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National Broadband Network – சுருக்கமாக NBN என்று அழைக்கப்படும் இன்டர்நெட் – இணைய இணைப்பு சேவைக்கு அரசு இன்னும் அதிகமாக 3 பில்லியன் டாலர் நிதி ஒதுக்குவதாக பிரதமர் antony Albanese அறிவித்தார். National Broadband Networkஐ நவீன மயமாகுவதன் மூலம் சாதாரண மனிதர்களுக்கு என்ன பலன் கிடைக்கும் என்ற கேள்வியுடன்தா தயாரிக்கப்பட்ட “செய்தியின் பின்னணி” நிகழ்ச்சி. தயாரித்து முன்வைப்பவர்: றைசெல்.
More investment in the National Broadband Network is expected to boost productivity within the ag sector. The federal government will spend more than $3 billion on expanding the network, if it's re-elected this year. Rural reported Dusty Fitzpatrick spoke with Tech Council chief executive Damian Kassabgi to find about how it could assist rural tech start-ups. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Labor has promised $3 billion to upgrade hundreds of thousands of NBN connections and speed up internet services, so what can rural households expect to change?
The Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has today promised $3 billion in funding to upgrade the National Broadband Network, if his government is re-elected.
The PM announced the government will splash $3 billion on the NBN to finish the project started by his Labor predecessors – but will it win an election? Find out more about The Front podcast here. You can read about this story and more on The Australian's website or on The Australian’s app. This episode of The Front is presented and produced by Kristen Amiet with assistance from Stella McKenna. It’s edited by Josh Burton. Our regular host is Claire Harvey and original music is composed by Jasper Leak.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Can you imagine a world where every household device is seamlessly connected and your internet speed is never a concern? Join us as we sit down with Robert Joyce, Head of Customer Strategy and Innovation at NBN, to uncover the incredible journey of fibre and connectivity evolution in Australia. From Robert's intriguing background in telecom—rooted in a family history with British Telecom—to his pivotal role at NBN, this episode is packed with insights into the massive growth of connected devices in homes over the last decade and how NBN has been the backbone of this revolution.Venture into the transformative impact that the National Broadband Network has had across both rural and urban landscapes of Australia. With internet speeds skyrocketing from a mere 384 kilobits per second to a blazing one gigabit per second, activities like 4K streaming, remote work, and gaming have become effortlessly accessible. Robert provides a visionary outlook on the expected shift of broadcast TV to streaming platforms, underscoring how this evolution will redefine video delivery and spectrum usage. We also highlight the ever-growing number of connected devices in the average household and the implications for future connectivity demands.Finally, we delve into the significant advantages that fibre optics hold over traditional copper networks. Robert sheds light on how fibre is not only a faster and more reliable option but also a greener, more environmentally friendly choice that saves energy by eliminating the need for repeaters. We also touch on the complexities of deploying such advanced infrastructure across Australia's diverse terrain and the importance of modern in-home Wi-Fi setups to truly harness the power of high-speed connectivity. Don't miss part two of our conversation with Robert Joyce next week as we continue exploring the future landscape of telecommunications.
I loved Dr Kristy Goodwin's latest book ‘Dear Digital, We need to talk' and lapped up our conversation with practical brain-based top tips to tame our tech habits. Habits that in recent years has seen us living in an ‘always-on' digital culture - and we know this is contributing to burnout. Do you feel it? As one of Australia's digital wellbeing and productivity experts, she is focused on the neurobiology of peak performance with her latest book sharing practical tips on how we can ‘tame' our tech habits. She has worked with top organisations such as Apple, Deutsche Bank, Bank of Queensland, Challenger, Westpac, DLA Piper, Westpac, McDonald's, Westfield, Randstad, the Reserve Bank of Australia, Cuscal, State Street, National Broadband Network and Foxtel. Hear her top tips in our conversation and give yourself a head start to down your digital tools and reduce your tech stress. ----------------------- Craving inspiration? I send an email each Sunday about leadership reflection, top tips to build an intentional & sustainable life and other things that have captured my attention and are too good not to share! Sign up here. Loving the podcast? Leave us a short review. It takes less than 60 seconds & will inspire like-minded leaders to join the conversation! Know your Leadership profile? Complete my 5 minute quiz and get a copy of my exclusive Brave Feminine Leadership Summer Glow Magazine. Click here. Ready to take immediate action to manage your energy? Grab my new Activity eBook: 5 Simple Yet Powerful Techniques You Can Use to Elevate Your Energy & Performance - Even If You Don't Know Where To Start. Get access instantly here. Are we friends? Connect with Us. Instagram LinkedIn
In today's episode, we welcome Darren Kane, Chief Security Officer at Australia's National Broadband Network to share his thoughts on the evolving role of security in the C-suite. Join us as Darren sits down with Clarke Rodgers, Director of AWS Enterprise Strategy to discuss the differences between the CISO and CSO roles and why “dropping the I” may be the next step in the evolution of security leadership.
