Frankly it's a travesty that there should be geographic price specificity.
The whole justification for a government monopoly on internet wholesale was
to avoid the sort of penalisation of remote areas that happens in a free
market.
I don't see the NBN's focus on delivery in the last mile has
Our uplink seems to be working fine.
Sent from Mobile.
On May 1, 2019, 10:34 PM, at 10:34 PM, Matt Perkins
wrote:
>Hi All,
>
> Is anyone else effected by this mornings outage on Telstra DA at
>Global Switch Ultimo.
>
>
>Matt.
>
>
>
>
>--
>/* Matt Perkins
> Direct 1300 137 379
I’d say it’s now spread to EA, looks like the entire Chassis at Chatswood is
dead and is going to need to be replaced. We’ve had our EA aggregated head-end
at GSW hard down since around 0820 this morning, flapping before that, they say
it’s also affecting consumer services in affected New
Hi All,
Is anyone else effected by this mornings outage on Telstra DA at
Global Switch Ultimo.
Matt.
--
/* Matt Perkins
Direct 1300 137 379Spectrum Networks Ptd. Ltd.
Office 1300 133 299m...@spectrum.com.au
Level 6, 350
Apparently the co-contribution installation cost will not exceed $5000, but
keep in mind that it's only available in areas already serviced by FttP,
FttN/B, FttC and HFC. So unfortunately it isn't currently an option for those
wanting to get away from the pains of Fixed Wireless.
NBN give
That was my first thought too and I couldn't find a concrete figure per month
for it, but I did find a document saying you were eligible for a free build on
a 3 year contract (may be inaccurate/specific to that provider I found offering
that, YMMV) so you'd basically just be paying the up-front
Enterprise Ethernet is certainly a better product, but the costs aren't
necessarily suitable for a residential customer, regardless of the possibility
of a free build (which is not always the case).
-Original Message-
From: James Andrewartha
Sent: Wednesday, 1 May 2019 4:27 PM
To:
On Wed, 1 May 2019, Beeson, Ayden wrote:
> That is spot on, but I haven’t seen a single quote come back that was in the
> price range you would actually consider going ahead with.
>
> Admittedly that was for FTTN -> FTTP upgrades, but still I always got the
> feeling those “choices” were