tstur.com
Thomas Stur's Blog.: 2013-11-17
http://tstur.com/2013_11_17_archive.html
Life, Travel, Technology and Other Ramblings. Sunday, November 17, 2013. The facts on some of Australian political 'issues' as I find them. A note on bias:. I am certain I have bias about these issues (as does most everyone), so if you have an article which focuses on the facts but shows it from a different point of view, let me know in the comments. Australian Government Fact Sheet: Asylum seekers and refugees: What are the facts. Which countries are they coming from? Are they queue jumping? View my com...
savethenbn.com
Save the NBN || Economic
http://www.savethenbn.com/economic.php
How are we paying? Can we afford it? What should we pay for? Peak funding required: $44.1 Billion. Capital cost: $37.4 Billion. Government contribution: $30.4 Billion. Cost of rolling out fibre is split amongst private investors and taxpayers. With this method, investors (Early adopters and businesses) subsidise connections for the rest of the country, making it cheaper to rollout fibre on a per premesis basis. Peak funding required: $29.5 Billion. Capital cost: $20.4 Billion. Examining current telecommu...
nbnconcerns.wordpress.com
Will NBN pricing go up and up? | NBN Concerns
https://nbnconcerns.wordpress.com/2011/08/23/nbn-price-increases
A plain-English, referenced guide to your National Broadband Network concerns. Will the NBN be too expensive? Will NBN pricing go up and up? 23 August, 2011. Malcolm Turnbull’s latest piece of anti-NBN information came in the form of a Liberal party press release on 22nd August 2011, entitled. Consumers will pay for Conroy’s roadmap to monopoly. In it, he made numerous claims about future NBN pricing, referring to a discussion paper. The paper actually specifies the following, in relation to NBN’s ...
nbnconcerns.wordpress.com
Can we leave the NBN to the private sector? | NBN Concerns
https://nbnconcerns.wordpress.com/2011/05/15/private-build
A plain-English, referenced guide to your National Broadband Network concerns. Will the NBN be obsolete before it’s finished? Will the NBN be too expensive? Can we leave the NBN to the private sector? 15 May, 2011. So would such a proposal work? Has it worked in the past? Does it work elsewhere? Could we be better off? Would a private company build the NBN? For a private company to make an investment, they require a commercial return on that investment, because their primary objective is to earn a profit...
nbnconcerns.wordpress.com
Will the NBN be obsolete before it’s finished? | NBN Concerns
https://nbnconcerns.wordpress.com/2011/04/22/obsolete
A plain-English, referenced guide to your National Broadband Network concerns. Can we leave the NBN to the private sector? Will the NBN be obsolete before it’s finished? 22 April, 2011. With the constant march of technology, there are often concerns expressed that the NBN may be obsolete before it’s even finished. So what are the chances of this happening, and what technologies could potentially make the NBN obsolete? The strands of glass fibre used in NBN cables is technically the same as the fibre used...
fibre4all.wordpress.com
Fibre Optic to Every Australian Home | Fibre 4 All Australians
https://fibre4all.wordpress.com/2012/09/30/hello-world
Fibre 4 All Australians. Expand The Fibre Footprint. Fibre Optic to Every Australian Home. Web logo for Fibre $ All.org. This entry was posted on September 30, 2012 by eyemakeart. It was filed under Uncategorized. And was tagged with Blog. NBN is now working for this. Hope that by year 2016 every home even in rural areas have NBN Fibre connection. November 11, 2013 at 9:24 am. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Follow Blog via Email.
fibre4all.wordpress.com
Your Options | Fibre 4 All Australians
https://fibre4all.wordpress.com/your-options
Fibre 4 All Australians. Expand The Fibre Footprint. 1 Click here to Email the Communications Minister. 8211; Stephen Conroy. Senator Stephen Conroy, Minister for Broadband, Communications and Digital Economy for Australia; opens the ICANN 35 meeting in Sydney. (Photo credit: Wikipedia). Minister Conroy sits on the board of the NBNco. And is the publics only voice at that table. Here is some suggested text to include in your letter. 8220;Dear Minister Conroy. Which I regard as a second rate. 2 C lick Here.
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