After a lengthy wait, NBN Co unveiled its three year plan yesterday — you can read my live coverage here if you’re still keen, or check when and or if it’s coming to a street near you any time soon through the NBN’s coverage check. But what happens now?
Prime Minister Julia Gillard, broadband minister Senator Stephen Conroy and NBN Co CEO Mike Quigley this morning launched the three-year rollout plan for the National Broadband Network. Here’s the full blow-by-blow live report.
NBN Co’s announced that the long-awaited three year rollout plan will be revealed this Thursday, just narrowly making its own self-imposed deadline of “before the end of March”.
Wholesale rates fixed for five years, overseas ISPs coming to Australia and Malcolm Turnbull comparing NBN Co to Scientology? It’s just another week of NBN news, conveniently wrapped for your consumption below.
The NBN is still highly politically provocative project, no matter which side of the fence you sit on. Politics aside, there’s a lot of confusion regarding the NBN. NBN Co’s launched a video series designed to clarify a few key points.
Abbot wanted the NBN axed in order to keep a surplus, Optus let fly with its own NBN pricing and home installations got a little simpler — in theory.
Want to know how your current connection stacks up against NBN speed? NBN Co’s just launched a site that’ll let you work that out — with certain caveats.
The coalition didn’t like technology choices or executive salaries, Primus’ new CEO called for copper to be retained and Optus promises NBN pricing as a pre-Christmas present.
The NBN announced its plans for the next year, Telstra shareholders voted in favour of the NBN deal, and it turns out that NBN plans might not be that expensive after all.
This week, the NBN spent up big, explained things in Armidale and got labelled “Extreme”.