Exetel joins IPTV trend with Quickflix services
Exetel will offer unmetered streaming of TV and movie programs provided by Quickflix to its customers next year.
Exetel will offer unmetered streaming of TV and movie programs provided by Quickflix to its customers next year.
The CEO of internet service provider Exetel, Steve Waddington, says the ISP is open to being acquired if the right offer is made, with the company already receiving expressions of interest from other ISPs.
The cost of backhaul from Tasmania to the mainland of Australia for the National Broadband Network could hamper competition among retail service providers (RSP — the NBN equivalent of ISPs) in the state, several industry players say.
Australia’s number three internet service provider (ISP), iiNet, has raised concerns over a number of aspects of NBN Co’s Special Access Undertaking (SAU), lodged to the competition regulator yesterday.
Despite publishing its “final executable” Wholesale Broadband Agreement (WBA), NBN Co has conceded that the contract terms will continue to be open for consultation with industry and customers for further development.
Optus has announced NBN mainland pricing for consumers only, choosing to forge ahead without a finalised wholesale broadband agreement (WBA) with NBN Co as the process was taking “longer than initially envisaged”.
Many internet access plans on the National Broadband Network (NBN) will be cheaper on a per gigabyte usage basis than current ADSL2+ plans.
Residents and businesses participating in the first five mainland trials of the National Broadband Network (NBN) will have access to commercial services over the network following the completion of the trials.
Less than a week after rival Internode announced pricing for the National Broadband Network (NBN), Exetel has revealed its prices for mainland NBN trial sites.
The nation’s internet service providers (ISPs) have responded with scepticism at recommendations for lifting customer service contained in the communication regulator’s draft Reconnecting the Customer report.
Exetel chief executive, John Linton, has signalled that the internet service provider has begun reshaping itself to better target the country's small and medium businesses.
Every week, <i>Computerworld Australia</i> collates all the things our readers have been saying about the news, both in the forums and in comments.
Australia’s major internet service providers (ISPs) have issued a lukewarm response to the news of Telstra and NBN Co coming to an agreement on commercial terms, months after initially envisaged and following numerous delays in negotiations.
Exetel chief John Linton has predicted a “negative nightmare” ahead of Telstra’s December half-year results announcement.
The time has finally come - internet protocol version 4 (IPv4) has run out of addresses.