Broadband Lies
I am a
network architect for one of Australia’s largest Telco’s - so I speak with
some authority on this issue.
Here are the technical
reasons this will fail :
1)
fibre optic cable has a maximum theoretical lifespan of 25 years when
installed in conduit. Over time, the glass actually degrades (long
story), and eventually it cant do it`s bouncing of light thing any more.
But when you install fibre outside on overhead wiring (as will be done for
much of Australia’s houses, except newer suburbs with underground wiring),
then the fibre degrades much quicker due to wind, temperature variation and
solar/cosmic radiation. The glass in this case will last no more than 15
years. So after 15 years, you will have to replace it. Whereas the
copper network will last for many decades to come. Fibre is not the best
technology for the last mile. That`s why no other country has done
this.
2) You can not
give every house 100Mbps. If you give several million households 100Mbps
bandwidth, then you have exceeded the entire bandwidth of the whole
internet. In reality, there is a thing called contention. Today,
every ADSL service with 20Mbps has a contention ratio of around 20:1 (or more
for some carriers). That means, you share that 20Mbps with 20 other
people. It`s a long story why, but there will NEVER be the case of
people getting 100Mbps of actual bandwidth. Not for several decades at
current carrier equipment rates of evolution. The “Core” can not and
will not be able to handle that sort of bandwidth. The 100Mbps is only
the speed from your house to the exchange. From there to the Internet,
you will get the same speeds you get now. The “Core” of Australia’s
network is already fibre (many times over). And even so, we still have
high contention ratios. Providing fibre to the home just means those
contention ratios go up. You will not get better download speeds.
3) new DSL technologies will
emerge. 15 years ago we had 56k dial-up. Then 12 years ago we got
256k ADSL, then 8 years ago 1.5Mbps ADSL2, then 5 years ago 20Mbps
ADSL2+. There are already new DSL technologies being experimented on
that will deliver over 50Mbps on the same copper we have now. $zero cost
to the tax payer
4) 4G
wireless is being standardised now. The current 3G wireless was
developed for voice and not for data, and even so it can deliver up to 21Mbps
in Australia. There are problems with it, but remember that it was
developed for voice. The 4G standard is specifically being developed for
data, and will deliver 100Mbps bandwidth with much higher reliability (yes,
the same contention issues apply mentioned earlier). $zero cost to the
tax payer
5) The “NBN”
will be one of the largest single networks ever built on earth. There
are only a few companies who could do it - Japan’s Nippon NTT, BT, AT&T;,
Deutsche Telekom etc. Even Telstra would struggle to built something on
this scale. Yet we are led to believe that the same people who cant
build school halls or install insulation without being ripped off are going to
to do it ??? Here at Telstra, we are laughing our heads off !!
Because when it all comes crumbling down, after they have spent $60+billion
and the network is no more than 1/2 complete, it will be up to Telstra to pick
up the pieces ! (shhhh don't tell anyone, it`s our secret)