not a gig by any means. 100mbit is about the max I get in real world usage, and then only on torrents and so on with other I2 sites involved. Also it only stays fast so long as people don't use their bandwidth all the time. If you do, you can rest assured you'll get a call. Everyone needs to use the network to get what they need, then back off and let others have a chance. No 24/7 torrenting (the students may, but the dorms have a heavy per dorm rate limit to deal with it).

    We do that at work to keep costs down and because it works well. It is just a big WAN, we aren't interested in actually providing 1gbps of Internet to each and every person. Fine, but we are realistic about that.

    Same deal here but on a MUCH larger scale. Providing a fast connection to the home isn't the hard part. Having the infrastructure and connections higher up to maintain that

    1. Re:Expensive, if done right by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      When your LAN has an entire country connected in it, it stops being local. Or if the entire world connected to it you'd still call it a LAN?

      And, no, you are quite wrong. The hard part is getting gigabit links to every home. The back end is easy.

    2. Re:Expensive, if done right by ultranova · · Score: 1

      What this means is if you have a switch full of people on gig, and you want them to see that gig a reasonable amount of time, you need to go 10gig for the uplink from that switch. Then that switch with all the 10gig ports is going to have to have something bigger up the chain, and currently there isn't anything on the ethernet standard.

      A possible solution is to not have "upstream", but use half the ports on a switch connect to people and the other half connect to other switches - in other words, have a mesh network rather than a backbone-based one. Or, if you want to think of it another way, make a gigabit backbone network and simply connect people to it with full-speed links.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    3. Re:Expensive, if done right by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      And, no, you are quite wrong. The hard part is getting gigabit links to every home. The back end is easy.

      If you're running fiber; giving them a 'gigabit' fiber connection by using a gigabit switch rather than a 100mb switch is easy.

      The problem on the back end becomes provisioning. If your switch has internal gigabit switching and you have a hundred some odd houses plugged in there, but you only have a gigabit connection going back to a central switch, can you really say that the users have a 'gigabit connection to the internet'? They only get that gig if none of the other hundred or so people are using it at the same time.

      A 10 gig connection would work better, but now what about the town's connection back to the nearest city? It adds up, fast. Going mesh helps, but you're still looking at needing a lot of bandwidth to serve all those homes.

      You're right though, I wouldn't call it a LAN, or even a MAN. But you're still looking at saturating the cables leaving the country if a lot of people want to access content located in the USA/Europe.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    4. Re:Expensive, if done right by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

      Again it matters on what you can provide. If all links in the country are gig, then it is just a collection of little LANs. You have gig to the switch which has gig to its switch and that to its switch and so on. Ok, but that means at each level contention gets much, much worse until you are talking very slow speeds to people who aren't extremely local to you. You have to have bigger and bigger upstream connections to maintain that gig speed over a wider area.

      If you think that part is cheap, all it tells me is you've never looked at the cost of high end routing switching equipment. You are one of the people who has seen the cheap gig switches and presume that means everything is cheap. Not so much, it scales exponentially as you want more bandwidth. The amount of power it takes to deal with all that data in a single switch is staggering.

      Then as I said, there is the problem of links to the world. Australia doesn't have much of the Internet internally, just because of its geographic location. If you don't have good connections to the US and Europe, it'll be not so useful since so much content is outside of the country.

    5. Re:Expensive, if done right by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

      How's that work at the next level though? So let's say I have a 48 port switch. I connect 24 ports to people, then 24 ports back to my floor switch. Ok, what does that switch connect to the next switch with? If you said "24 ports" well then the switches aren't doing anything, other than acting as extenders, 24 in, 24 out, we are never connecting more people.

      That's the issue is that you have to interconnect these things for it to be any use. Many connections must aggregate at some location so they can trade data. So if I had 10 switches with 24 people on them, and then 24 links back to the main switch, well the main switch would need 240 ports... Of course I could just get rid of the other switches and connect everything directly at that point.

      I'm not speaking in hypothetical when I'm talking about the challenges of big bandwidth connections, my profession is dealing with things like this and I work on a campus with a very large network, though only a tiny fraction of what they are talking about here. It is difficult and expensive to provide extremely high bandwidth. We have fiber to all buildings and it is still a challenge. Gig to the desktop is easy, maintaining that gig to higher and higher levels is hard.

