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Broadband Future

Broadband is essential to a wide range of commercial and public activities.

Leveraging Tasmania’s digital infrastructure allows regional economic strategies to emerge. These establish education, collaboration and partnerships as fundamental elements of the next economy. Comprehensive digital access is also an important framework for sustainable growth, and will provide added potential for improving socioeconomic harmony.

The Federal Government wants to build a competitive broadband network across Australia – high-speed, fibre-based broadband network, providing speeds of at least 12 megabits per second to 98 per cent of Australian homes and businesses. Construction of the Network is expected to begin by the end of 2008. Current proposals under consideration suggest that this new broadband network will be a fibre-to-the-node (FttN) network with speeds of up to 24mbps, replacing some of the copper telephone wire network with much faster and higher capacity optical fibre – but not all of it.

According to the current policy, most homes in areas receiving this upgrade will not be connected directly by ultra-high bandwidth optical fibre; this type of direct connection, providing broadband speeds of 100mbps, is called fibre-to-the-premises (FttP) or fibre-to-the-home (FttH), and is currently under trial in Tasmania and Western Australia.

In rural areas, various telcos are growing the size of their wireless 3G service in direct competition with each other, and in anticipation of the new optical fibre network. This effort is an attempt to gain a long-term market share without using the established exchanges, cable channels and line infrastructure owned by the larger organisations. There are many – often competing – technology solutions that connect homes to high speed broadband. This will lead to much more choice in price and services across this sector in the years ahead, particularly in remoter areas where communities may end up building their own solutions as an alternative to current services.

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