Our main problem is population density.  Our urban density is similar to many 
other countries but our rural population density is one of the lowest in the 
world.  To bring connectivity to the outback or the folded rural coasts is a 
real problem.  Currently the government pays companies to fix "black spots".  

We have this stupid duplication of the cellphone network.  We have sold chunks 
of all that local shared spectrum to different companies.  The government makes 
a lot of money privatising our spectrum.  

If we mandated the cell network infrastructure had to interoperate as a single 
cell network, built by different companies but used by all.  We would be able 
to have twice the coverage we have now.

Surely there is some way to do this.

> On 2019/May/09, at 11:22 am, David <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> On 9/05/2019 9:43 am, Kim Holburn wrote:
> 
>> https://www.smh.com.au/business/companies/absurd-accc-s-destructive-telco-fantasy-will-only-make-things-worse-20190508-p51leo.html
> 
>> The commission says TPG has a commercial imperative and the capabilities to 
>> roll out its own mobile network and that the merger would preclude TPG’s 
>> entry, therefore substantially lessening competition.
>> The ACCC might wish for a different telecommunications landscape but that 
>> doesn’t mean it would emerge.
> 
> I think there's a basic conflict between the market-economics dream of many 
> completely independent providers all busily competing with one-another, and 
> the Australian reality.  Constructing independent physical networks in a 
> country like Australia is just stupid.
> 
> David L.

-- 
Kim Holburn
IT Network & Security Consultant
T: +61 2 61402408  M: +61 404072753
mailto:[email protected]  aim://kimholburn
skype://kholburn - PGP Public Key on request 



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