
Good to see nbnco are coming out with more information, the silence was deafening.
bugger. silly me for relying on AdelaideNow copy/paste skills. i'll delete my prev post.Ben wrote:I saw that list on AdelaideNow too Wayno but don't know how accurate it is. forexample both my home and work suburbs Clovelly Park and Bedford Park are included in the AdelaideNow list but are not on the NBN list...
FURTHER construction of the Federal Government's high-speed National Broadband Network begins today in Adelaide's southern suburbs.
Work starts at Port Willunga, Aldinga, Aldinga Beach and McLaren Vale, and follows construction already underway at Stirling, Crafers, and suburbs around Modbury and Prospect, and last year's roll-out in Willunga.
Willunga was one of five trial sites throughout Australia last year, and the southern suburbs will be the first to get work on the high-speed network since Prime Minister Julia Gillard last month announced a major roll-out to more than 327,300 premises within the next three years, and 3.5 million premises nationally.
Member for Kingston Amanda Rishworth said she was delighted people in her electorate now would have the chance to get ahead of the curve.
"We are making real progress rolling out the National Broadband Network," she said.
"Businesses are already using the NBN to develop new and efficient ways of doing things and small businesses are accessing services that previously only big corporations could afford."
Prime Minister Julia Gillard has announced construction of the fibre-optic cable section of the $35.9 billion network will be under way or completed in areas containing 3.5 million homes and businesses in 1500 towns and suburbs across Australia by June 2015.
It further hopes to deliver high-speed fibre cable broadband services to 93 per cent of homes, schools and businesses by 2021.
The Opposition claims Ms Gillard's promises are a mirage that will allow Labor to go to a third election with the NBN as one of their key agendas without delivering substantial works.
There was a list I saw a few months ago showing the national breakdown of seats, who holds them, and when NBN rollout was expected. Overall it was very well balanced.Waewick wrote:living in a state safe liberal seat which doesn't even have a date of work commencing....we know it was a Labor and Independents agreement
I know Wayno wants us to avoid the political comparisons, but the only way this article could have been more political is if it was written by Gillard and Swan themselves. It completely glosses over the overkill factor of having every single home connected (high speed porn for everyone).Maximus wrote:And, even though the author specifically states he wants to "avoid politics", there's a strong political stench to my nose.
I thought the point of the NBN and most other infrastructure projects is to build it for the future. Like imagine building a freeway for $76m that only goes one-way because that's all the people really need at the time, and it was cheaper and quicker to build, then 20 years later when it needs to be widened so it goes both ways, costs more than $500m.claybro wrote:It completely glosses over the overkill factor of having every single home connected (high speed porn for everyone).
Correct. But I guess instead of building a 2 way freeway from the outset, we are building an 20 lane tunnel with on ramps for every street, which will all require replacement in 30 years. This is probably a better comparison of the current NBN.metro wrote:I thought the point of the NBN and most other infrastructure projects is to build it for the future. Like imagine building a freeway for $76m that only goes one-way because that's all the people really need at the time, and it was cheaper and quicker to build, then 20 years later when it needs to be widened so it goes both ways, costs more than $500m.claybro wrote:It completely glosses over the overkill factor of having every single home connected (high speed porn for everyone).
I think that's a major overstatement. Considering the traffic we expect to move onto the Internet in the near future.claybro wrote:Correct. But I guess instead of building a 2 way freeway from the outset, we are building an 20 lane tunnel with on ramps for every street, which will all require replacement in 30 years. This is probably a better comparison of the current NBN.
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