- Joined
- 26 March 2014
- Posts
- 20,882
- Reactions
- 13,946
Just found a video that reminds me of .....
Yeah it reminds me of someone very well.
Just found a video that reminds me of .....
Yeah it reminds me of someone very well.![]()
You need to first substantiate the basis of your $100bn figure before moving on to other numbers.NBN Corporate plan $56bn with $20bn loan/equity topped up from Mathius in Nov 2016
in the words of Ziggy in 12th Dec 2013: "It would reduce costs and bring forward revenues, reducing peak funding from an estimated $73bn to $41bn under the revised outlook."
That what you pay the big bucks for, expert costings that are blowout by 1.37 times in less time than two years later.
Maybe he used the same calculator the coalition used when calculating Labors FTTP NBN cost during the 2013 election, of course those figures turned out to be heavily inflated. 2016 and still no promised NBN to half the country.You need to first substantiate the basis of your $100bn figure before moving on to other numbers.
For the fifth time, on what information do you base that figure ?
You could always ask Tisme by PM if you like.Maybe he used the same calculator the coalition used when calculating Labors FTTP NBN cost during the 2013 election, of course those figures turned out to be heavily inflated. 2016 and still no promised NBN to half the country.
Maybe he used the same calculator the coalition used when calculating Labors FTTP NBN cost during the 2013 election, of course those figures turned out to be heavily inflated. 2016 and still no promised NBN to half the country.
You could always ask Tisme by PM if you like.
Based on his responses so far in this thread, I don't fancy your chances getting the answer.
Having now reached the three quarter mark in the financial year to June 30 2017, it's perhaps time to review the progress of the rollout.
4,531,300 premises have now been passed as at March 30 leaving 910,700 to be passed to reach the June 30 target of 5,442k in the 2016 corporate plan. The average weekly rate required to reach this target over the next 13 weeks to June 29 is 70,054. The rollout over the last 7 weeks to March 30 has passed 439,214 premises at an average rate of 62,745 per week. The average rate over the 13 weeks from Dec 29 to March 30 is 59,448 per week.
This progress indicates that if the rollout falls short of the June 30 2017 target above, it will only be by a small margin.
I can't fault the work ethic of the NBN workers at ground level. They've been working long hours, 8-7PM and even as late as 9pm, working Sundays too. So it's good to see their hard work is making progress. The interesting thing is that last year they seemed to shift the rollout schedule, all of a sudden places such as mine that had no date were being built a few months later and other places that had a date marked for the next 6 months have been put back years.
I have heard though that NBN co are targeting areas they can roll out FTTN faster which is regional areas where they generally aren't contending with concrete path ways over their node positions and problematic traffic. If this is true their ambitious roll-out targets are likely to hit a few snags later in the roll-out but politically speaking might be late enough that it won't hurt Turnbull at the 2019 election given they would still have a year to complete the roll out post election.
Have you compared connection ready to cable roughed in data?
Was this reply meant for me or Drsmith? I didn't present any data.
There's no doubt that 2017/18 will be the acid test as they have to sustain an average of 70k premises per week to reach the June 30 2018 target of 9.1m (9,062k in 2016 corporate plan). That being said, HFC should be in full swing which should help boost the numbers. There's some scope for catch up in 2018/19 if June 30 2018 falls a little short.I can't fault the work ethic of the NBN workers at ground level. They've been working long hours, 8-7PM and even as late as 9pm, working Sundays too. So it's good to see their hard work is making progress. The interesting thing is that last year they seemed to shift the rollout schedule, all of a sudden places such as mine that had no date were being built a few months later and other places that had a date marked for the next 6 months have been put back years.
I have heard though that NBN co are targeting areas they can roll out FTTN faster which is regional areas where they generally aren't contending with concrete path ways over their node positions and problematic traffic. If this is true their ambitious roll-out targets are likely to hit a few snags later in the roll-out but politically speaking might be late enough that it won't hurt Turnbull at the 2019 election given they would still have a year to complete the roll out post election.
Mr Ryan said NBN would make a further one million premises ready for service by the end of the financial year.
"The reality is, the only way you make one million FTTP RFS (ready for service) in three months in Australia – is to leverage existing network assets," he said.
"The other exciting point for me to make here is that nearly every home in this country is either in build, design or construction."
Regardless of how many premises are being passed, those numbers mean diddly-squat. In areas like our suburb where FTTN is planned - and we're still only scheduled for the second quarter 2018 - the copper between node and premises is still a very limiting factor. New cables have been put in between Exchange and roadside nodes less than ten years ago, but the conduits from there to homes are badly corroded and frequently flooded, rendering even simple phone calls scratchy and unreliable; ADSL 2+ doesn't stand a chance. It's the final leg that needs to be replaced. Otherwise, a large portion of several thousand premises in our suburb might as well stay with 4G wireless and make do with speeds between 1 and 10 Mbps.5,442k premises passed
No doubt about that.We have Optus 4G wireless and download speeds are generally around 10Mbps.
I'm wondering how quick 5G wireless will be? NBN infrastructure may well end up being a monumental waste of $$$ if wireless continues to become quicker and quicker.
http://www.news.com.au/technology/g...g/news-story/f0d7227b7cbc95630c768bee8b17e854
Hello and welcome to Aussie Stock Forums!
To gain full access you must register. Registration is free and takes only a few seconds to complete.
Already a member? Log in here.