On 22/05/14 10:03, Paul Brooks wrote: > ... If NBN built such a WiFi facility in, it would be providing a retail > service ...
The NBN could provide WiFi connectivity via retailers, just as it does the wired service. It would require NBN to install and maintain more hardware, but there would be considerable benefit for the customers and for NBN Co. The customer could still choose to install the own router as well, if they wished. Working out how to support WiFi would not be easy, or cheap. But no one said building a National Broadband Network was easy or cheap. The debate has been about Fibre-To-The-Premises versus "Node", but it is not nodes or premises which need the network, it is "People". A system which delivers the network to a box attached to the outside of a house is incomplete. Imagine you are a teco customer service representative talking to a customer: CSR: "Yes, sir, we have delivered broadband to your front door!" Customer: "Thanks, but how do I get it in the study and out back on the patio?" CSO: "Sorry sir, that is not our problem, we got it to the front door." Customer: "Well that is no use, take it away and I will use wireless instead." CSO: "Excellent choice sir, for only twice the price we can deliver one tenth the data. Now we just have to install this tower in your backyard. ...". ;-) -- Tom Worthington FACS CP, TomW Communications Pty Ltd. t: 0419496150 The Higher Education Whisperer http://blog.highereducationwhisperer.com/ PO Box 13, Belconnen ACT 2617, Australia http://www.tomw.net.au Liability limited by a scheme approved under Professional Standards Legislation Adjunct Senior Lecturer, Research School of Computer Science, Australian National University http://cs.anu.edu.au/courses/COMP7310/ _______________________________________________ Link mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link
