Why the NBN isn't delivering on its promise of fast broadband for all | 7.30

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  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2024
  • When the National Broadband Network was first dreamed up about 10 years ago, the promise of allowing people in remote areas to work in high-tech industries was a big part of its appeal.
    Now, in 2019, the NBN's regional rollout is pretty much complete.
    The vast majority of people who don't get the NBN via fixed-line services - such as fibre, copper or cable - are connected via "fixed wireless" - broadband delivered over radio waves.
    Fixed wireless can work well, but many people are also experiencing a yawning gap between what the NBN promises and what it delivers.
    Geoff Thompson reports.
    Read more here: www.abc.net.au...
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Komentáře • 937

  • @Reoh0z
    @Reoh0z Před 5 lety +321

    Worse, slower, over-budget.
    Just as planned.

    • @myopinion69420
      @myopinion69420 Před 5 lety +15

      Not how it was originally planned, I'm one of the luck few with FTTP, the fibre comes right into my lounge room. If i so chose to, i could get gigabit internet (about $200p/m). if the liberals had not destroyed the plan, most people would have the same option. If you live in a newer area (within 20 years old) FTTN could work well, as long as the node is not to far away as the shorter the distance and higher the quality of the copper, the more you can push through it.
      Fixed wireless should never have been used for that type of area, should only really be used for very small, flat(ish), remote areas.

    • @LukeFennell
      @LukeFennell Před 5 lety +7

      Murdoch thanks for you it

    • @myopinion69420
      @myopinion69420 Před 5 lety +12

      @MagamisZon I'm not saying the Liberals were not planning to do it from the start, I'm saying with Labors original plan, the majority of people would get FTTP, with the remainder a mix of satellite (for very remote) and fixed wireless

    • @NK-fh3st
      @NK-fh3st Před 5 lety +3

      @@LukeFennell Murdoch is happy his garbage Foxtell baby no longer has to fight Netflix

    • @baskyfn4589
      @baskyfn4589 Před 4 lety

      Reoh more “Under Budget”

  • @mpal219
    @mpal219 Před 5 lety +143

    I remember Bill Shorten telling Turnball that if you do it wrong and rush it in the beginning then you’ll have to pay more later to make it right. Seems like the Government should have listened.

    • @KategariYami
      @KategariYami Před 5 lety +19

      Not just Bill. Heaps of experts said so as well. But conservatives hate listening to expert advice...

    • @Jester123ish
      @Jester123ish Před 5 lety +1

      @@KategariYami Well I'd have said the same of the Left, but regardless Turnball was trying to score points by claiming they could do the NBN for less, less than what sounded like and enormous amount of money. Thing is you eventually forget the expense if you get what you wanted, if you don't then lots of money was wasted.

    • @KategariYami
      @KategariYami Před 5 lety +4

      ​@@Jester123ish All I know (and knew back in 2013) is even if the Libs managed to keep the costs down and spend I think they estimated half or less than half of what Labor was going to spend (on their 100/100 NBN), it'd still be worse because not only is our current NBN abomination dumpster tier, it's also going to cost even more just to get it back to Labor's 100/100 version. So no matter what, the Liberal's plan was going to be a money waster.

    • @haruhisuzumiya6650
      @haruhisuzumiya6650 Před 5 lety +1

      @@KategariYami its insane that the cost cutting nbn costs more than the platnium standard labor FTTP NBN

    • @Justwantahover
      @Justwantahover Před 4 lety

      @@KategariYami They hate experts and believe in the Bible instead.

  • @57Rye
    @57Rye Před 5 lety +383

    The Australian public made its bed, now they have to sleep in it. It's not just about people wanting to stream 4k netflix without buffering, or pirating movies. Important infrastructure like hospitals have to deal with these things now. You voted for this.

    • @wombatau
      @wombatau Před 5 lety +39

      57Rye Yep, it’s what happens when you ignore experts 😉

    • @donny234
      @donny234 Před 5 lety +6

      @@wombatau im sure they listened to heeps of highly paid pros with their cons

    • @The.Drunk-Koala
      @The.Drunk-Koala Před 5 lety +9

      Yeah we voted for the Labour NBN which was far far better, then the good old Liberals came along and fucked it hard.

    • @tubester4567
      @tubester4567 Před 5 lety +47

      We didnt vote for this. We voted for FTTP then the liberals came along and changed it. The copper network is at the end of its life anyway and needs to be changed.

    • @wombatau
      @wombatau Před 5 lety +18

      jim jim Haha yes a rigged NBN board full of Telstra shareholders (see the delimeter articles about this, it’s appalling)

  • @NilsMueller
    @NilsMueller Před 5 lety +226

    Australia has slower internet than Kazakhstan....

    • @1eagleeyez
      @1eagleeyez Před 5 lety +1

      Lol

    • @JP-wj2cz
      @JP-wj2cz Před 5 lety +1

      @@1eagleeyez Ikr?! 😂

    • @michaelmcclown5593
      @michaelmcclown5593 Před 5 lety +34

      @Dcvbkyrsscbgdsxcgf Actually Mr Mueller is correct Kazakhstan has faster internet than Australia we are now ranked 63rd on the internet speed rankings and going down fast Mal and Toned Abs must be so proud.

    • @shanee3485
      @shanee3485 Před 5 lety +4

      I’m sure the 3 people who have internet in Kazakhstan love it very much

    • @NilsMueller
      @NilsMueller Před 5 lety +2

      @@shanee3485 racist

  • @nakedlakedip57
    @nakedlakedip57 Před 5 lety +136

    Won’t be long before we’re receiving Red Cross parcels from New Zealand.

    • @willd0g
      @willd0g Před 5 lety +2

      Haha this is ace

  • @MrZombiPineapple
    @MrZombiPineapple Před 5 lety +61

    I live 15 minutes walk from a major city centre. Still no NBN. I get a fabulous 800 _kilobytes_ per second. These guys are living the dream. Thanks Malcom.

    • @TheMonkeyNetwork
      @TheMonkeyNetwork Před 5 lety +1

      Did you watch this video in 144p?

    • @Booth-
      @Booth- Před 5 lety

      @@TheMonkeyNetwork Pretty sure 800kbps could watch 720p no problem.

    • @TheMonkeyNetwork
      @TheMonkeyNetwork Před 5 lety +4

      @@Booth-Then you've never had speeds under 1mb xD

    • @IleneOva
      @IleneOva Před 5 lety

      @@Booth- Iget 450kbps and can watch 720p

    • @MotoCat91
      @MotoCat91 Před 5 lety

      Sorry to hear that Mr Pineapple.. I'm on 4mbps which isn't quite as bad, but I understand the frustration as I'm surrounded by people on 100mbps HFC and 15km from Brisbane CBD, still waiting for an upgrade from ADSL

  • @joshyoyoyoyoyo
    @joshyoyoyoyoyo Před 5 lety +41

    60 Billion tax dollars. Surely someone must be held accountable.

    • @BibleStorm
      @BibleStorm Před 5 lety +14

      They never are. They get pensions.

