Telstra Opening Network 108
News.com explains that Telstra, Australia's largest phone company is being forced to open their network to competitors.
The article explains that Telstra controls 99% of phone lines to Australian homes, and 75% of "the industry's sales", making them
ten times as large as their biggest rival. With any luck, prices of local calls will drop quite a bit - I hear
my .au friends complain about it all the time. I'm curious to hear
what our Australian readers have to think of this.
Re:The Network (Score:1)
year.
- Jaymz, also pissed off with telstra
.au buddies?! (Score:1)
God what a dork.
Note To Australians and Brits: I get free Local calls, but it doesn't matter as far as data transfer goes because of my $45 a month Cable Modem with no download charges.
A dingo ate Telstra's baby (Score:1)
We've seen this sort of thing happen in America with cable TV providers, and local phone carriers..whenever "competition" is forced on any industry (versus natural competition), it only results in there being more companies that suck..It doesn't really fix anything, imho. Instead of having one company which sucks moderately, you'll have 3 or 4 which *all* suck severely.
Here's an example: USWest has a virtual monopoly over telephone service in southern Arizona. You basically have no choice in who you choose for phone service. However, its a friendly monopoly -- All calls within Tucson city limits are free, and unmetered -- I can call anywhere in town I want, for free, and stay on as long as I want..this includes my ISP's dialup.
Flame away, and scream bloody murder about how all monopolies are evil evil evil, and i'm unamerican and all that... (laugh) I'll continue to enjoy my $13.62/mo phone bill.
Bowie
'Bout Bloody Time (Score:1)
TRANSLATION:
I highly approve of this development in Australian telecommunications.
Re:Localcalls are NOT always untimed (Score:1)
maybe now we'll get better net service! (Score:1)
thats like over $50 us dollars
Re:bring on the competition (Score:1)
ah, the mantra! (Score:1)
Well... Yes, it means the competition doesn't
have to lay their own infrastructure. Less waste.
But... Telstra laid this infrastructure. It's big.
Very expensive. They have to maintain it. They need to recoup both their investment in the first place
and their ongoing maintenance costs. Yet the regulatory authority tends to mandate cheap end user cost and unprohibitive access costs to the competition. I know if I were Telstra I'd be damn pissed about this situation.
Canada's got the same problems (Score:1)
And the crappiest thing is, thety've still got a monopoly on local lines, because we're in the centre-spot of the de-regulation timetable ! They know that they're about to lose the local monopoly too, so they SHOULD be being nicer and nicer, but no such luck...
I used to feel a little smug when speaking with my American friends (some of whom apparently STILL don't have touchtone-- yay free market telcos !), but there's less and less reason for smugness everyday.
I think you're right : Huge, sparsely populated countries are not good breeding grounds for free market telcos. We're disaster areas waiting to happen.
Jes
http://beoscentral.com
Re:Internet side of things... (Score:1)
have a direct satellite connection to the US
(5MBit) and you can get that for 14c/MB.
I think once Optus get their act together and
create some serious competition with the cable
modems the internet costs will drop across
the board. Telstra has a long history of keeping
prices as high as possible until they are
forced to price-cut due to competition.
Telstra opening network (Score:1)
The moral? Get the maximum competition in ASAP and don't think that the telecommunications companies will do ANYTHING that will cut their profits unless compelled to do so.
Tony Page
Double Edged Sword (Score:1)
By allowing all the phone companies around here to hop onto telstras lines removes the key reason why i switched to optus' local network, it wasnt saving 5c/call (although thats nice), it was the fact that i got a decent phone line that i could actually use. Allow everyone to use the same crap lines that have been there for decades and are maintained by a company that likes to halve its support staff every 6 months and you will get rid of this 'other option' that I and many others have taken. All competition does is allow telstra to slash even more staff and lower service standards to new lows, from a net connection point of view. The ACCC really need to kick telstra up the arse in regards to their net service, a cable modem in Australia costs at the lowest $70 and you have a 100mb download cap and 35c/mb thereafter. Telstra need to flesh out a peering agreement with the backbones in the US so they aren't paying by the Mb and hence passing it on 10 fold to the rest of us.