      I think the geeks here are getting too starry eyed. They see "Gig to the home," and start fantasizing about how wonderful it would be, not considering the real limitations out there.

      I'm not saying Australia shouldn't to fiber to the home. Ultimately, that is who the Internet needs to go. I'm also not saying they should use GPON to deliver it. What I am saying is they shouldn't sell it as gigabit because it won't be.

  40. What about the filter? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Everyone seems to be forgetting that the same party that is offering 1GBps "last mile" connectivity, is the same party that wants to filter the internet with a China link filter. redtube.com (42nd most vistited site on the whole interwebs) is blocked under the Hitler like filter. 1GBps "last mile" filtered internet vs 12Mbps unfiltered.. I think I'd go for the less "book burning" solution. Australia's biggest problem, even with ADSL2, is the international links. You can't go faster than the speed of light, and with 200ms latency to the USA (home of the interwebs), Australia will always be slow.

    1. Re:What about the filter? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      The filter has come up in different forms over the last three elections from both major parties but we don't have it yet. Call me cynical but I think it was part of catching the "think of the children" vote. Now pressure groups have worked out it won't catch child molesters so it's no longer a viable policy to catch that vote. I think the proposal will vanish completely when Conroy gets another job and wacko Senators that like the idea of a filter no longer hold the balance of power.

    2. Re:What about the filter? by Cimexus · · Score: 1

      Filter is dead.

      - Liberals: have stated their policy is to scrap the filter (yay!), but will also scrap the FTTH NBN and implement a cheaper plan consisting of FTTN, wireless and upgrading more exchanges to ADSL2+ / reducing copper lengths.

      - Labor: have quietly dropped the plan and have publicly stated they will reconsider it and tone it down. Even within the Labor party there are quite a few (e.g. Kate Lundy) who are pushing to have it reduced to a voluntary or opt-out filter. Which is fine - so long as there's a choice to be filtered, or not filtered.

      And in the end, none of the above matters anyway, since no matter which of the two major parties wins the election, the Greens are 99.9% certain to hold the balance of power, and thus the filter proposal can never make it through the Senate to be enacted into law. Frankly I'd be surprised if a mandatory filtering Bill even gets introduced into the House of Reps.

    3. Re:What about the filter? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Not their policy - Hockey (not the shadow minister for communications) and Turnbull (not the shadow minister for anything at all) said they didn't like the filter. This is the sort of game that covers all sides and allows them to say later that it was always their policy.
      On the other hand I don't think they will do it unless they need the vote of somebody like Fielding, but they are keeping their options open just in case.
      Either way Conroy is gone. Communications is almost a punishment posting because that means dealing with Telstra, and some more junior MP will be shuffled into the post.

  41. Re:my Agency built a 200 user LAN segment for $40. by kubitus · · Score: 1
    Now I got it! ;-)

    it is D.

    you are damned right!

    thanks

  42. Well there's a little problem, you have have seen by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    It is C = B*log2 (1+S/N).

    That would be Shanon's law. What it basically says is that the total amount of digital data you can get down a given channel is related to the bandwidth, in Hz of the channel, and the signal to noise ratio of that channel.

    Now in the wireless world, the SNR is something you have to count on being pretty low. There's interference of plenty of kinds, including just general thermal noise, which goes up as frequency does. Plus unless you want to expend tons of power blasting it out, there's just little you can do. What that means is that to get high C, you need high B, meaning a high bandwidth signal. That means high carrier frequency. You can't very well have a 500MHz channel on a 100kHz carrier frequency.

