Skip to content
  • Categories
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
  • World
  • Users
  • Groups
Skins
  • Light
  • Brite
  • Cerulean
  • Cosmo
  • Flatly
  • Journal
  • Litera
  • Lumen
  • Lux
  • Materia
  • Minty
  • Morph
  • Pulse
  • Sandstone
  • Simplex
  • Sketchy
  • Spacelab
  • United
  • Yeti
  • Zephyr
  • Dark
  • Cyborg
  • Darkly
  • Quartz
  • Slate
  • Solar
  • Superhero
  • Vapor

  • Default (Brite)
  • No Skin
Collapse
A microphone in front of an orange-yellow circle. Graphic.

Podcasting Chat Community

  1. Home
  2. World
  3. canberratimes.com.au/story/917…
Podcasting.Chat Banner

canberratimes.com.au/story/917…

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved World
canberraactnbnfttpfuckoffmadmonk
2 Posts 2 Posters 0 Views
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • Droppie [opensoc]M This user is from outside of this forum
    Droppie [opensoc]M This user is from outside of this forum
    Droppie [opensoc]
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    canberratimes.com.au/story/917…

    [quote]...

    These Canberra suburbs will have faster NBN by 2030 as long-awaited upgrades begin

    Construction has begun on long-awaited upgrades to improve National Broadband Network speeds for about 97,000 Canberra premises relying on older technology, due for completion by 2030.

    The project being delivered across Australia by the NBN Co with a $3 billion Commonwealth equity injection has faced faced hurdles in the ACT, where backyard power poles can struggle to support the cable load required.

    Finance Minister and ACT Senator Katy Gallagher said the NBN Co's consultation process was "second to none" but that "there will be some disruption".

    NBN Co chief executive Ellie Sweeney said "the vast majority" of the new cables would be installed underground but "there will still be some overground cabling".

    "We'll be building pits and pipes ... we're going to reuse as much as we can," Ms Sweeney told reporters in Canberra on Wednesday.

    "That just goes to resilience. It goes to efficiency, and it goes to the long term nature of this investment."

    She conceded that Canberra "has been a challenging build for NBN" but said: "We are absolutely committed to bringing this on time and on budget."

    In some cases, there would be disruption to private property as the project progressed.

    "We work really closely with local governments, with local communities, to ensure that it is a great experience," Ms Sweeney said.

    Senator Gallagher said many ACT residents "have told me they struggle with slow or unreliable connections".

    "Canberrans deserve fast, reliable and affordable internet, and this upgrade will make a real difference," she said.

    Many Canberrans already have NBN through a fibre-to-the-node (FTTN) connection, where the existing copper phone and internet network from a nearby fibre node is used to connect their home to a box in their street.

    Under the upgrades being rolled out, people with FTTN connections will be upgraded to the faster, more reliable fibre-to-the-premise (FTTP), where a fibre optic line is run from the nearest available fibre node directly to the home or business.

    The upgrades will almost double the number of ACT premises able to access multi-gigabit-capable broadband, with 99 per cent of ACT suburbs expected to be upgraded.

    For the remaining one or two suburbs, Ms Sweeney said "the logistics make it uneconomical, but we'll be looking at a better technology than what people are on today, which is copper".

    Alternatives could be fixed wireless or a high-speed Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellite service such as Amazon Leo, she said.

    Asked if NBN Co saw Elon Musk's Starlink as a competitive threat, Ms Sweeney said the NBN - which haw upgraded more than a million customers to fibre - was seeing its downloads " exponentially growing."

    Almost a third of Australians now demanding download speeds of 500 megabits or more, and growing, she said, and, "you can't get that speed on a Starlink."

    "We think [Amazon] Leo has a place within Australia. It's great in low density environments," Ms Sweeney said.

    "If you think about Australia, those remote areas, it makes a lot of sense, but fibre, globally is recognized as a superior technology. It is the fastest, it is the most scalable, so it will get you up to that multi-mix speed ... It is not impacted by line of sight, and it's not impacted by congestion."

    "Once that fibre is in the ground, it's there, and it is only the electronics on either end that we need to upgrade to take those speeds even higher in the decades to come," she said.

    The suburbs set to receive the upgrades are:

    CALWELL
    CHAPMAN
    CHIFLEY
    CHISHOLM
    CONDER
    DUFFY
    FADDEN
    FARRER
    FISHER
    GILMORE
    GORDON
    GOWRIE
    GREENWAY
    HOLDER
    HUME
    ISAACS
    ISABELLA PLAINS
    KAMBAH
    MACARTHUR
    MAWSON
    MONASH
    O'MALLEY
    OXLEY
    PEARCE
    PHILLIP
    RICHARDSON
    RIVETT
    STIRLING
    SYMONSTON
    THEODORE
    TORRENS
    WANNIASSA
    WARAMANGA
    WESTON
    ACTON
    AINSLIE
    ARANDA
    BARTON
    BELCONNEN
    BRADDON
    BRUCE
    CAMPBELL
    CANBERRA AIRPORT
    COOK
    CURTIN
    DEAKIN
    DICKSON
    DOWNER
    FORREST
    GARRAN
    GIRALANG
    GRIFFITH
    HACKETT
    HAWKER
    HUGHES
    KALEEN
    KINGSTON
    LYNEHAM
    LYONS
    MACQUARIE
    NARRABUNDAH
    O'CONNOR
    PARKES
    PIALLIGO
    RED HILL
    REID
    TURNER
    WATSON
    WEETANGERA
    YARRALUMLA
    BELCONNEN
    EVATT
    FLOREY
    FLYNN
    FRASER
    HALL
    HIGGINS
    HOLT
    LATHAM
    MACGREGOR
    MCKELLAR
    MELBA
    PAGE
    SCULLIN
    SPENCE[/quote]

    #ACT #Canberra #NBN #FttP #FuckOffMadmonk
    Link Preview Image
    These Canberra suburbs will have faster NBN by 2030 as long-awaited upgrades begin

    97,000 Canberra homes to see improved NBN speeds as underground fibre replaces outdated tech, ensuring faster, reliable internet by 2030.

    favicon

    (www.canberratimes.com.au)

    Chery (Great Australian Pods)C 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • Droppie [opensoc]M Droppie [opensoc]

      canberratimes.com.au/story/917…

      [quote]...

      These Canberra suburbs will have faster NBN by 2030 as long-awaited upgrades begin

      Construction has begun on long-awaited upgrades to improve National Broadband Network speeds for about 97,000 Canberra premises relying on older technology, due for completion by 2030.

      The project being delivered across Australia by the NBN Co with a $3 billion Commonwealth equity injection has faced faced hurdles in the ACT, where backyard power poles can struggle to support the cable load required.

      Finance Minister and ACT Senator Katy Gallagher said the NBN Co's consultation process was "second to none" but that "there will be some disruption".

      NBN Co chief executive Ellie Sweeney said "the vast majority" of the new cables would be installed underground but "there will still be some overground cabling".

      "We'll be building pits and pipes ... we're going to reuse as much as we can," Ms Sweeney told reporters in Canberra on Wednesday.

      "That just goes to resilience. It goes to efficiency, and it goes to the long term nature of this investment."

      She conceded that Canberra "has been a challenging build for NBN" but said: "We are absolutely committed to bringing this on time and on budget."

      In some cases, there would be disruption to private property as the project progressed.

      "We work really closely with local governments, with local communities, to ensure that it is a great experience," Ms Sweeney said.

      Senator Gallagher said many ACT residents "have told me they struggle with slow or unreliable connections".

      "Canberrans deserve fast, reliable and affordable internet, and this upgrade will make a real difference," she said.

      Many Canberrans already have NBN through a fibre-to-the-node (FTTN) connection, where the existing copper phone and internet network from a nearby fibre node is used to connect their home to a box in their street.

      Under the upgrades being rolled out, people with FTTN connections will be upgraded to the faster, more reliable fibre-to-the-premise (FTTP), where a fibre optic line is run from the nearest available fibre node directly to the home or business.

      The upgrades will almost double the number of ACT premises able to access multi-gigabit-capable broadband, with 99 per cent of ACT suburbs expected to be upgraded.

      For the remaining one or two suburbs, Ms Sweeney said "the logistics make it uneconomical, but we'll be looking at a better technology than what people are on today, which is copper".

      Alternatives could be fixed wireless or a high-speed Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellite service such as Amazon Leo, she said.

      Asked if NBN Co saw Elon Musk's Starlink as a competitive threat, Ms Sweeney said the NBN - which haw upgraded more than a million customers to fibre - was seeing its downloads " exponentially growing."

      Almost a third of Australians now demanding download speeds of 500 megabits or more, and growing, she said, and, "you can't get that speed on a Starlink."

      "We think [Amazon] Leo has a place within Australia. It's great in low density environments," Ms Sweeney said.

      "If you think about Australia, those remote areas, it makes a lot of sense, but fibre, globally is recognized as a superior technology. It is the fastest, it is the most scalable, so it will get you up to that multi-mix speed ... It is not impacted by line of sight, and it's not impacted by congestion."