Re:Localcalls are NOT always untimed (Score:1)
My take (Score:1)
Telstra were talking about changing over to untimed calls a while back, that they claimed would actually be cheaper for the average local call (5 minutes) - obviously concerned by people spending hours on a 25c data call. This will put the brakes on that idea, based on what happened with international calls (and rightly so).
Programming is 1% inspiration, and 99% plagiarism.
Re:Uhh... sorta... (Score:1)
Compared to the US it probably is. Compared to the UK it is a lot cheaper. I lived in OZ between '75 and '86 and I still find it incredible that you could talk to someone all day for 20c (at the time ).
Happend in sweden a while ago. (Score:1)
Re:Its fscking Telstra (Score:1)
Every time I spent time in Oz, I particularly remember the poor quality service of Telstra.
Where I was living, telecom were offering xDSL for NZ$79 per month, and that included the connection to their ISP. Plus, initially (now dropped) you could have a couple of tv channels too.
From what I remember, Telecom NZ is quite keen to get in there. While their business practices leave something to be desired, they do offer a pretty good service.
Re:The Network (Score:1)
Problem.
As far as I can tell, the whole 'we own the pipes, you rent the usage' idea can't work for anything but data. Say some big company owns all the powerlines in your area, but allows you to choose who's power you use. So you use 120KWh of electricity, and your supplier puts in 120KWh of electricity. But how do you know you got your supplier's electricity, and not someone elses? If somebody elses supplier starts putting fluctuations into the lines, you start getting fluctuations, even though it's not your supplier. How do things like that work?
Data, is different, as it can be packeted and seperated, ID'd and tracked. So you can mix it in the pipes, and it's all OK.
But Telstra will never do that. Even though the ACCC has now mandated that they open up their lines, did you notice how they're already stalling? Telstra's damn good at that, and has been doing it for ages on other matters (Like the ISP charging thang)
Telstra used to be good, and had some damn funky research labs.
Pity. But that's nostalgia really.
This better not mean timed local phone calls... (Score:1)
Re:Give me Telstra over BT any day (Score:1)
Re:.au buddies?! (Score:1)
Re:What's Happening to SlashDot?! (Score:1)
Comments
Great, if they do it properly this time. (Score:1)
Having the extra competition is going to be a great thing for Australians, who up until now have had little competition in the local call market, and not a great deal more in long distance. About the only thing that has seriously challenged the (few) telcos in Australia is various online service providers introducing Voice Over IP communications, such as OzEmail Phone, which I often use myself.
My concern is that Telstra's provision of services to third parties to resell will result in a great degradation of service for those wishing to use phone lines for data services.
At present Telstra's PSTN network in certain suburban and country areas uses compression of voice channels when in peak usage periods in order to avoid rolling out new equipment to increase the base capacity. eg. if each street block has a 2Mbps pipe to the Telstra network, two blocks may have only 3Mbps between them, One each and one shared between them. In peak periods when this overlap is required by both blocks the Big Box on the corner starts chopping off bits and pieces to fit it all through. While this doesn't seriously degrade a voice call this is guaranteed to destroy any attempt a modem will have to communicate with the outside world.
If Telstra starts selling of its already obviously limited bandwidth, where then is the consumer left who wishes to get online? This is obviously something that must be done in order to open up the market, but in the interim how much will Joe Net-User suffer?
Re:Give me Telstra over BT any day (Score:1)
-Bruce
Censorship testing (Score:2)
fuck,bitch,ass,crap,shit,whore.
If the above is blank, slashdot has implimented a "cursing" filter. Foo.
--
what I hate more than M$: Telefonica & Telecom. (Score:1)
New companies are expected to start giving services by the end of the year, and I'm SURE that they will display similar prices to the current monopolies. Competition? No, nobody want's to screw up the big communications bussiness. They are all friends, they like what they have and will never risk it so nobody is going to really lower prices.
Give me Telstra over BT any day (Score:1)
BT charges per minute. This must have cost Britain an entire industry.
