Ballmer cracks Telstra jokes

Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer cracked jokes at a Telstra event today as the telco's live demonstration of 21Mbps speeds on its Next G network came unravelled.

Steve Ballmer at Telstra's
investor day this morning

(Credit: Suzanne Tindal/ZDNet.com.au)

For the full video of Ballmer's Sydney speech on Thursday click here.

"I do have to say, I think I probably did it," laughed Ballmer, pointing out Telstra had already demonstrated the devices involved (which will launch in early 2009) to him privately.

"[Telstra CEO Sol Trujillo] wondered whether we were competing for all those years and we finally got things in constructive partnership and I went and ruined the first 21Mbps wireless demonstration ever. You're going to wonder about me again Sol I'm pretty sure," the Microsoft supremo added, referring to a partnership unveiled yesterday between his company and Telstra.

The telco has been upgrading its Next G network from its current 14.4 Mbps to 21Mbps, work which it hopes to finish by the end of this year. However, despite the high maximum theoretical speeds of the network, until now, devices have only been able to achieve speeds of 7.2Mbps.

The telco had recently announced that it was working together with Sierra Wireless, Qualcomm and Ericsson towards bringing out a faster device. Now Telstra will enjoy the fruits of the collaboration, with what it calls "the world's fastest mobile device" set to come out early next year.

When asked about when handsets might come out capable of 21Mbps speeds, Trujillo was coy. "That's clearly on the road map," he said.

"We're not only working with companies like Sierra and working on the dongle data card side of things, but we're also working with the companies that are in the handset side of things," he said. "Yes we will have devices ... but I'm not going to tell you when, because we like competing to win."

Later on this afternoon Ballmer will address an audience of software developers and Microsoft partners at Sydney's Darling Harbour conference centre; the speech will be broadcast live on ZDNet.com.au from 3:30pm AEST.

Tomorrow the executive is slated to address a business lunch hosted by the Committee for Economic Development of Australia (CEDA) at the Four Seasons Hotel in Sydney.

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Talkback 8 comments

    What about the internet too.Anonymous -- 07/11/08

    Take ZDnets ISP speed test and you know this country has problems. And this idiot government want to instill a unproven nanny filter that's going to slow the net down even more ARRRR S#IT. As for Telstra and Microsoft, Technology for idiots!

    Who cares about speed...Anonymous -- 07/11/08

    ...when Telstra charges ridiculous amounts for data usage. Instead of using your entire 300mb data cap in 5 minutes, you can now chew it up in 3!

    Stupid comment - what else do we expectAnonymous -- 07/11/08 (in reply to #320115780)

    You will always get some jerk that will use the I can waste my allowance in seconds comment. At the end of the day you should choose the right plan for your needs, if you intend on downloading heaps of crap then use a plan that suits, if you intend on checking the occasional e-mail then get the appropriate plan.

    Just another (possibly the same) loser troll

    TrollAnonymous -- 11/11/08 (in reply to #320115805)

    "loser troll"
    Now who's the troll here?
    It is a valid comment. Telstra do have small limits, and like to make profits when people stray over those limits.
    There's no way it costs Telstra the multiple times the base monthly cost they charge you if you use double the monthly quota.

    To get real benefits of ubiquitous Internet access, we need really large quotas, to make people feel free to use services without worrying about charges.

    These worries are a key difference in Australia - why we're so far behind some other countries in e-commerce - compare with the UK for example, where you can start out naked in a dark empty house, and just with a laptop and wireless Internet order & buy almost everything you need, including getting the electricity & gas on, clothes, white goods, furniture, a car, etc., etc.

    How little of that can be done in Australia? An amount of that resistance is because of the costly bandwidth here with low quotas.

    I'm not saying there's a magical answer, but nor should you say that quotas don't have a negative impact.

    All companies offer similar limitsCarl -- 11/11/08 (in reply to #320116003)

    You have singled Telstra out when this is an issue with all companies, at least with Telstra you could be sitting naked in the middle of the bush and get some sort of reception.

    Bandwidth isn't just limited to a bit of radio spectrum but all the way back to the server and information you are trying to access which are often overseas. There is very little competition for global bandwidth and until companies do something about this it will not change.

    The last global cable was a Telstra cable to Hawaii a few months ago and before that there hasn't been another new major cable for several years. A few companies have announced their intentions but little has been delivered and with the current global financial crisis I will not hold my breath.

    Now I can wait for the "yeah but they are still a rip-off" comments to come in when we all know they have a much more superior network, wider coverage and are taking advantage of the fact people are willing to pay more for the privilege to use it.

    I canceled my $70 a month ADSL and only use one internet service now because it is so good and I am not worried about extra downloads because I chose the right plan for my needs.

    Quality is King.Sydney Lawrence -- 13/11/08 (in reply to #320116013)

    Carl thank God for people who don't have a self-serving agenda, don't spew forth truth twisting lies and fairly give credit where credit is due.

    I have a Bigpond Cable connection with excellent speed, unlimited download with a cutback speed limit that I have never exceeded and all for $59.95 per month.

    Ban excess chargesSimon -- 13/11/08 (in reply to #320116209)

    I'd like to see all excess charges banned in favour of rate limiting. If Australia cannot manage uncapped internet access as standard, then unplanned usage should not bankrupt families.

    Anyone with a couple of teenagers will know how difficult it is to judge internet usage. My family churned to rate limited services some years ago. I am always astounded at how many people I meet who do not know about rate limits and excess charges.

    My belief is that the industry has seriously failed Australians by not educating but rather taking advantage of IT ignorance.

    roflYoutube chews it up -- 14/11/08 (in reply to #320116209)

    well syd, heres hoping that for the sake of your limit you never discover the joys of internet beyond your email and webpage browsing... god forbid you try and watch TV, you Tube, or use a music downloading service... your poor limit...

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