Telstra invites MPs on Next G drive-by

By Jo Best, ZDNet Australia
01 August 2007 01:42 PM
Tags: telstra, rural, next g, mps, cdma, network, telco, kilometre

After reports that the government is considering forcing Telstra to keep its CDMA network open against the telco's will, Telstra is now offering unconvinced politicians a chance to tour its Next G network.

Telstra has issued an invitation to federal members of parliament and rural industry groups to experience a test drive of the network first hand, with the telco's representatives.

Telstra's Country Wide group MD, Geoff Booth, said: "We want to share an insight into the work we are doing to continually fine tune our network coverage." A spokesperson for the telco said a letter had been sent out to MPs at the end of last week asking them what concerns they had and "to get in the truck with us". One MP in South Australia has already taken up the offer, he added.

Telstra plans to close its CDMA network from January next year, by which time it claims its third generation Next G network will provide equal or better coverage.

The government has repeatedly warned the telco over the network's performances to date, with the Prime Minister telling reporters earlier this month: "Our message is that we want to be completely satisfied that the new system will work effectively and we have sought assurances on that and we will take whatever action is required to guarantee that that occurs."

Telstra recently announced it now expects the Next G rollout to be completed two months ahead of schedule, in mid October. When the deployment is completed, Next G should cover 1.9 million square kilometres -- slightly larger than the 1.6 million square kilometres currently spanned by its CDMA network

Advertisement

Talkback 3 comments

    20mins from centre of Canberra Anonymous -- 01/08/07

    And no Next G reception. GSM 2 bars, no hope with UMTS. Makes you wonder

    it's comments like this... Andrew -- 02/08/07 (in reply to #320083762)

    ...that make Telstra do what they are doing. Users saying their phone won't work, but you have to ask: is coverage quoted there? The GSM service - Telstra's or another provider? Quoting UMTS - yes NextG is UMTS, but at 850MHz. Is this anonymous commentator using a 2100MHz handset? (yes there are people out there thinking they should work). And to top off, the rollout isn't finished yet. I bet they haven't even bothered to try and find out if their area is complete or report the problem (if there really is one). Finally, what handset? We know not all are equal... So speak with Telstra or go to a dealer who knows what they are talking about before sprouting off loose cannon comments like that.
    This debate needs some level heads and factual info - it really doesn't help when it gets politicised. The fact that 'Anonymous' is near Canberra, well make what you want of that!

    Telstra don't care Brad -- 06/08/07 (in reply to #320083769)

    Andrew, do you really think Telstra does anything in response to the public's comments? I think they truly believe that they have such a stronghold over the market that they can do whatever they like.

    I live in a rural area, our CDMA network has pretty good coverage, given the topography of the area, sadly the same can't be said of the NextG signal and yes I purchased a Telstra recommended handset for rural areas.

    I also work in a computer shop that acts as a Telstra dealership and though we would like to be selling a lot more handsets we are having a hard time recommending that our customers give up their CDMA handset for a NextG one, the coverage is simply not good enough. Also you recommend that people speak to Telstra about rollout status, well sorry but I have to laugh. Even as a dealership we hit stone walls trying to get any info out of Telstra regarding NextG. Getting a straight answer is nigh impossible.

    Oh and I don't live near Canberra either so I don't know what you will make of my comments...

Add your opinion

Latest Videos

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Suzanne Tindal Sick of broken tender sites
    Some of the state governments desperately need to invest in more user-friendly tender sites so that looking for information on government tenders doesn't have to be a game of blind man's bluff.
  • Array Cyberwar: What is it good for?
    In this week's episode, Cyberwar. What is Australia's place in the world of digital warfare? What are the implications for the NBN?
  • Array Is wholesale-only backhaul just a pipedream?
    The potential acquisition of Pipe Networks by SP Telemedia has raised the question about whether vertically integrated backhaul providers will mean higher wholesale prices for ISP customers.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured