Tag Archives: auspol

12Mbps: Why The Coalition Doesn’t Get It

Throughout the whole broadband debate currently underway in this country, the 12Mbps figure has been bandied around quite a bit. Every single broadband plan in some way has included this “magic number” as the minimum speed that everyone should have available to them. Under the initial hybrid fibre/ADSL/WiMAX/satellite OPEL Networks plan – the initial phase […]

NBN: Congestion, Telecommuting and Productivity

Last week, I took a virtual slide rule to the potential REVENUE earnings of the forthcoming National Broadband Network (NBN), and came up with some rather surprising numbers. I didn’t even need convincing, but the numbers even surprised me and I’ve been working in the industry for 15 years. Obviously I was unable to factor […]

NBN: Viable or Not?

There has been a lot of bellyaching of late about whether or not the National Broadband Network (NBN) will be a viable proposition or not. Certainly, the purported cost of $43b is a lot of money, and when dealing with a sum of that magnitude, a certain level of caution is very obviously quite prudent. […]

Gillard Has Conroy-itis

It seems to me that Julia Gillard has caught the same disease as her Minister for (Mis)communications, Stephen Conroy. I call it “Conroy-itis”. The major symptom is the ability to say one thing about the proposed internet filter, when you know categorically that the truth is the complete opposite. For months Conroy in particular has […]

NBN: The Opt-In/Opt-Out Debate

There has been a lot of discussion in recent weeks in regards to the opt-in or opt-out question for individual premises during the rollout of the National Broadband Network (NBN). In Tasmania, where the initial rollout of the network is underway, the government has chosen to adopt an “opt-out” model, while New South Wales and […]

NBN: Why Wireless is Impractical

Broadband in Australia is a hot issue right now. Do we spend $43b on Labor’s National Broadband Network (NBN), $6.5b on the Coalition’s hybrid wireless/satellite/”optimised” xDSL/HFC solution, or do we do nothing at all? Nothing is not an option – our broadband capacity is a joke – and for me it isn’t even a political […]

ACL: Hypocritically Filtering Factual Debate

Amidst the entire controversy surrounding the possibility of mandatory internet filtering in Australia, we have all come to know the two main advocates of the policy – Federal Communications Minister Stephen Conroy and the Australian Christian Lobby (ACL). I have previously commented on their ability to censor the debate to suit their own needs, and […]

Conroy: Shut The Hell Up and Get On With It!

In recent days, we have heard Stephen Conroy getting back into sermonising over his plan to filter the internet in Australia, in the best interests of “protecting” Australians online. Of course, anybody who understands what he is proposing knows that it won’t actually protect anyone from anything, so I don’t need to explain that again […]

Another Nail in the Filter Coffin

Hot on the heels of the stunning revelation from Stephen Conroy that he intends to continue to pursue his mandatory internet filtering policy, comes what appears to be another nail in the coffin of the entire plan. Former Opposition Leader, Malcolm Turnbull, having gained the Shadow Communications portfolio in the usual post-election hulla-ba-loo, has wasted […]