    • @Jake12220
      @Jake12220 Před 5 lety +8

      Unfortunately the structure of our government and corporations at all levels are set up so that no-one takes any personal responsibility for anything, it's always a blame game. This is why democracy itself is failing, because democracy requires some level of responsibility to be taken by the people involved.

    • @Secretlyanothername
      @Secretlyanothername Před 5 lety +8

      We had our chance to hold them accountable. It was called the election. We (they) blew it.

    • @r1yamahamini
      @r1yamahamini Před 5 lety

      @@Secretlyanothername Slow internet is better than the Socialist Labor Party.

    • @Secretlyanothername
      @Secretlyanothername Před 5 lety +1

      @Gerr Gerring ha, but the dumb farmers keep voting for it. They must like getting rorted and rooted.

  • @NilsMueller
    @NilsMueller Před 5 lety +16

    Blame the liberals for this

  • @amorettique
    @amorettique Před 5 lety +190

    Netflix effect... aka "we thought that speeds required in 2020 would be the same as in 2010"

    • @JD-tf4zw
      @JD-tf4zw Před 5 lety +8

      From what I remember when they released their expected required speeds when spruiking the mtm it was lower than the actual AVERAGE usage at the time.

    • @GeoCaptTerror
      @GeoCaptTerror Před 5 lety +7

      They're surprised by people streaming content from the internet. What exactly do they think you do with the internet then?

    • @Jester123ish
      @Jester123ish Před 5 lety +2

      @@GeoCaptTerror Emails and Facebook.

  • @hustleandflow
    @hustleandflow Před 5 lety +71

    It's the liberals fault. They changed it. It isn't Netflix fault. They said it would move online. They cut costs with FTTN and FTTC. Australia has the worst internet ever.

    • @alphonselee3564
      @alphonselee3564 Před 5 lety +2

      Who's the idiot that said it's Netflix's fault LOL?

    • @rollerskdude
      @rollerskdude Před 5 lety +7

      @@alphonselee3564 Its the liberals right wing biased ABC reporting. They need a scapegoat for this mess. Gotta keep up the facade of being "strong economic managers".

    • @mattfrench6393
      @mattfrench6393 Před 5 lety +3

      This mess has ended up costing more despite all the 'cost cutting', what a load of bullshit

  • @SlykeThePhoxenix
    @SlykeThePhoxenix Před 5 lety +155

    Just as an FYI, the "Netflix Effect" was predicted when the Libs wanted to scrap FTTP. Other countries knew about it, which is why they ended up putting in FTTP instead of FTTN. You only have to graph usage increases over the 2 decades to see how much bandwidth would be demanded by 2020. In fact almost all of the IT industry was stating this back in the early 2010s. It cannot be said that it unpredictable.

    • @TheCranberrySource
      @TheCranberrySource Před 5 lety +10

      SlykeThePhoxenix Yep. The problem was convincing Boomers and Western Sydney of that in 2013. Thanks jerks.

    • @Pyroteq
      @Pyroteq Před 5 lety +11

      Lol, anyone with an IQ above double digits knew streaming video was going to take over cable TV in the mid 2000's.

    • @scottysunday
      @scottysunday Před 5 lety +12

      In 2013 roughly a third of all internet download traffic in America was due to Netflix.

    • @TheMonkeyNetwork
      @TheMonkeyNetwork Před 5 lety +11

      Hearing them say that instantly put my palm to my head.

    • @Jake12220
      @Jake12220 Před 5 lety +4

      If you look at NBN press releases its always just trying to shift blame, like a 2 year old with chocolate all over its face trying to blame the dog for eating it. It's insane the amount of industry consultation it has done only to completely ignore the industry responses.

  • @SnowTheBard
    @SnowTheBard Před 5 lety +23

    You know I was pretty miffed that we were getting HFC but seriously wtf thought fixed wireless was a good solution for people who live INSIDE a town?!?! It's supposed to be for remote rural sites where it would be impractical to run kilometers of fiber for a single residence. Why are we deploying this technology to people who live in a suburb? This entire NBN rollout is a disaster and anyone who voted for this crappy short-sighted version of a national broadband network should be ashamed of themselves.

  • @ronmortimer252
    @ronmortimer252 Před 5 lety +37

    I'm starting to think that conservative politics and politicians is a euphemism for backward thinking. I guess you get what you vote for in the end.

    • @BibleStorm
      @BibleStorm Před 5 lety +8

      And some among them call everybody else "the regressive left". The irony.

    • @RakinkyOG
      @RakinkyOG Před 5 lety +1

      lmao, we literally "vote" the lesser of two evils.

    • @workout9632
      @workout9632 Před 5 lety +6

      I dont understand why the liberals got voted in once again

    • @Mortum_Rex
      @Mortum_Rex Před 5 lety

      @@workout9632 Because immigrants.

    • @workout9632
      @workout9632 Před 5 lety +4

      @@Mortum_Rex That is quite the opposite actually, almost every immigrant i know including myself voted for labor. The liberals are for the richest people but the labor party are accepting of immigrants.
      Also we are all immigrants here mate

  • @jennyaviet2297
    @jennyaviet2297 Před 5 lety +51

    And they blame Netflix lol. Netflix shouldn't be blamed. Let's just face it NBN doesn't have the power or no how to do it.

    • @positronundervolt4799
      @positronundervolt4799 Před 5 lety +16

      They're oversimplifying the problem so that morons can understand it. The same morons who voted for the Liberal National Party. The same morons who don't use the internet. Well okay, some do, but they can't tell the difference between a 1080p picture & a 360p picture on their 65" Somsing.

    • @BibleStorm
      @BibleStorm Před 5 lety +11

      @@positronundervolt4799 Not oversimplifying, completely ignoring the truth. The infrastructure in all wrong. The real reason the NBN isn't delivering is because the NBN still uses copper in most of Australia, even in the places that they also put cable. Has everybody forgotten that the liberal party under tony abbott immediately sabotaged the actually successful design out of pure personal greed? ABC seems to have forgotten.

    • @jarlaxledaerthe4045
      @jarlaxledaerthe4045 Před 2 lety

      @@BibleStorm Many of those treasonous Liberals also invested heavily into copper wire stocks, a clear case of insider trading.

  • @yedrellow
    @yedrellow Před 5 lety +37

    Why is this story presented as if it is some sort of surprise? The only real criticism of the MTM NBN on the ABC back when it actually mattered was by Shaun Micallef. Nick Ross claimed he was gagged by the ABC. When the communications minister was on Q and A, oddly very few questions were allowed on the topic of the National Broadband Network. The ABCs woeful coverage of this topic is a large part of the reason why MTM even went ahead in the first place.
    Just a little bit of education for the writers of this story.
    Congestion is built in to the network, latency is built in to the network, unreliability is built in to the network. Fixed wireless and Satellite will always be congested and unreliable. Fibre to the node is reliant on loads of rotting copper and is prone to dropouts. Fibre to the node will be congested once demand rises to the point where CVC is no longer the limiter. Even now, the way CVC is structured means most users will experience congestion even on isps that attempt to react to demand like Aussie Broadband.

    • @m0rthaus
      @m0rthaus Před 5 lety +4

      Everything you say is accurate and makes logical sense. Unfortunately, Murdoch gets what Murdoch wants from his buddies in the Libs, every time

  • @IzSmith
    @IzSmith Před 5 lety +28

    Hate the therm they used to justify the mixed technology “ on time, within budget”
    It wasn’t within budget even it was finishing it on time still meant we’re behind the world by at least 20 years.

  • @nitramluap
    @nitramluap Před 5 lety +30

    I have relatives in Eastern Europe who pay a quarter what we do for download (and upload) speeds of 250 Mbps and unlimited data - NBN is practically dial-up in comparison. 100Mbps is actually a joke... Australians have had the wool pulled over their eyes. We think we’re good at things but that’s just arrogance. Blaming Netflix effect is so bloody lazy - this was ALWAYS the obvious future of the internet. So much incompetence. The rest of the world does things so much better than we do in almost every area if we bothered to look: railways, public transport, environment, renewable energy, emissions targets, internet speeds, etc. etc.

    • @fokboy
      @fokboy Před 5 lety +2

      Australia has "Politically Correct" Consultants more than any real Leadership.. there is no clear vision for what the country wants to achieve in technology and contribute anything new to the world.. the fact that we decided to use tax money to build a TRAM line in Sydney's Anzac Parade and George street already proves how backwards thinking we are..

    • @AussieZeKieL
      @AussieZeKieL Před 5 lety +3

      When we have the population density of Europe then you can make a closer comparison.

    • @MrWackozacko
      @MrWackozacko Před 5 lety +1

      Australia is nowhere near as good as it thinks it is. We are shit cunts really

    • @Rage_Harder_Then_Relax
      @Rage_Harder_Then_Relax Před 5 lety

      @@AussieZeKieL EXACTLY. It's amazing how many carry on with how good it is everywhere else but NEVER, EVER take into consideration that we live in a massive country with a small population spread out. It doesn't change the fact though that the Coalition and conservatives in general only care about getting a well paid job after leaving politics too the SAME COMPANIES THEY DID DEALS WITH WHILE IN GOVERNMENT. Australia's political system needs a major overhaul before it gets to be much much worse than it is now. People also need to stop voting for the Coalition as they're the most arrogant, ignorant, incompetent corporate whores one can find. I don't expect that much because Aussies can also be the dumbest and/or ignorant voters. (Well 50% are).

    • @AussieZeKieL
      @AussieZeKieL Před 5 lety

      ​@@Rage_Harder_Then_Relax i feel that the only way for a shake up is to become a Republic. now that the party preferential system have been changed. the smaller parties can't do deals with each other to get elected no more. its made it even easier for the 2 big parties to keep control.

  • @iolio1
    @iolio1 Před 5 lety +20

    The NBN was a promise to FOX so it could maintain its media monopoly. These issues are a feature, not a bug.

    • @r1yamahamini
      @r1yamahamini Před 5 lety +1

      Exactly, Your the first commentor to blame the correct villein in all of this.. Enabled by Turnbull not the Liberal party as a whole.

    • @xer0cool
      @xer0cool Před 5 lety +2

      Yep, keep that internet shit slow so we still have a customer base.

  • @Kiwittgmail
    @Kiwittgmail Před 5 lety +191

    Shocking. We get 1 Gbps (1,000 Mbps) Fibre to the inside of our homes here in New Zealand.

    • @fasterthanwind8484
      @fasterthanwind8484 Před 5 lety +15

      Oh shit, thats awesome bro.

    • @dougcox3990
      @dougcox3990 Před 5 lety +25

      Yeah, but your whole country is only 50kms from end to end... ; )

    • @Harold_Flite
      @Harold_Flite Před 5 lety +14

      Telstra Australia got the contract for that in the late 90s...many tradesmen got ripped off by Telstra when they packed up and finished...left owing 1000s...me included. But Australian internet is garbage...the place is so big and they use unskilled people to install the fibre optic cables...its a mess...not to mention the FireWall the installed to cencor certain content.

    • @tubester4567
      @tubester4567 Před 5 lety +11

      @@FarshadGhanbari Only in big cities. Go out to the rural areas in the US and they get slow internet too.

    • @jgroenveld1268
      @jgroenveld1268 Před 5 lety +18

      We could have copied New Zealand and force the split of Telstra like what they did to Telecom.

  • @patg14
    @patg14 Před 5 lety +18

    Loool. NBN considers 6 Mbps (750kBps) acceptable.... Even adsl2 can get more than 3x that speed.

  • @nitachao7930
    @nitachao7930 Před 5 lety +59

    Why have a deadline, just build it properly

    • @drauss001
      @drauss001 Před 5 lety +12

      So they can sell it to Telstra whilst the sale value exceeds the debt they have run up and kept off the books...

    • @fightington
      @fightington Před 5 lety +1

      Interdasting. And prob true

    • @SormonAusPol
      @SormonAusPol Před 5 lety +3

      Because the Liberals ran and won on getting done it done fast and cheap AKA doing a crap job

  • @stuartlobegeier2701
    @stuartlobegeier2701 Před 5 lety +24

    NBN rollout has been a disaster. Still a disaster and was poorly planned, budgeted and has failed in delivering reasonable end user expectations.

    • @Djarms67
      @Djarms67 Před 5 lety +1

      That what happens when you have government back monopoly. poor planning poor desinging misbugenting and tons of politcized manageing that only delivery worst services. Serously the only real solution is competition and cosumer choice and no political cronyism.

    • @octapc
      @octapc Před 5 lety +6

      It was planned correctly by Labor but was crippled on purpose by the Coalition

    • @MnKJSGVsHMs8iOHr
      @MnKJSGVsHMs8iOHr Před 5 lety +2

      @@Djarms67 Bullsh-it. The NBN was co-opted by the Abbott government in 2013 as a political wedge to gain votes ("Fast. Affordable. Sooner."--then-Minister for Communications Malcolm Turnbull). There should have been bipartisan support for a primarily-FTTP NBN from the beginning. The original NBN could have been a huge boon to our economy as a government monopoly--a heavily-regulated common carrier like our other national infrastructures, e.g. highways and the now-increasingly privatised electricity grid.

    • @MnKJSGVsHMs8iOHr
      @MnKJSGVsHMs8iOHr Před 5 lety +2

      @@Djarms67 If you want to see how great privatisation of essential services is, just look at your electricity bills and the value brought to you by private health insurers.

    • @MnKJSGVsHMs8iOHr
      @MnKJSGVsHMs8iOHr Před 5 lety

      CZcams auto-moderation sucks; sorry for repost. NBN yadayada

  • @xjet
    @xjet Před 5 lety +33

    This is one area where New Zealand got it right. I have fibre to the home with our UFB network and I'm about to upgrade from the 100/30Mbps plan to the open (1Gbps) plan. All for under $100 a month with no data caps.

    • @Rage_Harder_Then_Relax
      @Rage_Harder_Then_Relax Před 5 lety +1

      You also live in a country as small as my back yard. Of course you're gonna get better coverage. Australia is massive with a small population. Clearly some people can't figure that part out when comparing this and similar topics.

    • @shaungordon9737
      @shaungordon9737 Před 5 lety +5

      @@Rage_Harder_Then_Relax Well if Australia did fibre to the premises in the actual population centers, instead of trying to connect everyone out in the wop wops like NZ did, we could have good internet. NZ concentrated on getting fibre to everyone in towns and cities and wireless for the rural areas. Australia has tried to do the whole dam country approach which is a failure. Most of Australia is desolate, the size of the country is irrelevant when most people live in cities/towns along the eastern seaboard.

    • @xjet
      @xjet Před 5 lety +5

      @@Rage_Harder_Then_Relax But a town is a town is a town. I live in a small town (14,000 people) and I have fibre to my house. The only difference with Australia is that there might need to be longer trunks between population centres but within the borders of a town, the population density of NZ is the same as Australia. It is clear that Australia's problem is not related to the trunking... but the "last mile" distribution where NZ has opted for fibre to the home and Australia has opted for chaos :-)

  • @deeboy1957
    @deeboy1957 Před 5 lety +20

    I'm in rural NZ, currently have 40/40mbps. Aussie sure messed it up

    • @kezkezooie8595
      @kezkezooie8595 Před 5 lety

      Yep. It was a foregone conclusion and, with the poor oversight of the contractors and sub contractors who did the installation of the network, I don't think it will be long before it gets much worse.

  • @ilsando3550
    @ilsando3550 Před 5 lety +15

    I got better internet speeds working on a drill ship 100's of kilometers offshore Myanmar than in inner city Sydney. Right now i'm in a house in the suburbs of Bangkok getting 90 mbs down and 60 mbs up. Studying university online i can hardly connect sometimes when in Sydney, how does that help an economy.

  • @Eccentric_Villain
    @Eccentric_Villain Před 5 lety +101

    I’m staying away from NBN and 5G. My ADSL+2 is faster than my Mum’s NBN. The NBN is a total joke if you ask me.

    • @surfie007
      @surfie007 Před 5 lety +28

      Good luck, they're turning off ADSL soon. For me it's October 2019

    • @justinm2697
      @justinm2697 Před 5 lety +12

      You should go to the NBN website or an ISP site and type in your address. You won't have ADSL forever. If you still have or want a home phone, you will need the NBN for that too.

    • @carly09et
      @carly09et Před 5 lety +7

      NBN can be no faster than ADLS2+ as it is ADSL based ... Its a pocket lining exercise.

    • @TheMonkeyNetwork
      @TheMonkeyNetwork Před 5 lety +7

      Sure you can stay away from NBN, but not getting in on 5G would be most unwise.

    • @carly09et
      @carly09et Před 5 lety +4

      @Yun Fu lol 5G saturates the same as fixed wireless - Bandwidth is bound by Shannon's law, double the users one third the speed. 5G is some extra channels BUT it will still bottle neck :( , Fiber to the home/block +5G is how the tec should be implemented. NBN is a fail at scale - that's politics.

  • @thatoneneeko2131
    @thatoneneeko2131 Před 5 lety +3

    Remember when hwawei offered to set up 5g for us but Australia being america's dog just rejected that good shit.

    • @camb069er
      @camb069er Před 5 lety

      When the yanks ask if the Aussies got any wool

    • @TotalGAMIX
      @TotalGAMIX Před 4 lety

      For real?

  • @Goldenhen
    @Goldenhen Před 5 lety +4

    If the NBN can't handle video streaming like Netflix then it is not "fit for purpose".

  • @werebilbyj4449
    @werebilbyj4449 Před 5 lety +9

    This is what you get when you vote for the "man who invented the internet" *rolls eyes*

    • @rollerskdude
      @rollerskdude Před 5 lety +1

      And Morrison the bastard who stabbed him in the back. Aussie's are really easy to fool politically. Damn Rupert.

  • @TheCranberrySource
    @TheCranberrySource Před 5 lety +22

    Australia voted for budgie smugglers rather than a decent broadband network. Thus Australia gets the NBN it deserves.

  • @RileysFilms
    @RileysFilms Před 5 lety +6

    4G mobile broadband works for me now that competition has pushed the data limits up. Paying $80 pm for 500GB. It's not ideal, but it beats the shoddy fixed wireless.
    The alteration of this project to save a quick buck is going to have an absolutely devistating effect on the economy in the long term. We're already seeing the effects of it. The Internet is the future, and if we can't keep up, we'll drop off.

    • @person.X.
      @person.X. Před 5 lety

      Y I agree. It is astounding how incompetent Australian leadership has become. I travel to poor countries all the time and their internet is much faster and much cheaper. The future for Australians will be bleak if we do not get a grip soon.

    • @Jake12220
      @Jake12220 Před 5 lety +1

      I did have an unlimited fixed wireless connection, but the NBN has changed their rules so all fixed wireless will be capped at 200GB per month as if August. I wouldn't mind quite as much if it wasn't for the fact they didn't even adjust the price. So yeah lm headed back to a 4g connection, 200GB is stuff all these days.

    • @RileysFilms
      @RileysFilms Před 5 lety

      @@Jake12220 are you for real? I wasn't aware that they were going to cap fixed wireless at 200GB. What a failure. 5G won't be a perfect solution either. Australia needs fiber to the premises everywhere, and we've blown our once in a lifetime chance to make it happen.

    • @Jake12220
      @Jake12220 Před 5 lety

      @@RileysFilms lm with my republic (currently looking for a different provider) they sent an email and had it posted on their site that they would be introducing the cap and that it was because of the NBN changing the rules. They later sent another email (after much annoyance) saying that on further consideration they won't be introducing the cap and that it was actually just their decision and nothing to do with the NBN. I honestly hate My Republic far more for being so full of shit trying to blame it on the NBN than l do the NBN for being so crap.

  • @royferntorp3575
    @royferntorp3575 Před 5 lety +7

    I remember Alan Jones saying how wireless would be better than fiber.

    • @g1598
      @g1598 Před 5 lety +3

      Why listen to Alan Jones in the first place? I doubt he could even use the finger print reader on an iPhone

    • @BibleStorm
      @BibleStorm Před 5 lety +1

      He practically never tells the truth.

    • @Jake12220
      @Jake12220 Před 5 lety +2

      Well 5G connections are now faster than anything offered by the NBN to home users, but the fixed wireless lm on is utter shit and can be beaten by a 4G connection using a $30 antenna instead of the thousand plus they must have spent on the wireless antenna.

    • @colconn57
      @colconn57 Před 5 lety

      Jones would have been paid to gee up wireless, he never does anything without a kickback I'm guessing.

    • @SmartDumbNerdyCool
      @SmartDumbNerdyCool Před 5 lety

      @@Jake12220 5G deadset causes cancer. It's short-ranged waves.

  • @QHTaker
    @QHTaker Před 5 lety +12

    Living in NZ i can game with friends in sydney and get a better ping than them, thats with the server located in sydney

    • @thatoneneeko2131
      @thatoneneeko2131 Před 5 lety

      That is not how ms works but ok.
      Unless somebody is downloading porn in his house.

  • @simonkormendy849
    @simonkormendy849 Před 5 lety +2

    Remember, Australia is supposed to be a democratic country, democracy is supposed to be about governance for the people by the people, not "for the rich by the rich".

    • @BibleStorm
      @BibleStorm Před 5 lety

      How do we go about changing that?

  • @alanfurlong-drummer4419
    @alanfurlong-drummer4419 Před 5 lety +5

    In little old Dublin Ireland fours years ago on fibre optic connections we had 150+ mbps. Even with the Netflix rubbish. If you don’t put in the correct infrastructure etc etc. watching the CEO clip smirking about how much it would cost speaks volumes. Future proofing Australia’s economy, community connectivity and developing regional areas is going to require people who care and have the integrity to critique plan and not take a cavalier approach. Without proper fast broadband Australians will be left with a 3rd world infrastructure and inward investment will be curtailed. A very short sited approach by those in power!

    • @Rage_Harder_Then_Relax
      @Rage_Harder_Then_Relax Před 5 lety

      What do you expect though from conservatives. They hate spending money on society as a whole but love giving it to their future employers after leaving their ALREADY cushy political jobs. It's always been like that. Until the dumb voters start losing everything, will they stand up. Most of them pay no attention to politics but then complain when it's too late. They (We) get the governments they deserve.

  • @Colkadome12
    @Colkadome12 Před 5 lety +9

    The Libs have made a long string of abysmal tech reforms and rollouts (mandatory data retention, AABill, and the NBN) which have really hurt the Australian tech industry. It sucks, and it makes me sick.

  • @RavenVapes
    @RavenVapes Před 5 lety +7

    NBN and the telco's are a joke, living in a rural remote town, the main exchange doesnt have enough ports to service the town, only a select few people can get broadband, and that's ADSL with a speed of 8mb/s, We only have one provider in the region Telstra.. if someone wants to get the internet on , they have to go with NBN Satellite and you're charged at $100+ a month for 100gb of data , And the NBN Satellite providers throttle your speeds depending what your doing, meant to have 25mb download/5mb upload, but trying to watch Netflix or CZcams or downloading a large file, they will throttle your speeds slower then ADSL,
    Internet is not classed as a Luxury any more, its classed as a utility the same as electricity and water, we should be able to have a fast reliable service at reasonable prices.

    • @Jake12220
      @Jake12220 Před 5 lety

      Honestly the NBN should never have connected any houses to the net, instead it should have created a really good pipe or backbone connection between all the population areas of Australia and contracted other companies to connect the houses. The other companies would only get paid if they could reliabily achieve a set stable speed, but they could choose whatever method they liked to create the connection so long as it met the desired outcomes. Other countries did it this way and got massively better results and far faster and cheaper.

  • @guochuqiao
    @guochuqiao Před 5 lety +12

    People in remote areas can thank their LNP COALiton. Right, probably for future worse drought as well.

    • @Secretlyanothername
      @Secretlyanothername Před 5 lety +4

      And they'll keep voting for them til the donkeys die.

    • @KonradZielinski
      @KonradZielinski Před 4 lety

      This kind of boggles me too. The people who are most directly affected by climate change are the ones who keep voting for politicians who deny it is taking place.

  • @Br4ido
    @Br4ido Před 5 lety +6

    My current mobile 4G internet is at 0.20 mbps after 7 pm. Telstra won't deal with it. Local store told us its not their problem and their online tech support won't get back to us
    Come 6 am its at 47.1 mbps

    • @clint-0088
      @clint-0088 Před 5 lety +1

      It's congestion nothing they can do it's simply a limitation of technology sharing the wireless link amongst all users. All you can do is try another provider to see if it is any better.

  • @Secretlyanothername
    @Secretlyanothername Před 5 lety +1

    If you voted Liberal or Nationals a few weeks ago, stop complaining. This is what you endorsed.

  • @Z3N1T4
    @Z3N1T4 Před 5 lety +9

    "We didn't anticipate people streaming more content over the internet"

  • @seanrogers3389
    @seanrogers3389 Před 3 lety +1

    Unless you're on FTTP or HFC you're getting shafted. The government cut corners to save money and introduced several cheaper access types like FTTN/B and FTTC which almost completely defeated the purpose of NBN in the first place. They should have gone all in with FTTP rather than piggybacking off of old ADSL / PSTN lines that have been in place for decades.

  • @jomac2046
    @jomac2046 Před 5 lety +3

    No fixed line or wireless here, only 2 hours from Perth and only NBN in town is Satellite, hopeless.
    I'll be sticking with ADSL2+

  • @davidlp3019
    @davidlp3019 Před 5 lety +2

    IMO NBN is very dependant on the technology being used. I just got switched to FTTB 50/20 plan and am getting 47 down 18 up. My attainable rate according to the modem is 128 down and 53 up, so I can upgrade to 100/40 if I so wish. FTTC/FTTB, definately FTTP and FTTN(only if you are closer than 500m to the node) are the only good connections on NBN. However satellite and fixed wireless like these poor people in the video have sucks they should have at least put in FTTC for towns like bellingen. What they've done here makes no sense. Ideally, we should have got full FTTP in the first place as this MTM is just as expensive and slower, but it is what it is I suppose :/

  • @simonkormendy849
    @simonkormendy849 Před 5 lety +5

    Personally, I think that the entire population of Australia, excluding the federal Liberal Party members, should sue the Liberal Party for leaving us with a sub-par NBN, the entire Australian population should also sue Mr Rupert Murdoch too for his part in Australia's NBN debacle, and jeopardizing Australia's future .

    • @BibleStorm
      @BibleStorm Před 5 lety

      Is this possible? We could sue them for a lot of things... NSW government wrote legislation to help dodgy contractors building deathtraps for people to live in until structural fractures appear for no reason leaving them all homeless.