    The presents an additional problem. The higher the frequency of your signal, the less it travels. A 76Hz signal, which was really used by the American Seafarer to talk to subs, could go through the whole earth and took minutes to transmit a character. Something in the 50MHz area can go beyond the horizon, it can curve around the world, if conditions are good, and goes through buildings with ease but only at modem speeds. Now when you go to to say the 2GHz range, where we are talking for WiFi you can get good data speeds, probably 50ish mbps of actual throughput in the 2.4GHz band (and 100mbps or so in the 5GHz) but now it is direct line only and walls, trees, etc start to impede the signal. Hundred meters max, if you are really lucky. So let's go up to the 50 or 100GHz range. Here we can do 1gbps finally... And we have a signal that most windows will stop. It is also getting highly directional. Even the air attenuates the signal by a non-trivial amount, and rain can play hell on it.

    So you find that at a 1gbps rate, wireless is getting to be of extremely limited use. Things not only are short range, but going in and out of buildings is problematic.

    For interior coverage this might work, and I emphasize might as we've only just brought online 802.11n which caps out at a maximum theoretical transfer rate of about 200mbps (600mbps raw, it wastes about 2/3rds) and then only in the right conditions while using the whole frequency. All the real N hardware I've seen caps out at 100mbps actual (300mbps data rate) and even that is dicey in an actual house. My laptop rarely connects to my AP at more than about 100mbps raw data rate because it is a cheap WiFi card.

    However for wider neighbourhood coverage? I don't see it happening.

    Sorry man but fiber is king for bandwidth. The reason is again that pesky law. Light isn't in the GHz range, it is in the 100s of THz region. An IR laser might be 400THz. Also you can usually rely on a bit better SNRs in the optical cable. On top of that, you can shoot more than one colour of laser down a cable if you need to. So bandwidth ranges from insane up to OMGWTFBBW insane levels with no problem.

    Wireless is neat and going nowhere, but it'll always be a second class citizen in terms of bandwidth. You tell me what technology can deliver wireless, and I'll show you a couple of order of magnitudes over that wired. Just how it goes.

  43. STOP WITH THE 43bn YOU MOB OF SHEEP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You lot are a bunch of sheep, blindly regurgitating media hype!

    For a start, why are you all saying that the National Broadband Network (NBN) will cost 43 billion Australian dollars?!

    The NBN has set aside 43bn for costs. This was decided over a year ago. This amount included provisions for laying new infrastructure needed.

    With the recent agreement to buy existing infrastructure from Telstra it is expected to cost less.

    So really who knows what the actual cost will be, do you?

       

  44. Kinda right Tony. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Firstly, the government budgeted plan is to upgrade all connections from the main backhaul nodes to the premises with fiber. This fiber is connected to VDSL2 equipment at the pit on home or apartment block or whatever. The VDSL2 equipment is then connected to the existing copper in the premises and the data comes through that. This is the case for any EXISTING home. For new homes, Ethernet is installed in the premises and connected to the fiber.

    So yeah, for EXISTING homes it will be 100Mbit, and for NEW homes it can be up to a GBit. For them to say that it would not impact the budget to install Ethernet through every EXISTING home is implausible. The technology however is not.

    1. Re:Kinda right Tony. by jonwil · · Score: 1

      Thats not true, none of the current concrete plans are proposing to use ADSL, all of them are proposing to use Ethernet.

    2. Re:Kinda right Tony. by wilko11 · · Score: 1

      I think it is kinda true :)
      From what I have read on the Tasmanian trial roll out, they are providing an ADSL service for those that don't want full speed. The advantage is that they can continue to use their existing ADSL modem/router.
      Saying that only new houses would be able to get the Ethernet service is wrong, however. Cable TV is available to older houses that don't have a cable outlet or a satellite dish; When you sign-up they come and install it for you. Installing an Ethernet socket in an existing house is no more difficult than a cable TV point - a couple of hundred dollars, or maybe nothing if you sign a minimum term contract.

  45. They can make Aussie content / data cap free! by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They can make Aussie content / data cap free! Just cap over seas data.

    1. Re:They can make Aussie content / data cap free! by Barny · · Score: 1

      Look at the internode prices someone else here posted, and they do indeed have a TON of free content, steam, ABC online, majorgeeks, sourceforge as well as their own FTP server (both for regular software, yes tons of linux distros, and also for games), however they do throw in free premium usenet access too, which will cause you to eat up all the downloads you save :)

      --
      ...
      /me sighs
  46. That old expression by c4tp · · Score: 1

    When dingos fly!