Bad Monopolistic Telcos (Score:1)
Its fscking Telstra (Score:1)
Also, they charge 25cents for an untimed local call, which is not that expensive. C&W Optus have local phone lines available to around 2.2 million people in Sydney (dunno 'bout other capital cities/states), and that costs 20cents per untimed local call.
People! (Score:1)
Would somebody actually spell it right for once? =) It's Telstra, not Telestra
http://www.telstra.com.au/
--
Mark Waterous (mark@projectlinux.org)
Telstra is a fairweather company (Score:1)
The other problem is that telstra is a fair weather company, when things are going ok there pretty good but as soon as a problem hits they don't want to know, and it's a bit hard to go to the opposition when there really isn't one.
We have a good uptake of technology here and while the mobile and other comm's stuff has taken off pretty well, the telstra monopoly tends to stagnate the growth in the other areas. I think this can only be a good thing.
Internet side of things... (Score:1)
(or if they do, its a token accounting book shift of funds that means nothing in real money). ISP's are forced to go throgh Telstra as it's the only provider worth a damn.
People think Microsoft have a monopoly, they're nothing compared to Telstra.
That being said, their level of service is pretty good and their tech support are excellent (perhaps the telephone side of Telstra could learn from the Internet side here). I think my major complaint really is that they invented ISDN, yet they resell it here so @#$#@$ expensive yet the bloody yanks get it for next to nix. Should be the other way 'round.
Telstra has poor service (Score:1)
Some competition is well overdue...
Dragged kicking and screaming (Score:1)
require much technology to move a little noise from one place to
another. It takes only slightly more technology to move data. Each
day wasted allowing some miserable monopoly to take profits and
control access is another wasted day.
At this point, I am willing to consider any alternative to my local
phone and cable company. The place I live is populated by _only_
130,000 people. As a result, neither the phone company or the cable
company consider it profitable to provide more than voice media to
myself and the other customers living here.
I would feel privileged to pay $150 per month for continuous broadband
access. Unfortunatly, people like myself are shut out because the
bureaucratic monopolies can not see a means by which to profit from
this. I am certain that given the opportunity, smaller more efficient
providers could _earn_ enormous profits from people like myself.
Until the Telstra's of the world are set back on their heals and told
to start earning their revenue, nothing will change. I for one feel
no hesitation. Monopolies _always_ breed mediocrity and waste. For
whatever benevolence these institutions have shown, they have been
compensated lavishly. Now is the time for change, progress and
bandwidth.
bring on the competition (Score:1)
I don't live in Australia, but I have this thing that competition is good, and I like it. I mean, who wants one big moron controlling everything?
Monopoly: The other white meat. (Score:1)
After all, when the same company controls ~99% of the local loop cabling, is the largest ISP (BigPond), supplies >70% data comms, and owns >70% of the pipes going overseas, how much do you think they will innovate.
OnRamp ISDN is still ~AU$1000 installation + AU$300/mth.
Thats a single B channel. Dont even get me started on the reliability of their services. Oh, and this is the corporation that because 49% is owned by public shareholders (thanks to our idiotic government -- other 51% still govt owned), has a 'responsibility' to gouge it's customers to keep said shareholders happy.
Can you say horizontal and vertical monopoly? Telstra are Australia's own little MS (and are seriously in bed with them).
I personally think they *should* have kept the local loop as a separate organisation, and have it lease access to other carriers.
Mind you, even with all of my rabid dislike for them, they still keep my mobile phone business (decent coverage).
HTH
Daniel
telstra vs. telestra (Score:1)
yes, it was my mistake. i initially thought it was telstra, as i'd seen all the australians i know type it that way
sorry.
Price is not the issue for Voice connections (Score:1)
However, the moment that you move to data, you get slugged. For a 64k ISDN channel, expect to pay $140 per month rental, plus $135 per month capped call costs. It is vastly cheaper to get an extra phone line and use multilink ppp, but somehow the phone companies here just don't get it.