    • @Secretlyanothername
      @Secretlyanothername Před 5 lety +1

      That's really dumb. They had the chance to vote them out, but decided they want more of this.

  • @joelgoetze
    @joelgoetze Před 4 lety +1

    Cancel your connections...You don't actually need it...I cancelled mine and negotiated an unlimited mobile data plan for less than the nbn costs...It's also about 3 times faster than when my fixed wifi was at its best.
    If you all opt out, they will die or come crawling back.

    • @joelgoetze
      @joelgoetze Před 4 lety

      Also, in my area, the supposed one tower turned into 4 and it still doesn't work right, for 200 houses...

  • @MatthewBayard
    @MatthewBayard Před 5 lety +8

    Rupert Murdoch must be loving this.

  • @milkymilkyisacat3154
    @milkymilkyisacat3154 Před 5 lety

    After graduated from Monash in 2013, I went back to China for 5 years. At the beginning of this year, my wife and I decided to move back to Australia.
    When I was in China, my internet plan was a 100Mbps unlimited data plan, it cost me about 300 AUD per year. IPS was China Telecom, which is China's Telstra. It is the most expensive IPS, but the service is fast, reliable, no buffing no drama. I could easily achieve 10mb/s download speed at any time.
    My phone plan cost me less than 15 AUD every month. I use 40-100GB per month. Every corner I went to was covered by 4G. Include basement carpark, lifts, remote areas.
    I never took any cash and cards with me in China. Everything paid by phone, fast, convenience, and safety.
    Most cities are connected by high-speed train. A trip from Shanghai to Beijing (1300km) by train takes less than 5 hours, costs 110 AUD.
    I feel like I was moving from a developed country to a developing country. What a joke. Come on, Australia!!

  • @officialspock
    @officialspock Před 5 lety +5

    Thanks Abbott

  • @theodorkipen4069
    @theodorkipen4069 Před 5 lety +1

    Well this is a simple question to answer. Tony Abbot and the Liberals decided that we should use outdated technology (copper wire to node) rather than Labor's original plan (fibre optic to node). And everyone who new anything about this said that the speed of the NBN would be a problem under the Liberal policy.

  • @KyleMontibello
    @KyleMontibello Před 5 lety +3

    As someone who wants to move to Australia one day, this is a big hurtle. Where I am in the States, 100 is the minimum and I can get up to 2000 should I want to pay for it. I don't understand how 6mbps is "acceptable" for new infrastructure.

    • @The.Drunk-Koala
      @The.Drunk-Koala Před 5 lety +1

      Population density is the key. America slightly bigger than Australia with approximately 12x the population.

    • @MnKJSGVsHMs8iOHr
      @MnKJSGVsHMs8iOHr Před 5 lety

      @@The.Drunk-Koala USA's population density is overall comparable to Australia. Therefore, it should be easier with a smaller population to service?

    • @The.Drunk-Koala
      @The.Drunk-Koala Před 5 lety

      @@MnKJSGVsHMs8iOHr America 93 people per square mile.
      Australia 3.1 per square kilometre.

    • @Jubei66666
      @Jubei66666 Před 5 lety +2

      @@The.Drunk-Koala we are one of the most urbanised countries in the world. 90% of the population lives in a handful of cities, the size of the country was never a factor.

    • @MnKJSGVsHMs8iOHr
      @MnKJSGVsHMs8iOHr Před 5 lety

      @@The.Drunk-Koala I'm failing to find a source at the moment, though I recall figures that showed the density of *inhabited* land to be rather comparable to USA. We don't need to service our uninhabited deserts.

  • @rams3710
    @rams3710 Před 5 lety +2

    I moved to Australia from Russia about 5 years ago. Back in Russia the Internet I had was unlimited 150mbps with the cost of 10$ a month. I even remember the internet ads back in 2010, it was something like 10$ a month for 100mbps and back in 2008 we paid about 10$ a month for unlimited 40mbps. Go figure

  • @JeffBourke
    @JeffBourke Před 5 lety +3

    5:40 WOW. How could anyone have possibly predicted that people's internet usage was going to increase?
    I guess nobody could have predicated that outcome.

  • @spoddie
    @spoddie Před 5 lety +1

    This was all predicted 10 years ago, that's why everyone was going to get fibre to the premises. Turnbull and Abbott gave us this shit that will have to be replaced with fibre.

  • @johndoe-qo8cy
    @johndoe-qo8cy Před 5 lety +4

    Bellingen is in the Oxley Electorate, which voted for the coalition, which promised a worse NBN than Labor. Why should we care if they get bad NBN, you got what you voted for.

    • @Secretlyanothername
      @Secretlyanothername Před 5 lety

      Exactly. They deserve shit internet, because they vote for it every election.

  • @SuperCaptainSkittles
    @SuperCaptainSkittles Před 5 lety

    I live in Springvale, Victoria; a major metropolitan area, where they cut our ADSL 2+ access and forced us to use NBN fibre to the NODE!! This cut our D/L speed by more than 200%. All for a political ploy. Is there no one else that is fed up with suffering day to day inconveniences for a politicians salary? I sincerely hope these inconveniences don't escalate to serious issue (which it already is for those who earn a living using the internet) before the population take action against these FEAR-MONGERING POLITICIANS!!

  • @DursunX
    @DursunX Před 5 lety +3

    we got fibre to the node instead of full nbn.
    my aged copper lines have started to break down at the joints in the waterlogged pits.
    only been 2 yrs 🥴

    • @bmrapple
      @bmrapple Před 5 lety +1

      Exact same issue here. I'm on FTTN and everytime it rains the pit outside my home fills up and then it's weeks of calls to my RSP to get a tech out to fix it. It makes me sad to think this is the best my country can do for its citizens.

  • @Justwantahover
    @Justwantahover Před 4 lety +1

    If the liberals (in Australia) opened a restaurant and if they were required to buy more food for the restaurant (cos of increased business) they would spend less on food instead of more (to save money). And they will save money too, but won't get the returns they would have if they spent their money. That seems to be what they done with the NBN! If they spent the money, there would be way more business happening. And what about the Sydney Harbour bridge? Made by the Labours, and yes it did break the country but (in the long run) Australia benefited a lot! But the Liberals wanted to "save money" and they bitterly opposed the Sydney Harbour Bridge. They live in the dark ages.

  • @peterhall6656
    @peterhall6656 Před 5 lety +3

    Come to Bondi Beach and experience NBN service interruptions everyday - I'm on my Aldi mobile phone hotspot now because the NBN drops out at this time nearly every night. Outrageous.

