[ It's unclear whether this particular news is a bit of a beat-up, or indicates a serious failure by suppliers and regulators.

[ But I'm wondering what the magnitude of the obsolesence trap was.

[ Relying mostly on Wikipedia pages:

[ 3G beginnings:
[ -  May 2001 as a pre-release (test) of W-CDMA
[ -  In Australia, Hutchison/3 in June 2003, fully available 2006?

[ 4G beginnings:
[ -  In Australia from 2011/12

[ 3G-only new-device sales ended when?

[ Warnings of 3G closedown appear to have been 15 months or so
  (although Telstra claims to have given 5 years' notice?)

[ 3G closedown
[ -   In Australia, Dec 2023, mid-2024 and finally Aug 2024

[ Realistically, it's a maximum of nearly 20 years of life, with all early handsets, many mid-period handsets - and maybe some late-period handsets? - condemned to die with the network.

[ What's the longevity of handsets been like?

[ Some people are into fashion-purchasing, and many delight in the extended functionality that high-speed data-transmission has brought.

[ But many people *don't* live in the modern, eyes-glued-to-screen-crossing-the-street world, and use a handset as a mobile phone and SMS device. Are there reasonably inexpensive options for them? ]


3G shutdown to affect more customers' access to Triple Zero
More than a million users at risk, if they don't change handsets.
Richard Chirgwin
itNews
Apr 9 2024 11:50AM
https://www.itnews.com.au/news/3g-shutdown-to-affect-more-customers-access-to-triple-zero-606795

More than a million users at risk, if they don't change handsets.

[ I'm not sure that 'risk' is an appropriate word, given that a considerable proportion of the >1m handsets won't work, period, and some proportion of those affected aren't techno-literate, and some proportion may feel the pinch when they go to buy a new phone and plan. ]


More than a million phones could be impacted by 3G network shutdowns later this year, a telecommunications working group set up to monitor the closures has told communications minister Michelle Rowland.

3G shutdown to affect more customers' access to Triple Zero
When Telstra and Optus close their 3G networks later this year, customers who haven’t updated their handsets will lose access to 3G-based services.

The shutdown will also affect other applications, such as internet of things and medical alert devices.

Some older 4G handsets that don’t support voice-over-LTE revert to 3G for emergency calls, so will also be impacted.

In response to growing concerns in regional and remote communities, the government convened a working group to try to manage the issue.

The working group comprises Telstra, Optus, TPG Telecom and the Australian Mobile Telecommunications Association (AMTA).

“A key concern for government is the subset of 4G-enabled devices that default to 3G when making emergency calls," Rowland said in a statement.

“I was first briefed by my department in early March that up to 740,000 4G handsets may not be able to make emergency calls following the switchover, and this figure was recently revised to up to one million following the formal reporting request I made to industry.

[ Announcements of closure date back to late 2022 and early 2023, but no-one noticed that 3G-only phones weren't the only devices affected? ]


“I did not consider that consumers had enough awareness of this problem, or information to address it.

"That’s why I immediately requested industry stand up a working group to improve information sharing between mobile carriers, establish fortnightly reporting to government, and scale up customer communications.”

The working group will be reporting to the government on a fortnightly basis.

Opposition communications spokesperson David Coleman has called the minister “negligent”, telling the ABC the AMTA was first in touch with the government last November.

[ Nov 2023? The switch-off dates for the networks were as early as Dec 2023, and finish in May and Aug 2023. ]


This week, Telstra launched a tool to help customers find out if they're impacted by the shutdown.

As explained here, customers can text "3" to 3498, and Telstra will reply telling them if they need to take action.

[ https://www.telstra.com.au/exchange/3gxt-3g-closure-sms ]

[ It's not clear whether the replies address the 000 fallback issue. ]


--
Roger Clarke                            mailto:[email protected]
T: +61 2 6288 6916   http://www.xamax.com.au  http://www.rogerclarke.com

Xamax Consultancy Pty Ltd 78 Sidaway St, Chapman ACT 2611 AUSTRALIA
Visiting Professorial Fellow                          UNSW Law & Justice
Visiting Professor in Computer Science    Australian National University
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