The other area where Telstra fall down is service. Put simply, it is appalling. I wanted my phone service modified - move the connection point on the house and add an extra outlet. The Telstra service guy didn't turn up on the day, even though they had two months notice. Then when he finally did turn up, he disconnected my monitored alarm service because he didn't know what it was.
If I had a choice of local carrier I'd switch in an instant.
Re:Internet side of things... (Score:1)
on the other hand i am currently using a FREE SIGN UP MONTH with bigpond ( telstra's isp ) where for the whole sum of $0 i have a free unlimited month ( 4 hour cut of period ) 56k dial up and very fast ping times and downlaods
you can hardly say this is fair charging the isps so much for their traffic while offering free sign up hours on their own super fast isp
p.s. telstra are bastards
Re:Its fscking Telstra (Score:1)
The problem: (Score:2)
What really has to happen is something along these lines: The part of Telstra that maintains the actual infrastructure has to be broken away from Telstra the service provider. The service provider side can be sold to the highest bidder, funding whatever our current bloody stupid govt. wants today. The infrastructure side really must stay in public hands - that way it's possible for them to be forced to give a certain level of service everywhere, be it the capital cities or some outstation in Arnhem Land.
If Telstra is privatised, or is forced to compete as it is, then those expensive, non-profitable services will get dropped. They are simply too expensive for a commercial entity to support, and it would be unreasonable to expect them to (hey, it's not real competition if you handicap one player). Asking Telstra to be both commercially competitive and to provide (much needed but) expensive, unprofitable services is ridiculous.
So break them up. It would give us Australian taxpayers some certainty in the services provided us (because of the govt. control of the infrastructure), and it would allow real competition on a completely level playing field (apologies for the cliche). And the govt. could still rake in masses of cash from charging the telco's for using their wires . . . I think it'd be a win-win situation, but even if it set Telstra the company back it'd be way better for the country, and that's far more important.
My 2% of a Universal Currency Unit . . .
himi
Wishing for cheaper net access... (Score:1)
Hopefully this will force them to open up to competition a bit more - when I moved to Optus about a year ago they wouldn't allow you to keep your old number, although it was technically possible.
Unfortunately because of this almost-monopoly, the fastest net connection available to most people is still about 40k on a 56k modem (if you're lucky enough to have a decent phone line) - Telstra is still the only cable modem provider (with very high prices), ISDN is even worse, and both of these are only available in some major cities...
--
Re:Telstra has poor service (Score:1)
Although I do agree that it is a good thing to have competition. Hopefully some other carriers will offer some but priced ISDN services as well. $300 a month for 64k ISDN is shitloads. (That is BEFORE ISP charges)
Their customer service also ins't fanstastic. It has taken me over a week to simply change pricing structure for our ISDN connection.
This is after it took them over a month to install the thing. Which I personally think is pretty poor service especially for busineess customers.
My 2c
Re:Rip off merchants..... (Score:1)
Bring it on (Score:1)
A personal hope is that CWO (Cable and Wireless Optus) provide competative rates for cable modem access. Currently you pay $80 a month for a mere 200mb of data.
You would hope that the competition would lower this to $80 for unlimited downloading or better.
DSL is also scheduled for trialing in Australia over the next 18 months
Zionite
Re:Price is not the issue for Voice connections (Score:1)
Re:Give me Telstra over BT any day (Score:1)
On the subject of Telstra's reliability, last night I tried to use my (BT) phone and there was so much Static and line noise that I couldn't even hear the operator when I phoned report the fault.
It wasn't the phone itself though because when I unplugged it and and tried to connect through my modem, there was so much noise initially that it couldn't handshake ( 3 times in a row) then it couldn't even recognise a dial tone.
Lousy service and stupid prices, and no real alternative, now thats what I call a Microsoft, sorry I meant Monopoly.
You live in hope
I live in the UK
Skraggy
Re:Wishing for cheaper net access... (Score:1)
Costs are the same for untimed local calls. Reliability is excellent.
Ken
Re:The Network (Score:1)
Competion do you really know what that is ? (Score:1)
There are *only* seven million people is CH. 18 in Australia. and the Country is 50 times bigger ( bigger = MUCH higher Transmission and Infrastructure costs).
I'm Australian. Living in Switzerland, And I used to work for Optus. ( Australia # 2 carrier) I have worked in Europe ( switzerland isn't part of euroland is it ? ) and Swiss for diAx ( The # 2 Mobile carrier ).
The reason Switzerland does not have competive prising is the same reason that Australia has poor effective competition. Swisscom ( think Telstra ) has an almost complete monopoly of direct connect ( copper ) throughout the country. And they are not letting go.
By freeing up the competition, in Oz and giving the other carriers access will enable price savings for the smaller carriers. ( currently Telstra charged 8 c ( 7.995 rappen ) for a connection leg ( AT EACH END) which makes a local service for a pre-selected customer cost 16 cents for Optus. If the calls cost 20. cents Optus is only making 4 cents on a preselected local call. Why would they bother ?. Bearing in mind they have to bill the customer and THEN pay telstra for the right to use the Governments Copper.
Price fixing in most indutries by Cartels in Switzerland is the biggest ( and least talked about ) problem in this/your country. Prices will never change while they are not truely subject to market forces and demands. And controlled by the group of comapanies ( or monopolies ) that control these services.
Etc etc etc etc.
mroeder
Re:Telstra has poor service (Score:1)
Re:You may be able to get compensation (Score:1)
I live in the Sydney and was getting a third line put into my house (one voice, one personal modem, one work voice/modem). It took 12 months
I asked about compensation, but was told that this was only related to people who had no preexisting phone service. Hmmmm. It didn't REALLY affect me, so I kept the pressure on more for the fun of abusing Big Brother rather than a real requirement.
It sounds pretty worthless anyway - a lot of damage was done to property in Sydney's eastern suburbs in April this year by a vicious hailstorm, and this included phone service disruption. Telstra got out of their "service guarantee" by claiming it didn't apply during periods of bad weather. Plus they don't compensate you proactively, you have to apply and be aware of your rights to make such a claim.
Competition must be good. However, I've done programming contracts for two of Telstra's competitors, and neither seem at all efficient or well organised, so I ain't holding my breath.
Re:Telstra Cable Modems (ot) (Score:1)
Re:Uhh... sorta... (Score:1)
The beauty of living on the outskirts of Sydney I guess... *sigh*
Re:Dragged kicking and screaming (Score:1)
For people like me the introduction of competition will not make a large difference. How could a small provider, given the same infrastructure, be able to offer a better service and still earn a reasonable profit? I'm sure that if there was a profit to be made then Telstra would have acted on it in the first place.
It's not as if Telstra will lose out completely on this new ruling. I'm sure that these new telecos will have to pay a small commission back to Telstra. After all Telstra would be responsible for servicing and maintaining the network. With this in mind, how will this "commission" be determined? Will this see the introduction of timed local calls? If I swap to a new teleco will that mean that any service faults I report will be put at the bottom of the pile?
If I was Telstra, any services that weren't turning a profit would be pulled like a bad tooth, roots and all. If a competing teleco wants to offer that same service then let them fork out for the instalation and servicing of equipment and lines.
I'm not pro Telstra by any means. I jut know how I would feel if after spending millions of dollars setting up and servicing a business some beuracrat comes along and tells me to share my equipment with a competitor. And to rub salt in to the wound I would still be responsible for maintaining the equipment.
The Network (Score:2)
era) tells me that telecom (what telstra *used* to be
called) was a good telco.
Essentially, it was set up to provide universal phone
access within Australia, for a low price. The engineers
ran the show, top to bottom. They had to, to do what
they did.
Telstra/telecom has deployed what is possibly *the* most
advanced integrated phone network of its size anywhere
in the world. To do that cost the Australian people many
billions of dollars.
So why, may I ask, is it considered Telstra's sole
property?
Here's what *ought* to happen:
Keep the hardware. Sell Telstra. Set up a bandwidth
market, where telcos can buy and sell the capacity that
is available. Some of the money on these bandwidth bonds
can then be put towards new hardware.
That way:
1) No free lunch for Telstra. We The People keep
what we payed for.