  47. It can be done with $43 billion by Ex-MislTech · · Score: 1

    It can be done with that amount of money or even less if you can keep the pirates and looters
    from running off with the money.

    Now that is nary impossible, especially seeing how they control the government and the corporations.

    If this $43 billion was turned over to a Co-op with TRUE TRANSPARENCY it could be done
    by the ppl who actually want this system and only run it to the ppl that want it initially.

    If half the country wouldn't pay for it or use it, then why even install it to them initially.

    Good odds the single mode fiber is already in place between the cities, and the only
    real issue is the last mile.

    --
    google "32 trillion offshore needs IRS attention"
  48. Ill-will and marmelade jam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Selling the copper - or recycling it - could defray a large measure of cost. Fibre technology isn't as transcendent as it used to be in the 80's - when Brazil made it's own. Brazil could have changed over in the 80's through 90's - but the retarded dictatorship-entrenched agriculturally-paradigmed burocracy couldn't understand it and would have none of it. Technical proposals were cast aside without a glance. Literally.

    Is Australia having the same social (and, maybe, technical) problems in the 2010's, that Brazil had in the 1980's ? Hmmm.

  49. Re:I don't think aussies want to fork up that much by Ex-MislTech · · Score: 1

    Better deal would be to just upgrade those willing to pay for the jump in speed.

    I am willing to bet that there is fiber between the cities already.

    So it is more of a last mile issue.

    If only half the ppl would pay for the faster service then only install
    it for those ppl.

    They could do an automated phone survey to find out how many ppl
    want it in each area, and do one area at a time to work out
    the bugs and other issues, then roll it out further.

    $30 bn for 1 mega-bit is a bad deal seeing how 100 Mb has been
    around for over a decade.

    You can get a used 1 Gig-E card on ebay right now for $35.

    --
    google "32 trillion offshore needs IRS attention"
  50. Back in the eighties. by zorbathonic · · Score: 1

    Governments have been rickrolled by lobbyists far too much for far too long. The govt is for the people so therefore the people get rickrolled. That's the idea. A friend of mine worked for a tech company (Plessies ?) back in the 1980s, when fibre-optic was getting attention. They [Plessies] tendered for a FO network which was to cost in the 10s of millions at that time. At least, the beginnings of a major network, even before Internet. Obviously, if that had been done at the time, Australia would/could have been world leaders in this area. An important milestone was crushed to dust as the Government greased their behinds in acceptance of the aforementioned lobbyists. i.e. The monopoply that is now know as Telstra.

  51. Re:I don't think aussies want to fork up that much by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

    Surely you'd need at least 640!

  52. Waste of money. by AbRASiON · · Score: 1

    Guess I'm the only Aussie nerd here who thinks this network is a joke.
    43 billion dollars in a country with a property pricing crises, water crises, not much (if any?) sustainable energy.

    Seriously, it's a joke (and I'm no liberal either)
    Fuck the NBN, more important things to worry about :/

    1. Re:Waste of money. by thaig · · Score: 1

      If you are in an office job like me then good broadband at home could make a difference to the energy crisis - 2 of 7 people in my team in the office, the rest at home. This means that 5 of us didn't use any fossil fuels to travel in to work.

      Knowledge workers could all do this. The more bandwidth there is, the more we'll be able to make the experience as good as being in the same place.

      I'm in London but I've worked from South Africa once for a while and there was really no difference except network speed from the guy working in Norwich. So that means that you should be able to have a property that isn't in the middle of the city just so you can go to work every day.

      Don't think it can do anything about water though :-)

      --
      This is all just my personal opinion.
  53. The funny thing is... by shplorb · · Score: 1

    If you'd have said six months ago that Tony Abbott had a good chance of being Prime Minister, you'd have been mercilessly mocked. Back then, Kevin Rudd was the Most. Popular. Prime Minister. Ever. for some reason and the Liberal party was in a complete mess.

    Now, Kevin Rudd is nursing some knife wounds in his back delivered by his deputy not even two months ago and Tony "Mr Personality" Abbott is in the running for the top job. How did it all go so wrong? Well, that's a long story...

