At 03:38 PM 8/01/2016, Frank O'Connor you wrote:
>5. Batteries at the consumer end to provide back-up power to the copper and 
>HFC connections. Personally I think they could do away with these and simply 
>let consumers rely on mobiles, but I suppose a sizeable proportion of the 
>public still doesn’t have cell phones, or may not live close to a tower, and 
>I don’t know anything about the node design or circuitry which allows for 
>back-ending line based phone calls, so I guess it may still need to be offered 
>as an option. 

This may be a stupid question, but hey, I'm going to ask it so you all can have 
a laugh.

Let's examine the reason the back-up battery is needed. To operate the phone, 
right, when the NBN goes out? Which at the moment takes its power from the 
copper we have now, but won't when we switch to NBN, otherwise it would all 
still work. So the power goes off. We need a phone for emergencies. If the 
power is off in the area, what is this phone going to operate across? Aren't 
those systems also going to be off? We're told we won't have copper PSTN any 
more, just the NBN. But it needs power to operate. 

What am I missing in this picture?

Jan


I write books. http://janwhitaker.com/?page_id=8

Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
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