  • @brettst01
    @brettst01 Před 5 lety

    I have fixed wireless. Same issue for 18 months, was getting 1 mbps, Wrote to ACCC, local and national government's, the NBN, and anyone else who might be able to help. The government agencies like ACCC told me there is nothing the could do as the NBN is another government agencie and they did not have jurisdiction over them. The NBN just blamed the telco's. The telco's blamed the NBN. I finally got to the truth, and it was that the wireless towers did not have enough bandwidth to deal with the NBN fixed wireless solution. Now the NBN is forcing this on people to get the NBN completed by 2020. It is not a netfix or streaming issue. I live in to town of 280 houses. It is purely that the wireless infrastructure (towers) was never designed to cope with the amount of data. Thankfully this has now been fixed in my area for the moment.

  • @OFFRoadWheels
    @OFFRoadWheels Před 5 lety +3

    I would love just to have fast upload an download.

  • @jdsgotninelives
    @jdsgotninelives Před 5 lety +1

    To be honest, we had the opportunity to have FTTP with Rudd part 2 but we chose to believe that it was a terrible waste of money. Anyway, you couldn't have KRudd in charge coz he set all them houses on fire with 'is pink batts and also coz of that time he picked 'is ear and said fair shake of the sauce bottle. Yep, we were far too clever for the likes of Rudd. Brilliant country, this one.

  • @copuis
    @copuis Před 5 lety +3

    lets be honest about things here
    the change in the tech roll out was a major factor
    that cost difference and the speed required meant the there was more than a change from the best product (fixed fiber to most, mixed where there might be some difficultly, fixed wireless where there were issue providing the former, then sat for the middle)
    was change to less suitable and vastly less robust systems, all round
    and NBN co have in short blamed everything but the truth, people made cost and time promises when the Libs came to power, and now they have to stand by the incorrect statement of "this will be cheaper the the tax payer, and provide the service required"
    well, it doesn't sorry,. and the timelines blaming netflix as an effect, sorry, bullshit, you can go back to the labor days as this was being floated, and then look at the excited experts, and what a modern service would be able to bring about
    able to stream video (youtube was already a thing, as was using it as a learning tool!), work from home (telecommute), offsite storage of data (the cloud) and having multiple people in a house hold doing that as households were getting more and more devices
    none of what has happened was unknown about in 2007 when the idea was everyone (all) would have a minimum speed of 12mbs
    even the highest pegged cost for the original planned roll out (fyi would be about the same point total roll out, however, would have been a vastly more robust internet, less prone to dropouts, and those currently suffering on the node drop out, weather affected (thanks to 40 year old copper) would have been able to get the speeds we pay for, and able to access faster speeds, (not an option for most of us) AND would have been cheaper long term (less maintenance needed, ongoing and planned) )
    but no, we got something that was promised would be cheaper (so far slated to cost over 50bil, close to 10 bil more than the peak original roll out cost) would be finished by 2016 (slated to be 2020 at last look, the original was 2021, 1 year, hardly worth it)
    but, more importantly, the whole network, would have been more robust as it was planned and was going to be built to cope with the expected uses of 2020 and beyond
    not the expected uses of 2009, cause they couldn't see any one needed more than that

    • @Jake12220
      @Jake12220 Před 5 lety

      One thing l do still blame the labour party for is not listing the NBN as critical infrastructure. If it had been then many of the holdups would have been avoided and the process if not better would at least have been completed faster.

  • @borgarden2731
    @borgarden2731 Před 5 lety

    As a former Telstra contractor I can tell you this whole clusterfuck was just about a select people at the top making money by NBN giving contracts to certain companies for contracting work and for products. Unfortunately this is pretty common in business in Australia. However giving FTTP to every home in Australia is IMPOSSIBLE. The cost would be astronomical because of how many people here have larger blocks of land which means every larger block of land in rural and semi-rural properties would have to retrench there property to get the fibre to there house (unless the block was brand new but even then I've had new houses with broken conduits even on small blocks. People have to remember that even though the NBN has had bad press most of Australia has been happy with there NBN (apart from the initial HFC customers who were stuck with Optus' crappy old cable network which was designed to be MAXED OUT with customers initially which causes slower speeds at 5pm onwards which is why Telstra capped its cable network at around 70-80% to stop that). If NBN pull there finger out and finish the Fibre to the Curb people will be much happier. Also fixed wireless for MOST people in my experience has been pretty good (usually better than FTTN unless you want 100mb speed of course).

  • @Scorp308
    @Scorp308 Před 5 lety +3

    Thanks, Rupert Murdoch.

  • @NORKIE
    @NORKIE Před 5 lety +1

    Because the original CEO left and refused to fix the piberaps screw ups... now we will be 60 billion in debt with internet nation wide that works 2% better than adsl2... and yet my country voted for these clowns twice... what an absolute embarrassment.

  • @hiroshiganna9078
    @hiroshiganna9078 Před 5 lety +1

    The actual issue is the core backbone of the NBN. It's speed is only 19.8 terabits/s at that speed if most of the population only 20 million were to connect, the speed is only 1 mbps for any Australian without bussines. Our population is a bit more than that though. There is no point in setting up a connects if the host server cannot handle it.

  • @hardtofind1
    @hardtofind1 Před 5 lety +4

    Thank LNP Turnbull for changing a good plan and changing it to the crap NBN we have now

  • @gore1089
    @gore1089 Před 5 lety +1

    The original proposal would have given the country one of the best broadbands on the planet...then the liberals got in. I thought it would be watered down while costing us more..... but nothing as bad as this.

  • @jeffma7507
    @jeffma7507 Před 4 lety +1

    If they wanted us to switch to NBN, at least they have to have stable connection, otherwise it’s just a stupid downgrade

  • @byronbandit605
    @byronbandit605 Před 5 lety

    They drilled and installed NBN cables in our neighbourhood over 1 year ago. We still do not have NBN to the curve or premise. NBN Australia has no records of this lines being installed. Criminals.

  • @josephj6521
    @josephj6521 Před rokem

    The constant drop outs, maintenance outages and unexpected outages on HFC in suburban Sydney is infuriating! We cannot work productively. Late 2023 and we still have to put up with this crap!

  • @edwinsubijano263
    @edwinsubijano263 Před 5 lety

    The people in the rural areas are the ones who keeps putting the LNP in power !!! They deserve the government they elected !!!

  • @fiddlestickzmuzik
    @fiddlestickzmuzik Před 5 lety

    cracked sinking apartments, water rorts, slow internet, excessive road fines and taxes, unaffordable housing, pillaging of the environment...etc etc it never ends it just seems to get worse and worse.

  • @DelbyDank
    @DelbyDank Před 5 lety +1

    I'm starting to think we should have just let China do it. Crazy I know

  • @tasmanianbadger
    @tasmanianbadger Před 5 lety

    If you voted liberal, you don’t get to complain. It was obvious that they were going to bodge it and you were warned that this was the case.