2) The network is still run by engineers, not
MS-wannabes.
3) Telstra competes on a level field with everyone
else.
Here's to dreaming
JC.
Re:Telstra has poor service (Score:1)
Telstra was the government department for handling the PSTN, and thats why it has a USO. It owns pretty much all the cable laid in Australia. They don't particularly want to have to service rural Australia, because they don't make any money out there, they'd rather concentrate on the urban areas of Australia.
On the car on the way into work, I heard a soundbite on the radio - apparently Telstra have been offering local call line access to competitors for "the last 18 months".
Eh. I work for a subsidiary of Telstra. Sometimes, its a joy being able to say "I'm sorry, Telstra only guarantee a data transfer of 2400bps. I cant do any more to help you tweak that new 56k internal winmodem"
Gren
Telstra and their network.... (Score:2)
This equipment (anything over 5 years old) was installed by Telstra (or Telecom as it was known) and most of it is just plain shocking. To expect anyone to actually figure out the junk they have installed, and connect your service without destroying some other service at the same time, is just asking for trouble. At a guess, over one tenth of all new installs do not work first time, or upset someone elses service.
Telstra's backbone however is quite nice, and the street wiring is improving. There is still a lot of crud out there, that will not be replaced unless we go fibre, or until it fails (of course).
ISDN is still overpriced here, although the prices are going down, they are no where near as good as they could be. Installation costs are just plain terrible. Leased lines are also way overboard. These are just some of the reasons a lot of companies are looking heavily into Wireless Technology, especially if they have large operations that are not too distantly seperated.
Telstra are also our biggest ISP, and they charge for bandwidth like a wounded bull. At 18 cents per megabyte (or 9 cents per megabyte you SEND, if your incoming bandwidth is less than one tenth (aproxx) of your outgoing bandwidth usage) you damn well expect good service, right? Wrong, unfortunately. The Telstra international link(s) have had packet losses of over 40% on AVERAGE for the last 3 years.
It's a step forward, but personally, I'm worried about the two steps backwards me might be taking elsewhere.
Forgotten my password - Bugger!
Telstra - Competition at last! (Score:1)
The big news I'm waiting for though, is affordable high bandwidth internet access. However, I feel this may be some time coming...
Re:Comment from an Australian reader (Score:1)
Unfortunately, it is in the Telstra T&C that they only have to _guarantee_ a customer (Res. or Bus.) 2400baud (yes, baud; dont start a flame war, I know the difference between bps and baud) on any phone line. Which is a real pr*ck if you like downloading stuff fast from your local ISP (oh, who inevitably buys connectivity from Telstra Internet, a 'wholly separate' entity *cough* *cough*). BUT, if you want your phone line fixed.. ring up their Support line and tell them you're a BigPond (Telstra's Home Internet service) customer, even if you aren't, and voila, spiffy new phone line that'll hold 48,000 for hours. Unless you're on a PairGain system. And don't get me started there, suffice to say that if anyone else in the street makes a phone call you get disconnected. Shit eh.
If only they were as good as they had been.
Justaan
Re:Telstra has poor service (Score:1)
Telstra (Score:2)
seem to be caught between a rock and a hard place.
Re:A dingo ate Telstra's baby - (Score:1)
Being government owned, it did not make profits as big as it does now.. The company often had to provide services that resulted in very low profit margins, particularly for services that were provided for the rural and outback of australia.
Low profits from the rural australia didn't matter to Telstra as much as the extra votes the government would get in favor during the next election! Usually, the extended coverage and affordable costs kept the voters happy..
Since telstra has recently started to privatize, there is growing fear that competition might actually be bad..
To compete successfully with other tel-co's, telstra would have to cut back on spending on those low profit margin services, and divert the funds to more needed paces so that they could be used to curb competition.
In this case, telstra might cut spending on the rural / outback service, in order to to decrease the cost of a local urban call, so that it would match the competition.
