NBN announces restructure as network grows
NBN’s CEO, Bill Morrow, has announced a number of changes to the company’s structure as the rollout of the National Broadband Network approaches the halfway mark.
NBN’s CEO, Bill Morrow, has announced a number of changes to the company’s structure as the rollout of the National Broadband Network approaches the halfway mark.
Optus’ wholesale arm has expanded the range of National Broadband Network services available to its customers.
Kogan has struck a deal with Vodafone to offer fixed-line National Broadband Network services.
NBN has achieved downstream speeds of up to 1 gigabit per second over a hybrid-fibre coaxial (HFC) connection in lab trials using the DOCSIS 3.1 standard.
NBN’s revamped discount scheme for its capacity-based Connectivity Virtual Circuit (CVC) charge begins today.
A scheme to monitor the performance of the retail service providers (RSPs) that provide services on the National Broadband Network is one step closer, with the organisation coordinating the program formally seeking tenders to deliver it.
Five million homes and businesses are now able to order a National Broadband Network service, NBN announced this morning.
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has done an about face on the government’s proposed Regional Broadband Scheme (RBS) charge, saying it will allow network operators to pass the cost of it on to consumers.
NBN’s chief executive Bill Morrow says that the company will be “making some announcements soon” about wider use of fibre to the curb (FTTC) technology for the National Broadband Network rollout.
End users on the National Broadband Network are “gravitating to speeds that meet their needs” — and in most cases that is 25 megabits per second, according to NBN’s CEO, Bill Morrow
More than half a million households are able to order fixed wireless services on the National Broadband Network, NBN said today.
New figures released by the Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman and Communications Alliance confirm that telco complaints are continuing to climb.
An analysis by Telstra has revealed that a small number of its customers with NBN services were on broadband plans with maximum speeds that were not achievable.
On average 58,000 premises were connected to the National Broadband Network every week during the quarter ending 31 March, up from 26,000 premises at the same time last year.
Complaints about telcos surged in the second half of 2016, according to figures released today by the Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman.