MasterSpinnaker
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if you have any questions regarding products Telstra offer, post them and I will answer. I work for the company.
rawk.
rawk.
Why does a corporation have a monopoly on our telecommunication lines when these copper highways were supposed to be considered national property?MasterSpinnaker said:if you have any questions regarding products Telstra offer, post them and I will answer. I work for the company.
rawk.
1. the reason telstra holds the monopoly is that it was the first company to have them: telstra used to be the Post Master General's office, but come the turn of the 20th century, they split and Telecom (now known as Telstra) and Australia Post. Telecom then went about setting up the copper wiring system for telephones and have done slow gradual upgrades since then. And then around the 80's (i think) a young upstart company called Optus came along to challenge Telecom, which was still at that time, government owned. Optus didnt think it financially viable to spend billions investing in their own infrastructure, so they rented the lines from Telecom (soon to be Telstra). Other companies then came out of the works and saw this as viable. Telstra doesnt have a monopoly on PURPOSE, thats just the way it happened.Serius said:Why does a corporation have a monopoly on our telecommunication lines when these copper highways were supposed to be considered national property?
Is this fair to other companies?
why are you crippling our broadband industry?
would you support legislation that seeks to nationalise telstra again?[of course shareholders would be paid nothing, just like they deserve]
Do you beleive your corporation would be willing to sell the last section of copper wire to the government in exchange for our 17% holding in telstra? why/why not?
Yes... you are. Your plans are horrible so in a pathetic attempt to stop competitors giving better deals you try and stop them using your network, or charge them ridiculous amounts to use it. Then you refuse to invest in improving the infrastructure because the ACCC will make you give your competitors access. If you weren't so interested in ripping people off you could build some kind of fibre network, lease it to competitors and still have better prices than them.MasterSpinnaker said:3. we arent crippling our broadband industry. like i said: ownership issues. shareholders dont see it as a viable investment to upgrade the copper wiring system. so instead, telstra went about it another way. we created NEXTG. what NEXTG does is provide speeds of up to 7.2mbps wirelessly. Whether it be on your mobile or on a data card. Upgrades are planned for late to early next year to upgrade that to 14.4mbps....data cards will evolve and plans will get cheaper, people just dont know it yet. now who said we're holding broadband back? think outside the copper wire....
lol, its like your blaming me for the "evils" of Telstra. anyway, that's is your opinion and i respect that, but let me say this:iamsickofyear12 said:Yes... you are. Your plans are horrible so in a pathetic attempt to stop competitors giving better deals you try and stop them using your network, or charge them ridiculous amounts to use it. Then you refuse to invest in improving the infrastructure because the ACCC will make you give your competitors access. If you weren't so interested in ripping people off you could build some kind of fibre network, lease it to competitors and still have better prices than them.
NextG is a fucking joke. The biggest quota you can get is something like 3GB and that's going to cost $150. I use that much in 1 day. It is only useful for people who need to access the internet while on the move. It is not a reasonable solution for home use. It's not a realistic alternative to physical cables.
All you do is take advantage of people who don't know any better, tricking them with seemingly good deals and locking them into 24 month contracts that cost them more in the long term.
Thank god for the G9 and the ACCC. You guys are a fucking disgrace.
it sneezed in a sandstorm...obviously!DeathB4Life said:how did the sphinx lose its nose?
You work for and support them so you are also to blame.MasterSpinnaker said:lol, its like your blaming me for the "evils" of Telstra. anyway, that's is your opinion and i respect that, but let me say this:
NextG is an unfinished product. a network less than 6 months old that is still being expanded and worked on as we speak. it's the fastest network rollout in the world and it is set to be the fastest data network in the world when its finished in mid to late 08. dont judge an unfinished book by its unfinished cover is all i say to you.
1 more thing, if we drop prices to be more competitive, the ACCC has a field day saying that we're undermining competitors who can never match it. its a balance; we have high wireless broadband prices because we have the largest network. if we were to lower our prices (which every single telstra employee would LOVE to see happen, i shit you not) we would be slapped with a regulation warning/fine for undercutting the competitors. dont blame telstra, blame the whiny competitors who cant keep up. how about the competitors all kick in for the fibre network upgrades instead of telstra paying for all of it and then being undercut by its competitors?
Well every profesional in the field beleives it is broke, our internet speeds are starting to make us look like a third world country. Our telecommunications are unreliable[although i must admit have gotten lots better recently] and there is nowhere near enough competition.to be honest, i dont think so. its something that's in the too hard basket right now. telstra seems to be kicking along well and if it aint broke, dont fix it.
The wireless telstra uses (and any other company) is supplied to your laptop by microwave towers if im not mistaken. As a result, no australian ISP will be able to offer you internet overseas. Im pretty sure the only way you could achieve internet anywhere would be by utilising a satellite connection, and this is in no way cheap nor very mobile.CSI: CRIMES ™ said:may i ask, when you're travelling overseas, and you've got a laptop with telstra as its provider, how can you use telstra overseas, seeing that it would connect to a different server wouldn't they? or do you need wireless?
Most likely Telstra has set up a agreement with the telecommunications provider in the other country.CSI: CRIMES ™ said:may i ask, when you're travelling overseas, and you've got a laptop with telstra as its provider, how can you use telstra overseas, seeing that it would connect to a different server wouldn't they? or do you need wireless?