  • @lawlordummett2851
    @lawlordummett2851 Před 5 lety +1

    They managed to talk about the NBN for 10 minutes straight saying liberal or LNP a total of 0 times!

    • @Jake12220
      @Jake12220 Před 5 lety

      Honestly both plans were doomed from the start. The fibre to the premise was never going to work in rural and remote areas and the liberals ideas were utterly incompetent. The NBN should only have been responsible for creating a high speed backbone and the market should have been allowed to do the last mile connection using whatever method worked. Private companies doing the last mile connection means the government wouldn't always be trying to deflect blame and instead would be insisting on quality connections.

  • @phengov943
    @phengov943 Před 5 lety +1

    Australia should of split up telstra like here in nz the government split up Telecom or Spark, to 2 individual companies Spark and Chorus and worked with Chorus new company to build the fibre network around the country. Instead of having to pay them to use their lines to build the fibre network by the government alone. Australia should have connected all the major cities with nbn first and not the rural locations. I am paying about the same as my uncle in Sydney but I am getting Gigabit fibre broadband at the same price as he is paying for only 100 mbp on the nbn, our whole city are able to connect to gigabit speeds here in Dunedin NZ. It's a pity Australia has slower internet now.

  • @francismarshall8201
    @francismarshall8201 Před 4 lety +1

    Where i live they put fttn across the street then put it over the old hrc cables , not even replacing them.

  • @frizzyacademic
    @frizzyacademic Před 5 lety +1

    Hey ABC CZcams admins. I notice the video is uploaded at 1080p, but the source video resolution is quite a bit lower.
    I’ve noticed that on a couple of other 7:30 clips.
    Any chance you could increase that to HD?

    • @copuis
      @copuis Před 5 lety

      hey, cant be stressing the network there fellow, the lib say 360p video is enough, and we dont want there to be a youtube effect blamed for slow nbn next
      (it could also be that if you watch it early enough, youtube might not have finished doing youtube things, so you getting a lower quality video)

    • @willd0g
      @willd0g Před 5 lety

      Jeremy Sims gold

  • @JeffBourke
    @JeffBourke Před 5 lety +2

    Fixed wireless is a joke!
    Business can not function on TRASH

  • @MTT-ic3ci
    @MTT-ic3ci Před 5 lety

    Because they put the money in their pockets, there are places in the big cities still having excuses thrown at them by NBN.

  • @danogamez5250
    @danogamez5250 Před 5 lety +1

    Government stuffed up to save money now australia has service than third world countries

  • @lardook
    @lardook Před 5 lety +2

    In New Zealand on 300mb down and 400mb up on 5GHz band & 200MB down and 300MB on 2.4GHz band on my router. Not only fibre to the door but fibre to the wall, CAT 7 cable to my router. Soon to get gigafibre in Auckland $120NZD a month for unlimited.

    • @willd0g
      @willd0g Před 5 lety

      Larduk_ 1UK boom that’s it right there

  • @gokt6054
    @gokt6054 Před 5 lety +2

    ah Sam, people have been streaming netflix for years now, surely NBN would have thought about the bandwidth to handle streaming before implementing fixed wireless. if it's not handling it then fibre it up you turds. What a joke.

  • @leviroch
    @leviroch Před 5 lety +1

    Broken promises, a lack of long term thinking in favour of quick publicity. . . I see nothing has changed

  • @rickylovesyou
    @rickylovesyou Před 5 lety +1

    Corruption.
    Thats the bottom line.

  • @youknownothing3766
    @youknownothing3766 Před 5 lety +1

    Whats the problem, you got what your voted for 3 times over. Its 3 elections already, LNP got voted in every time. You get what you deserve. Enjoy you crappy speeds.
    I was slated for FTTP in 2015, it got pushed back. I only got FTTC in Jan 2019. 100/40, came 4 years late. Good luck with those on fixed wireless and FTTN/HFC. Enjoy until 2040. Remember Tones Abs said 25megggsss is all you need. He had no idea what the difference is mbits and mbytes. You trust him to deliver the MTM??... hahah. GG

  • @AussieVet
    @AussieVet Před 5 lety +1

    500mbps upload and 500 download here in Thailand

  • @JeffBourke
    @JeffBourke Před 4 lety +1

    Fixed wireless is literally worse than ADSL

  • @q36spacemodulator
    @q36spacemodulator Před 5 lety +1

    The NBN considers speeds of 6Mbs as acceptable, I wish, my download can go as low as 1Mbs and is usually below 10. Considering I'm paying for 25Mbs and they charge a premium price this amounts to fraud. Our politicians have turned this countries communications into an overpriced joke . You can get better internet and mobile services in many S.E. Asian counties for a fraction of the cost we pay in Australia.

  • @ivanoleaanimator
    @ivanoleaanimator Před 5 lety

    The coming 128 billion tax break will fix all this.

  • @ornn6177
    @ornn6177 Před 5 lety

    citizens shouldnt have to pay for it to be installed because this country owes it to us for being so far behind for so long with no reason to be

  • @sc0tte1-416
    @sc0tte1-416 Před 5 lety +2

    Don't worry, our brothers to the south... Canada was once in the stone age too with only DSL to the CO many kms away but in the matter of 5 or so years most of us got fibre to the cross connect box usually less than a km away and currently I have 200/20 connection, unthinkable back then.

    • @ChrisJohannsen
      @ChrisJohannsen Před 5 lety +1

      That happened due to good governance, not some miracle.

  • @pauldart8548
    @pauldart8548 Před 5 lety +1

    The Network is on 4 G,But buy the time "it's done" we will be on 5 G

  • @JC-nc8hu
    @JC-nc8hu Před 5 lety +1

    slow internet speed will make Austrailian lose lots of opportunities.

  • @timotot123
    @timotot123 Před 5 lety

    NBN has been considered a joke for years now. Don't trust any internet provider offering NBN because most likely you're not going to be a happy camper

  • @zahrans
    @zahrans Před 5 lety

    Watching this from a consistent & reliable 100mbps down 50mbps up FTTH connection in Sri Lanka. And since it's fibre all the way, it's already future-proofed with (no doubt) increased higher bandwidths but without the need to re-install any new cables or equipment.

  • @stevepaul2507
    @stevepaul2507 Před 5 lety

    We live on Brisbane's northside and the NBN is only capable of 3 Mbs per second. We're now using 4G at 95 Mbs per second, as NBN is slower than our ADSL2 was. How humiliating for our government and our country. We are meant to be proud of our out dated massively expensive white elephant called the NBN.

  • @kingwillbisthebest
    @kingwillbisthebest Před 5 lety

    I'm in a fairly affluent area in South East Melbourne and am not tipped to receive NBN until late 2021 and the longer the better. I'll be forced to buy a service that is slower than my now "cable internet" that will cost me more money. The NBN is just a big waste of tax payers dollars and a massive fail for state and federal government.