Southern Cross resolves cable issues

International carrier Southern Cross Cables said it had fixed a problem with its Internet link between Australia and the United States (US) on Saturday that several local Internet service providers (ISPs) had warned could cause slow international speeds.

The carrier also indicated advisories from at least one ISP on Friday that the problem was caused by a cable break were incorrect, with the outage instead being due to a problem with the so-called unprotected circuits used to supply some services.

iiNet and Internode had issued an outage alert to their customers on Friday, with the latter saying the fault was believed to be due to a cable cut in the US.

"We had an outage on Friday evening going through and it was rectified on Saturday morning," Southern Cross' director of sales and marketing Ross Pfeffer told ZDNet Australia in a brief telephone interview this morning.

The executive said the problem "wasn't a cable break or a fibre break or anything disastrous like that", but an issue had arisen within his company's premises in San Jose in the US.

Pfeffer said the problem affected a few of what he called "unprotected circuits", which are relatively simple point to point connections without redundancy sold by Southern Cross.

"If the circuit is disrupted in any way, then the customer hasn't got any other form of protection," he said.

"If you buy a protected circuit, your services are transmitted effectively over a loop. If one side of the loop breaks the other side's still there."

"It's really a customer decision as to whether they buy protected or unprotected capacity," he concluded.

Advertisement

Talkback 0 comments


Latest Videos

Blogs

  • Chris Duckett PayPal launches Aussie developer program
    PayPal announced the opening of its certification program for Australian developers today, making Australia the first country outside of the US to offer certification.
  • Array Cash cow in a BigTinCan?
    Around one third of Australia's telcos have shut their doors over time, but that isn't stopping new ventures hoping to chip away at carriers' mobile call bonanza. By fighting carriers at the smartphone rather than the home phone, could the latest two contenders be onto something big?
  • Array A third of the way to a zettabyte
    This week on Twisted Wire we look at how internet usage is changing in Australia and around the world. How are we meeting this demand and how is the cost structure changing for the service provider?
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured