* As of today, a lucky selection of Optus customers in Canberra (who live in 
Dickson or Manuka) will have the opportunity to sign up to get a 5G home Wi-Fi 
service.

* Optus says it has launched an additional live site in Sydney and 47 more 
sites are planned to be online by March this year.

* Optus has opened expressions of interest today allowing customers to register 
their interest for 5G home broadband in certain areas of selected suburbs 
including 23 in NSW, 13 in Queensland and nine in the ACT

* Optus will confirm that they have received your submission and will keep you 
updated on the progress of your Expression of Interest.


Optus has launched parts of its early 5G network ...

By Nick Whigham February 1, 201911:14am
https://www.news.com.au/technology/online/optus-flicks-switch-on-5g-home-broadband-for-lucky-few/news-story/1d09491f3737df585c6a782e39f3c16d

and https://www.optus.com.au/shop/broadband/5g#5gAvailability


Optus has flicked the switch on parts of its 5G enabled network, giving 
customers a chance to get their first taste of the new mobile technology.

As of today, a selection of Optus customers in Canberra (who live in two 
specific suburbs) will have the opportunity to sign up to get a 5G home Wi-Fi 
service.

For $70 a month, the unlimited 5G home broadband offer comes with a 50Mbps 
satisfaction guarantee and holds the promise of delivering up to 1Gbps peak 
speed in the future.

Optus says it has launched an additional live site in Sydney and 47 more sites 
are planned to be online by March this year.

The service will allow Aussie customers to access 5G speeds through wireless 
home internet, such as on mobiles and laptops on Wi-Fi.

“This is a historic day for Optus as we begin our exciting 5G journey with the 
announcement of Optus’ 5G Home Broadband service,” Optus chief executive Allen 
Lew said.

Late last year, the telco announced it had completed live 5G trials in Sydney 
and promised to turn on parts of its 5G network in Canberra in January.

“After successfully concluding live 5G trials in Sydney, we are on track to 
commercially launch fixed-wireless access services in January 2019,” Mr Lew 
said at the time.

The company cut it close, choosing the final day of the month to make good on 
the promise, switching on 5G sites in two Canberra suburbs: Dickson and Manuka.

As Telstra and Optus jostle to lead the 5G race in Australia, both companies 
are keen to tout any developments, no matter how ceremonial.

Nonetheless, it’s a notable milestone in the move towards 5G services for Optus 
but very few consumers will actually be able to enjoy it just yet, and those 
lucky few with access will still need 5G compatible equipment.

Optus has teamed up with Nokia to provide the gear — supplying a 5G RAN and 
Fastmile 5G CPE — to eligible customers who sign up to an expressions of 
interest campaign launched today. Optus said an off-the-shelf product will be 
available in the coming months.

“We will have more 5G sites going live across Adelaide, Brisbane, Canberra, 
Perth and Sydney over the coming months giving a select group of customers the 
chance to get their hands on our 5G Home Broadband devices in areas of selected 
suburbs,” Mr Lew said.

“We will open the service up to more customers and more locations as more 
devices are released and our 5G cells continue to rollout.”

Optus has opened expressions of interest today allowing customers to register 
their interest for 5G home broadband which it plans to bring to 60 suburbs 
around the country by March this year. You can see the full list of suburbs at 
the bottom of this article.

Optus plans to deliver 5G sites across the ACT, Victoria, New South Wales, 
Queensland, South Australia and Western Australia by March 2020.

That timeline puts it behind Telstra which earlier this month announced it had 
signed deals with certain smartphone manufacturers to bring new 5G phones 
“exclusively” to its 5G mobile network in the first half of the year.

Optus had teamed up with Chinese telecom giant Huawei for parts of its rollout 
but was forced to make some changes after the government banned Huawei 
equipment from being used in Australia’s 5G networks.

This morning Optus confirmed it had tapped Finish vendor Nokia for greater 
participation in its network upgrade.

“We currently have three live in-network 5G cells, but we will be turbocharging 
our rollout over the next 12 months to deliver 5G cells on the Optus Mobile 
Network across Australia with the goal of putting this exciting technology into 
the hands of our customers as soon as possible,” Mr Lew said.

“We will continue to adopt a multi-vendor approach to our network technology 
infrastructure that will drive innovation and competition.”

As the telco works towards having 1200 5G sites up and running by 2020, the 
Optus boss said they will include residential locations and other key customer 
hotspots surrounding airports, train stations, sports stadiums and CBD 
locations.

WHAT DOES 5G PROMISE?

At a consumer level, 5G promises more bandwidth and speedier connections giving 
you the ability, for example, to download HD movies to your phone in seconds.

You be able to enjoy super-fast downloads, high-quality streaming and gaming, 
and future advancements in emerging trends such as augmented reality and real 
time virtual gaming.

An important factor will be reduced latency — the slight lag in the transfer of 
data. That will make a critical difference in robotics, gaming and augmented 
reality, where shaving milliseconds is crucial. It will reduce from around 60 
milliseconds on 4G to 1 millisecond on 5G.

The new communications technology is also considered vital to provide the super 
quick response time needed for autonomous vehicles on a large scale.

The technology will also underpin a plethora of sensor-enabled devices that 
will do everything from tracking cargo, to measuring weather patterns and 
providing other smart metering applications.

This world of connected devices is known as the as the Internet of Things and 
the expected boon to manufacturing, mining, transport logistics, agriculture 
and other industries is sometimes referred to as the fourth industrial 
revolution by the true believers.

In describing its potential earlier this month, Telstra CEO Andy Penn said it 
will digitise the physical world.

“As the physical world becomes infused with the digital world, you’ve got the 
connectivity to harness that data, you’ve got the computing capacity and power 
to process that data in the cloud and you’ve got the AI engines to actually 
turn them into close looped systems,” Mr Penn said. “That will lead to an 
incredible world of automation.”

ACT

Barton

Campbell

Dickson

Franklin

Harrison

Mitchell

Russell

Wanniassa

Weetangera

NEW SOUTH WALES

Bidwill

Blackett

Bonnyrigg

Daleys Point

Dharruk

Emerton

Glendenning

Koolewong

Lethbridge Park

Minchinbury

Niagara Park

Phegans Bay

Richmond Lowlands

Shalvey

Springfield

St Huberts Island

St Johns Park

Tascott

Tregear

Warriewood

Warwick Farm

Woy Woy Bay

Yattalunga

QUEENSLAND

Auchenflower

Bellbird Park

Brookwater

Burpengary

Camira

Clayfield

Gailes

Goodna

Kallangur

Kenmore

Kenmore Hills

Macgregor

Newmarket

WESTERN AUSTRALIA

Bellevue

City Beach

Eden Hill

Henderson

Hilton

Kiara

Lockridge

Midland

Mosman Park

Orange Grove

South Guildford

Wattleup

White Gum Valley

SOUTH AUSTRALIA

Old Reynella

Reynella East

Trott Park
_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to