As for now, competition is mainly in urban areas
Luckily, telstra still remains 50% government owned, so that low profit services can still operate.. Recently 400 million dollars has been set aside for telstra to install the CDMA [telstra.com.au] cell phone network. Why CDMA? I don't know.. we already have a GSM network covering over 90% of the population... I guess the farmers have been complaining again..
Re:Telstra and their network.... (Score:2)
Forget 'Telsta's network" let them buy parts of it like anybody else, and try to run it with their existing 'service levels'. I wonder how long they'd last?
Stuart Fist, one of the better telecummunications columnists has said that the guvmint could raise revenue by selling domestic users the cable from the street into their home.
This is a great idea; I could get some quality cable instead of the shite Telstra put in.
Stroppy
Re:Uhh... sorta... (Score:1)
Having said that, I think that this decision will be good for Australian telecoms. I'm more excited about the prospect of quicker deployment of DSL and such technologies than about local calls.
Chance for new carriers (Score:1)
carriers like Jtel to become
established.
Re:The problem: (Score:1)
However, I suspect we did our deregulation a little earlier and now have had significant decreases in call prices. Local calls are still free (as provided for in law) too.
I am proud to say that I am no-longer a Telecom customer for my home service or my cell-phone service. Options at last!
I even hear that cable modems will be available next month!
Hurrah!
when old things are new again... (Score:1)
I also believe that what Telstra thinks are it's assets, infact belong to every Australian since our taxes paid for it all in the first place.
As far as I can tell (and other Australians might be able to prove me wrong here) when Telstra was Telecom it wasn't a company (no ACN number?), in fact it's my opion it was an agency and didn't act as an individual.
Government agencys as far as I know don't own the assets their allocated, those infact belong to us the public. Therefore i don't see how telstra can claim to own that which is owned by the Australian Tax Payers, and as far as I'm concerned Telstra should be bought back and a system introduced so that telstra only breaks even, Public owned utilites/assests aren't meant to make huge profits their there to provide a service which is needed.
comments??
Matt
Re:Give me Telstra over BT any day (Score:1)
BT charges per minute. This must have cost Britain an entire industry.
Which industry ? The per-minute charges are trivial for local calls (and all ISPs have local numbers). There are plenty of alternative telcos, some of which even have per-call or no-fee charges for local calls (though they don't apply these to ISP calls).
The interesting aspect of the per-minute billing is the new industry of 'free' ISPs (that make there money by splitting the call charges with their teclo).
Re:Wishing for cheaper net access... (Score:1)
Rip off merchants..... (Score:2)
AUS: 1Mb frame or DDS link: $AU18,000 per year + $0.19 per meg (carrier and data)
US: 1.5MB ADSL: $US60 per month unlimited traffic
OK I'll admit this is not available to all of the US but the AUS 1MB frame is only available within 12Km of the POP (i.e. CBD of Aussie cities) outside of this you only get some expensive ISDN and some unreliable PSTN
shit!
Re:Its fscking Telstra (Score:1)
Will we actually see any change? (Score:2)
I live in the biggest non-capital city in australia, and I can't even get cable access. Even if I could, it would cost me $540 to install, and then $90/month. Every Mb over the limit of 200 is 33cents. Its not exactly what I'd call affordable.
It really shits me when I hear every day about these peeps in the US with xDSL, cable, or faster, whereas I have to dial up on a fucking modem. I wonder why everything with computers is getting bigger better and faster, yet I am still stuck on the same crappy analogue line I was on years ago.
They are *such* a monopoly - I've read many articles on how they are frequently going out of their way to crush smaller companies who try to offer competition. I can't believe this has gone on so long... I sure hope this helps to change something.
nick
Re:Give me Telstra over BT any day (Score:2)
Carriers in Australia can't, by law, implement time-charged local calls for residential customers. Business customers are another matter, though.
There was some talk a couple of years ago about Telstra implementing technology to tell the difference between a voice and a data call, and time charging data calls. Quite frightening, actually. Thankfully, nothing came of it.
Back on topic, this is excellent news, but it comes too late for the mobile phone system. Australia has three sets of GSM cell towers, one belonging to each carrier, due to exactly this kind of pig-headedness on Telstra's part.