It’ll be exception now, but will just turn to “ordinary” down the track as more 
subscribers come on-board & requirements for applications and media increase. 
Not to mention that there’s still latency issues.

Same thing happened with 2G, 3G, and every other “G” prior. The only thing that 
LTE killed (IMHO) is WiMAX, which has pretty much sunk without a trace.

Cheers
Ken

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of David Connors
Sent: Tuesday, 31 December 2013 2:05 PM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: NBN Petition

It is great that you managed to get it sorted - I'd always thought it was an 
artificial/market segmentation thing by T to now cannibalise EoC/fibre business 
services.

In other interesting Internet related news, the last of analogue TV gets turned 
off when we tick over to 1 Jan 2014. The end of 2014 and 1 Jan 2015 see the 
licenses commence for 2.5GHz and 700MHz respectively. It is going to be really 
interesting to see this play out. The performance of Telstra's LTE-A network @ 
7xxMHz will be exceptional. I bought one of those new Telstra 4G/WiFi hotspots 
the other day to throw in my backpack: 99.58mbps down and 45mbps up 
(http://www.speedtest.net/my-result/3195768480).

David Connors
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> | M +61 417 189 363
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