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07
The National Broadband Network is truly the Nationals’ Broadband Network as it has been lifted straight from the 2005 Page Research Centre’s position paper into telecommunications chaired by then Senator-elect Fiona Nash, Senator Barnaby Joyce, the Leader of the Nationals in the Senate, said today.
“How could we disagree with something that is quite evidently our idea,” he said. “The problem, in the near future is because of the mountainous debt that has been acquired to pay for ceiling insulation, boom gates, school halls and sundry $900 cheques, we will be compromising our capacity to raise the money to fulfil this infrastructure goal.
“It is a program like this that goes to show how blatantly ridiculous alternate policies such as the so-called stimulus packages really were. This delivers a strategic infrastructure outcome. The other packages delivered nothing more than a path to a debt-laden financial oblivion.
“It is vitally important that the National Broadband Network gets to the corners of our country where the market has failed, at a price that is both affordable and a service that is comparable.”
Senator Nash said that the Nationals’ plan recommended that the government retain a stake in the telecommunications infrastructure by making a capital investment in a broadband network.
 “A business consortium in 2004 approached the Page Research Centre with a preliminary costing of $7 billion to roll out the infrastructure with a view to it being completed in five years.
“The plan then was to roll out fibre optic cable which the government would lease to service providers including Telstra. With the government controlling this part of the infrastructure, it would remove some of anticompetitive practices and create a transparent pricing regime. 
“As I said in 2005, rolling out fibre optic infrastructure across Australia would be like a Glass Snowy, Mr Rudd has used the same analogy today.”
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# John Hodgkinson
Wednesday, April 08, 2009 7:52 AM
Something wrong with my arithmetic?

$45 billion @ 10% return is $4.5 billion.
Add 50% for operatiing costs = (4.5 + 2.25) = $6.75 billion
Yearly payments to cover cost and return by say 2 million homes & business = $3375 or $281 per month. About 5 times current cost.

The 10% return would be necessary to attract the private sector and Telecommunication companies.
Thursday, April 09, 2009 10:02 AM
I was in a small way involved it the 2005 effort and I still agree that this is a Nation Building exercise with long term benefits and purpose.

I don't think I have agreed with anything the existing government as done to date, but I do agree with this.
# Alan Harris
Thursday, April 09, 2009 4:00 PM
I fully support your effort to obtain a better broadband service for rural and regional people, regardless whether the horrendously expensive and poorly timed roll-out Labor is presently championing goes ahead or not.
I would suggest for parity with city people enjoying ADSL2 from cable, those in the bush be able to receive a Wireless service comparable in cost and performance to ADSL2, with at least the same download capacity.
At the moment for Telstra Wireless, which they trumpet as covering 100% of OZ, one has to sign a 3 year contract with much less download capacity and twice as expensive to boot.
Another issue is where there exists a fibre-cable to a telephone exchange, the upgrading of such exchanges to provide broadband should follow suit. At the moment Telstra invites subscribers to indicate whether they would desire connection if such an upgrade happened – enquiries as to how many interested parties are needed before an upgrade would occur receive a nil reply.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010 6:08 PM
How are you. To believe in God or in a guiding force because someone tells you to is the height of stupidity. We are given senses to receive our information within. With our own eyes we see, and with our own skin we feel. With our intelligence, it is intended that we understand. But each person must puzzle it out for himself or herself. Help me! I can not find sites on the: Distance education consortium. I found only this - define distance education. Distance education, eaton contains three universities that must be offered in the current action where a federal university may even be system of the adverse degree. This quality is the newest material at closed, distance education. Best regards :eek:, Chance from Zaire.
Thursday, February 18, 2010 2:25 PM
The National Broadband Network, also known as NBNCo is a Fibre to the Home (FTTH) network set to be built in Australia.In my home also use this broadband connection.It really makes me afriend aog google .It helps me in my study on google.Its speed dis really great..
Wednesday, April 14, 2010 1:07 PM
i cant get normal phone line broadband where i am..ive looked everywhere to try and get a plug in broadband that will give ma good signal where i live for my laptop.
3(the phone network) are offering 3.6mb per second speed for €20 a month with a 10gb download. so here are my 2 questions:
1. is 3.6mb per second fast??
2. is that a good price considering the speed and download limit?
Thursday, July 29, 2010 10:53 AM
i cant get normal phone line broadband where i am..ive looked everywhere to try and get a plug in broadband that will give ma good signal where i live for my laptop.
3(the phone network) are offereing 3.6mb per second speed for €20 a month with a 10gb download. so here are my 2 questions:
1. is 3.6mb per second fast??
2. is that a good price considering the speed and download limit?

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