Telstra: We won't pay for broadband in the bush

Telstra has sought to lay down the law on the vexed issue of delivering broadband Internet services throughout Australia, describing any push to do so as "a waste of resources".

Telstra Countrywide regional managing director Roger Bamber told a rural and remote communications conference in Sydney today the carrier would focus instead on enabling those users without access to broadband to get as close as possible to a 64 Kb Internet connection.

"We didn't build the telephone network for the Internet, but re-engineering the infrastructure so it can carry broadband services would be a waste of resources," Bamber said, going on to defend the use of pair gain technology, which has recently come under fire.

"If the cable is full our job is to provide connectivity through the most cost-effective means and there are far more cost-effective ways to spend our budget than spending AU$2 billion and ten years ripping out the pair gain technology that is already in place."

According to Bamber, ADSL services are available to close to 80 percent of the Australian population, with ISDN services available to 94 percent. He went on to say that Satellite technology was available to those areas which weren't covered by ADSL.

"People who don't have access to ADSL, may well be able to gain access to an ISDN connection, and if not their alternative is to use asynchronous or synchronous satellite," he said.

Bamber claimed that, over the last four years, Telstra had managed to significantly reduce wait times on new connections to regional areas, in some cases by hundreds of days. He added that, while there were problems with the nationwide network, these were not as serious as might have been presented in the past. "The external network is not falling apart," Bamber said. "We have just spend AU$50 million putting gas in the cables in areas where it is required, and the gel that was reported to have failed only affected three percent of the network." Accepting criticism that the current network was not aimed at providing synchronous broadband services throughout Australia Bamber said Telstra had not yet solved the problem of how to provide reasonably priced, cost effective synchoronous Internet access, as there was not yet any technology capable of providing such service to a population as disperse as that of Australia. -The network was built to last for 95 years in the pre-Internet era, our job is on working out how to maximise it," Bamber said.

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Talkback 7 comments

    what a joke areas that cant ha ...Anonymous -- 27/11/02

    what a joke
    areas that cant have adsl can have satalite instead
    hahahaha someone stop me laughing
    I am in this situation, pair gain, new house, 10mins form major city. only option after 8 hours on the phone calling every dept. at telstra is satalite... 1 way approx $300 a month 1gig limit and its VERY VERY expensive to install
    how can they even say thats a comparable option !
    what a joke

    Neither will they pay for it c ...Anonymous -- 27/11/02

    Neither will they pay for it close to capitals apparently. I live a massive

    I cannot believe that 80% of A ...Anonymous -- 27/11/02

    I cannot believe that 80% of Australians have access to ADSL. I live 30 minutes from Newcastle, NSW in Port Stephens where one of the exchanges has ADSL but the other doesn't. I attended a Telstra seminar four months ago and was told that my area would have ADSL prior to Christmas, yet just this week I received an email offering me satellite. No thanks! *0% have access? Crap!

    *Telstra* seeking to “lay down ...IDon’t BelieveIt -- 27/11/02

    *Telstra* seeking to “lay down the law”? What, Ziggy thinks he’s above the duly elected Parliament now???

    Doesn’t surprise me. Wasn’t he hand picked by little “honest” Johnny?

    We all know that figures are c ...Dennis B -- 07/01/03

    We all know that figures are constantly fudged to make products appear more attractive. Comments like 80% Australians.... can mean that somewhere around 8 out of 10 areas we have surveyed... (3 of them close to Sydney and an all Australian community) can have access to the service. Try getting connected anywhere 50Ks out of Adelaide! Sateleite? you have to be kidding, Adelaise cannot handle Satelite in many areas due to terrain shadow, especially around the hills area the same with wireless ADSL. One school in Marryatville could not connect to ADSL because it was 75 yards out of the signal range!!

    Before this technology is accepted widely it has to be reliable, cheap to access and have unlimited exchange. USA has the population that allows this service to be relatively cheap. In Australia the population is far too sparse and disseminated to make this a viable exercise for a long time to come.

    Perhaps we should try a hookup with those US bases at Woomera that can send and receive data at near light speed and bend their beams around the earth. After all they had free rent for their lifetime, courtesy of the arselicking liberals. Ot might be payback time now as a courtesy for the risk we took in having them on our soil.

    Yes its just another case of u ...Anonymous -- 11/01/03

    Yes its just another case of us people living in rural areas getting sub standard services from the high price of fuel to lack of telecomminication services including mobile phone coverage

    Come on people, forget it, we ...Anonymous -- 18/01/03

    Come on people, forget it, we all know that big business runs the country and that we have the best politicians you can buy.

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