      "Once that fibre is in the ground, it's there, and it is only the electronics on either end that we need to upgrade to take those speeds even higher in the decades to come," she said.

      The suburbs set to receive the upgrades are:

      CALWELL
      CHAPMAN
      CHIFLEY
      CHISHOLM
      CONDER
      DUFFY
      FADDEN
      FARRER
      FISHER
      GILMORE
      GORDON
      GOWRIE
      GREENWAY
      HOLDER
      HUME
      ISAACS
      ISABELLA PLAINS
      KAMBAH
      MACARTHUR
      MAWSON
      MONASH
      O'MALLEY
      OXLEY
      PEARCE
      PHILLIP
      RICHARDSON
      RIVETT
      STIRLING
      SYMONSTON
      THEODORE
      TORRENS
      WANNIASSA
      WARAMANGA
      WESTON
      ACTON
      AINSLIE
      ARANDA
      BARTON
      BELCONNEN
      BRADDON
      BRUCE
      CAMPBELL
      CANBERRA AIRPORT
      COOK
      CURTIN
      DEAKIN
      DICKSON
      DOWNER
      FORREST
      GARRAN
      GIRALANG
      GRIFFITH
      HACKETT
      HAWKER
      HUGHES
      KALEEN
      KINGSTON
      LYNEHAM
      LYONS
      MACQUARIE
      NARRABUNDAH
      O'CONNOR
      PARKES
      PIALLIGO
      RED HILL
      REID
      TURNER
      WATSON
      WEETANGERA
      YARRALUMLA
      BELCONNEN
      EVATT
      FLOREY
      FLYNN
      FRASER
      HALL
      HIGGINS
      HOLT
      LATHAM
      MACGREGOR
      MCKELLAR
      MELBA
      PAGE
      SCULLIN
      SPENCE[/quote]

      #ACT #Canberra #NBN #FttP #FuckOffMadmonk
      Link Preview Image
      These Canberra suburbs will have faster NBN by 2030 as long-awaited upgrades begin

      97,000 Canberra homes to see improved NBN speeds as underground fibre replaces outdated tech, ensuring faster, reliable internet by 2030.

      favicon

      (www.canberratimes.com.au)

      Chery (Great Australian Pods)C This user is from outside of this forum
      Chery (Great Australian Pods)C This user is from outside of this forum
      Chery (Great Australian Pods)
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @msdropbear thanks Dropsy - this is the reason we went with g.fast in the interim because my suburb is still not slated for upgrade until 2030. 🤷‍♀️

      1 Reply Last reply
      0

      Hello! It looks like you're interested in this conversation, but you don't have an account yet.

      Getting fed up of having to scroll through the same posts each visit? When you register for an account, you'll always come back to exactly where you were before, and choose to be notified of new replies (either via email, or push notification). You'll also be able to save bookmarks and upvote posts to show your appreciation to other community members.

      With your input, this post could be even better 💗

      Register Login
      Reply
      • Reply as topic
      Log in to reply
      • Oldest to Newest
      • Newest to Oldest
      • Most Votes



      Welcome To Podcasting.Chat!

      This forum is for podcasters, podcast guests, and podcast enthusiasts alike to share tips, tricks, and their love of the medium.

      This forum is fully federated, so you are able to contribute to any discussion here through your own software of choice (e.g. Mastodon, Misskey, Lemmy, Piefed, etc.). So you can sign up for an account here and it federates around the Fediverse. You can also follow feeds and topics from your other Fedi-enabled accounts.





      Recent Posts


      • Chery (Great Australian Pods)C
        Chery (Great Australian Pods)

        @earthmothering9 very handy

        read more

      • ChadF :pci:C
        ChadF :pci:

        @merryoscar for sending payments to fountain wallets should we send LNUrl instead of keysend? My apps default to keysend if it's available but I don't think BoostBox is meant for keysend payments so defaulting to keysend doesn't trigger its use.

        Still trying to think this all through.

        read more

      • Chery (Great Australian Pods)C
        Chery (Great Australian Pods)

        @msdropbear @treleanor better wait a few days - I've ordered a cheap eBay frame so I can hang it up. 😁

        read more

      • Droppie [opensoc]M
        Droppie [opensoc]
        @cheryanne @treleanor am calling the walloppers now...
        read more

      Hosted On NodeBB.org -- A Goldstein Media Project
      • Login

      • Don't have an account? Register

      • Login or register to search.
      • First post
        Last post
      0
      • Categories
      • Recent
      • Tags
      • Popular
      • World
      • Users
      • Groups