  54. Internet sensorship by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gigabyte internet ain't so useful when you can't surf shit.

  55. Re:I don't think aussies want to fork up that much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Especially not when you realise that a vote for labour would censor every single one of those 75 videos. What's the point in the NBN if there's nothing to do on it?

    However:
    http://www.itnews.com.au/News/223743,coalition-wont-support-internet-filter-report.aspx

  56. Tony abbots plan is no plan at all by jonwil · · Score: 2

    Tony abbots so-called "broadband plan" does NOTHING to address the market dominance of Telstra in so many areas of this country or the fact that so many areas of the country cant get ADSL at all because Telstra would rather push NextG than install more ADSL hardware (mostly because it has to allow other ISPs to provide service over the ADSL hardware but not over NextG wireless)

  57. Re:I don't think aussies want to fork up that much by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    There isn't a need for gigabit connections when the average pipeline of a website is less than a megabit.

    I'm sick and tired of this bullshit argument from people who can't see further than the nose on their face. There has NEVER been a need for more bandwidth. NEVER! Look into history:

    - We used to surf text based BBS at 9600 baud. Man that was fast and worked well. You don't need 14.4k baud to do that any faster, but it came anyway.
    - Fast forward to Command and Conquer, the lag was fine at 14.4k and it worked well. You don't need 56kbps baud to do that any faster, but it came anyway.
    - The internet became a whirlwind of heavily compressed crap. The most demanding part of loading any webpage was the geocities background. We didn't need DSL or cable, but it came anyway.
    - Now the internet is fatter than yo mamma. Slashdot is a page that is half a megabyte of HTML and JavaScript alone. Youtube is streaming content in what is loosely defined as HD. The average game fuelled by desire for no lag, but also a 100% identical scene for all players on the server has a netcode that just plain hurts on anything below ADSL2 / Cable. A company has even started providing games that are rendered on their servers and streamed to your computer in high def.

    And finally, half the world is running on a technology that requires you to be within 5km of your exchange. I'm happy that I get 20Mbps sync on my ADSL2+ connection. I'm happy for YOU if YOU are happy with your current connection, but the fact of the matter is that current technology just sucks for distances. I have a friend who lives close enough that I often walk to his house. He has the same ADSL2 provider as I do, and he syncs at less than half the speed. You should watch the 1080p videos load on his machine before you say that we shouldn't upgrade our bandwidth.

    I'm happy that people like you don't make decisions, or I'd be posting this from my BBS. Do you have any idea how dull a text terminal looks on a big and colourful LCD monitor?

  58. Re:I don't think aussies want to fork up that much by mdf-flynn · · Score: 1

    ... then the cost of money goes down. I'm not an economist, but $30 billion in 10 years wont be worth as much as $30 billion today. Avoiding large initial capital costs can be a good thing. Considering neither of the major parties are opposing the internet filter, they wont be getting my vote.

  59. Re:my Agency built a 200 user LAN segment for $40. by petermgreen · · Score: 1

    The other really nice thing about ethernet is that as well as keeping it open they have kept compatibility for a very long time. Equipment for twisted pair always seems to support falling back to slower speeds and with relatively cheap converters one can easilly hook up really old equipment with a AUI or BNC too.

    --
    note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
  60. Tony Abbot is a fuck hole. by dogzdik · · Score: 0

    No.... make that a lying, stupid fuck hole.

    --

    .

    Voting up, Voting down - If I really gave a fuck about your approval or not, I'd come and ask you.

  61. Re:I don't think aussies want to fork up that much by hasdikarlsam · · Score: 1

    You think Telstra would actually *do* that?

    What does their history show?

  62. Re:I don't think aussies want to fork up that much by srodden · · Score: 1

    Gross inefficiency. No I don't think they'd use 10b2 but I do think they'd use a proprietary technology to make life difficult for competitors. For evidence I submit the original cable modems. It wasn't for many years until they moved to a recognised standard.

    --
    Why can't we let people believe whatever they like? It's not like a little religion has ever hurt anyone.
  63. meh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seems pointless to me, my 300ms ping from West Australia to EA sports game servers in the US would barely improve!