[LINK] Labor to deliver lightning internet speeds
David Goldstein
wavey_one at yahoo.com
Mon Mar 3 14:48:36 AEDT 2008
All rather slow when one compares this to say Japan where, as Randy Bush was saying during the recent Domain Pulse conference, he gets 100gbps to his apartment in Japan. And large parts of Europe are already way beyond what the Australian government is planning and around what is currently available in Japan.
David
----- Original Message ----
From: Bernard Robertson-Dunn <brd at iimetro.com.au>
To: link <link at anu.edu.au>
Sent: Sunday, 2 March, 2008 4:55:16 PM
Subject: [LINK] Labor to deliver lightning internet speeds
Labor to deliver lightning internet speeds
Jason Koutsoukis
March 2, 2008
SMH
This story was found at:
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2008/03/01/1204402249626.html
Most homes will have broadband communication speeds up to 100 times
faster than what is currently available, under the Rudd Government's
plan to wire Australia for the 21st century.
Federal Broadband Minister Stephen Conroy told The Sunday Age that early
discussions on the Government's promised broadband network indicated
that it would be much faster than previously thought.
"This is going to revolutionise the way Australians live their lives,"
Senator Conroy said.
Before last year's election, Labor promised to contribute $4.7 billion
to help build a national broadband network accessible to 98% of homes,
with a guaranteed minimum speed of 12 megabits per second.
But by deploying VDSL, (also known as Very High Speed DSL) technology,
Senator Conroy said the new network would be able to carry up to 25
megabits per second.
Most broadband users currently receive only 256 kilobits per second -
100 times less capacity than 25 megabits - using ADSL technology.
With internet speeds like 25 megabits per second, people living in the
same house will be able to use the network simultaneously for different
purposes.
This could include a broadcast-quality video telephone call , while
someone else watches high definition internet television, and another
person plays online gaming.
Pay television would also be delivered through internet cable, with
people able to watch different channels at the same time in different
parts of the home, while a feature length film was also being downloaded
to a computer hard drive in another room.
Other applications such as "smart" electricity meters, which say how
much electricity is being used and at what price, would also be
instantly available.
"Labor would welcome the newer VDSL technology as part of its broadband
network. This will greatly enhance Labor's current plan, making
available a wide range of applications at the same time and begin to
fundamentally change the way people live," Senator Conroy said.
"The extra speeds will simply allow more bandwidth-hungry applications
to be run at the same time without shutting each other out."
The Rudd Government's broadband network will be built using a
"fibre-to-the-node" network design.
This means laying new fibre-optic cables and extending them to the
telecommunications pillars found on many street corners. These are
called nodes.
Technicians will then attach the fibre-optic cables to the existing
copper wires that run out of those boxes into telephone subscribers' homes.
"People imagine that the really hard part about this is digging the
trench and laying the new cable," Senator Conroy said.
"That's actually the easy part — the more difficult task is connecting
it to every copper line that runs into every home," Senator Conroy said.
On Tuesday, Senator Conroy is expected to announce who will sit on a
special expert panel that will assess the bids from Telstra, Optus and
other telecommunications consortiums that are competing to build the new
network.
The expert panel will assess each bid and make a recommendation to
Senator Conroy by July.
"I expect to be able to give final Government approval by the end of
August or early September, and hope construction will commence before
the end of the year," Senator Conroy said.
The new services would be available progressively, as the new network
was rolled out over the next five years, he said.
"It's not like in five years I will stand at a switch and turn it on.
New services will be available to people as it is installed in each
neighbourhood," Senator Conroy said.
What is VDSL?
VDSL stands for Very High Bit-rate Digital Subscriber Line technology.
DSL technology transfers data digitally using standard telephone system
copper wires at a much faster rate than the old analog modem
connections. It is the fastest DSL service available.
Its main advantages are speed and the fact that it is always "on" and
does not tie up the phone line.
--
Regards
brd
Bernard Robertson-Dunn
Sydney Australia
brd at iimetro.com.au
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