manticle
Standing up for the Aussie Bottler
There are occasions when I agree with you Black Devil dog and that last paragraph particularly is one such time.
Im not calling it a conspiracy theory and understand the power of the almighty $ - perhaps Bob Brown could give himself a reality check before coming up with such statements.Danscraftbeer said:Sorry I could'nt help but giggle a little at this. A lawyer? up against the highest payed lawyers owned by the biggest wealthiest most powerful heavy polluters? No chance.
Conspiracy theory? or reality?
Check out a Documentary called: Merchants of Doubt for some relevance. Scientists and scientific evidence has been little competition against them. Although after decades they did manage to prove that cigarettes are bad for you. So there is hope still.
To campaign and say its all crap while at the same time planning their new drilling areas for oil once the Ice caps melt away and clear the path. They new the science was real all along.
I think we are well past the mythology and hoax theories. The science needs to be taken seriously. (both ways!) or left and right wing/everybody loses.
Talking about the whole Global scale thing in general etc.
$0.02
Hey, all these hypotheticals about how rolling out fibre to domestic premises is going to change the way we work and make our nation super competitive in your prediction of the future are fantastic.SBOB said:I question the cost involved in building roads that I will never drive on.
Actually, I dont but its a similar mentality.
Infrastructure such as the NBN should be a higher priority than it is, as its deployment provides future growth (both planned and unplanned from ideas that havent been realised)
Plus, if it was done right in the first place its 'true' cost to the tax payer/budget is minimal due to the large majority of the funding coming from government backed bonds to raise the capital..not a single country is rolling out copper so why bother rolling out upgrades that continue to use it (you're already resigned to paying $x to roll out some arbitrary upgrade, why not spend $x + $y and do it right the first time instead of having to come back later and re-do it, but that will be on some other governments dime so who cares right)
Actually, its exactly that.Eagleburger said:The west laughed at Thailand and the way they churned through PM's. Immature was the agreed label. I think we have surpased them.
A likable leader is not always the best leader. It is not a popularity contest FFS.
At least if its Rob Smigels hand, its a funny puppet.Eagleburger said:A puppet is only as good as the hand in its arse.
I don't disagree with any of the above, but one option completely missed there is the option of fixed wireless (which is the barrow I was trying to push last night a bit unsuccessfully) . As I stated previously, that's what I'm on now. Good enough speeds for the home at a cheap as chips rate compared to FTP. I completely am comfortable with business that require the speeds that fibre brings getting FTP, but domestically, you don't and more than likely won't need that speed.Ducatiboy stu said:RE the NBN
Ok.
Labor saw that the existing copper network just cannot handle the speeds of a modern internet
Technically copper will never, ever, ever compete with fibre.
The bandwidth of a single optical fibre has not yet been reached. The only thing limiting the bandwidth of fibre is the equipment at either end
Most of the copper in the ground is old, serviceable, but old and getting older
It costs less for fibre per Km than copper ( and you get a **** load more bandwidth )
The install costs are about the same.
The big problem with the NBN is Telstra and their ownership of the existing copper network. They have they fixed line users. And that is where the $$ are
Business broadband is a cut throat race to the bottom
The LNP dont like the original NBN model. It was about providing a flat platform for all users. Bit like Auspost
NBN is seen as competition
* Note I work for an ISP ( only for the last 12months ) but before that I worked in the general comms industry in various tech/install/support roles. I dont have an allegiance. I look at the industry from a tech side, not a marketing or commercial side
Emissions taxing/trading to begin with. That is a stupid idea. It doesn't achieve anything, except drive business out of the country, which comes as a loss to the economy. Very few businesses left here producing, exporting, paying taxes which is bad for the economy especially considering the resources sector is now failing (this country has put all their eggs in one basket for far too long). Then there's the flow on effect to unemployment. There's a lot more people out of a job than the rubbish 6.1% they quote. They fail to mention they count being listed with an employment agency as being employed, even though you may not be receiving any work from them. Yes something needs to be done to tackle carbon emissions, but you can't just go and slap a ridiculous tax on and expect it to make a difference. Investment in research, development and installation of efficient clean power technologies whilst phasing out the old as it is brought online is the way to achieve it. Creates jobs, entices manufacturing back into the country, reduces emissions in the long run and everyone is happy.Airgead said:Again I ask... what policies are, as you put it "purist dribble"? What exactly is "whacked out" about them?
I suspect that by "whacked out purist dribble" you really mean - "things I don;t agree with".
which is fine for low density or low user-count areas, but its a shared medium.. the more users, the lower per-user bandwidth available..jlm said:I don't disagree with any of the above, but one option completely missed there is the option of fixed wireless
It is, but you have to look at cost v usersSBOB said:which is fine for low density or low user-count areas, but its a shared medium.. the more users, the lower per-user bandwidth available..
This sort of my point.......I don't see the need to roll out FTP just so this nightmarish scenario can be avoided. The money could be spent on things far, far more important. Remember the health care section of pages on the other Goodbye thread? I'd rather cash is shovelled into that rather than keeping relatively well off suburbanites happy with their download speed.Ducatiboy stu said:More and more user are using the like of Netflox, iView etc..etc and this eats bandwidth. Combine this with multiple users hanging off a single connection ( Mum & Dad each have a computer, each child has an iPad etc ) and that 25Mbps connection feels more like 5Mbps
1/2 the speed is a massive over-estimationtechnobabble66 said:Btw, a few of the latest estimates indicate the FTN-modified NBN will cost roughly the same and take about as long as the original FTP NBN, but will now deliver half the speed
And the latest estimates also indicate that the original FTP model would have blown out to 78-84 billion according to NBN co (queue cries of Bill Morrow is a liberal party stooge.....Bring back Quigley) so either the govt cap would have to dramatically increase or NBN co would have to raise a significantly large amount of cash to complete that existing network (and they already have to find another 5-15 billion) to which would throw all the above figures significantly out of whack. I'm not arguing anywhere that business' don't need FTP, just its a waste trying to connect the majority of homes via FTP.technobabble66 said:Btw, a few of the latest estimates indicate the FTN-modified NBN will cost roughly the same and take about as long as the original FTP NBN, but will now deliver half the speed - all due to problems integrating the fibre network (to the node) with the exchanges and the copper link to the premises (a cousin is in the dept that is dealing with it, says all the cash saved on reducing the network is now being sunk into IT fixes for this problem. And it was originally predicted as a flaw in the FTN concept, fwiw). All for the sake of the LNP having something to slag off the ALP over.
And the idea with the NBN, as mentioned above, is to unlock unattained or unknown potentials - eg: many more people can run all sorts of businesses from home, business can access new concepts and channel them into those homes.
It's a bit like saying why construct phone lines when telegraphs do a perfectly good job, and people are only going to use phones to needlessly chat on them.
Really? Except that while our (admittedly very lame) carbon tax was in effect it had a measurable impact on emissions which immediately evaporated when it was removed. https://ccep.crawford.anu.edu.au/publication/ccep-working-paper/4388/impact-carbon-price-australias-electricity-demand-supply-andpist said:Emissions taxing/trading to begin with. That is a stupid idea. It doesn't achieve anything, except drive business out of the country, which comes as a loss to the economy. Very few businesses left here producing, exporting, paying taxes which is bad for the economy especially considering the resources sector is now failing (this country has put all their eggs in one basket for far too long). Then there's the flow on effect to unemployment. There's a lot more people out of a job than the rubbish 6.1% they quote. They fail to mention they count being listed with an employment agency as being employed, even though you may not be receiving any work from them. Yes something needs to be done to tackle carbon emissions, but you can't just go and slap a ridiculous tax on and expect it to make a difference. Investment in research, development and installation of efficient clean power technologies whilst phasing out the old as it is brought online is the way to achieve it. Creates jobs, entices manufacturing back into the country, reduces emissions in the long run and everyone is happy.
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