The National Broadband Network has now reached 50,000 connections on their network. Speaking to Newstalk Breakfast was Peter Hendrick, CEO of National Broadband Ireland.
The National Broadband Network has now reached 50,000 connections on their network. Speaking to Newstalk Breakfast was Peter Hendrick, CEO of National Broadband Ireland.
Filly is joined by Dr Kristy Goodwin on today's podcast episode. Dr Kristy is amazing - you're going to LOVE the wealth of knowledge she brings about our techno-habits in our modern digital world, how it's connected to burnout, and simple, research-backed micro-habits you can implement to tame your tech-habits (and therefore support your brain & adrenal glands!). About Dr Kristy Goodwin Having personally experienced how our always-on digital culture is compromising people's wellbeing and is counter to optimal and sustainable performance, award-winning researcher and speaker Dr Kristy Goodwin is on a mission to promote employee wellbeing and bolster workplace productivity in an always-on digital world. As one of Australia's digital wellbeing and productivity experts, she shares practical brain-based hacks to tame tech habits and the latest evidence-based strategies to decode the neurobiology of peak performance in the technological era.reverting to phone bans or constant digital detoxes. In Dr Kristy's latest book, Dear Digital, We need to talk. . . she shares how to use technology in ways that are aligned to your neurobiology (how your brain and body are designed to work). Senior business leaders and HR executives from the country's top organisations engage Dr Kristy to help them promote employee digital wellbeing and performance. Her roster of clients includes Apple, Deutsche Bank, Bank of Queensland, Challenger, Westpac, DLA Piper,Westpac, McDonald's, Westfield, Randstad, the Reserve Bank of Australia, Cuscal, State Street, National Broadband Network and Foxtel. In today's episode, Dr Kristy talks to Filly about: We dive straight into the personal stuff: Dr Kristy shares her own “body burnout” story, where she developed insomnia, fatigue, anxiety, gut issues and vasal-vagal episodes (fainting & fitting). She identifies deeper root-causes of addictive-doing, perfectionism, and the underlying driver of getting external validation to feel good about herself. We then get into Dr Kristy's work and her latest book, Dear Digital…We Need To Talk. Dr Kristy covers key “digital diagnostic” signs and symptoms to look out for, if you're in techno-burnout (eek - think “toilet tweeting” and “email apnea”) We chat about establishing digital borders and boundaries, especially around sleep (sleep is medicine, remember!). How to adopt neuro-productivity principles that work with our biology, rather than against it (Dr Kristy pulls out some fascinating research around fight-or-flight and seeing big heads on screens). Easy micro-habits to implement to reduce and disable digital distractions (and why tech companies are making it HARDER to disable distractions). How to unplug from technology so your brain and body can rest and recover (and no, this doesn't include a digital detox!). Show Note Links: Grab a copy of Dr Kristy Goodwin's book Dear Digital…We Need To Talk here (use discount code ‘FSDD' to claim free shipping) Check out Dr Kristy Goodwin's other tech-habit resources here, including the ChronoType quiz & Digital Wellbeing box Connect with Dr Kristy on LinkedIn here Connect with Dr Kristy on Instagram here Take Chris & Filly's Ending Body Burnout Assessment here Check out how you can work with Chris & Filly Functional Medicine here Disclaimer: This Ending Body Burnout Show podcast and any information, advice, opinions or statements within it do not constitute medical, health care or other professional advice, and are provided for general information purposes only. All care is taken in the preparation of the information in this Podcast. Chris & Filly Functional Medicine does not make any representations or give any warranties about its accuracy, reliability, completeness or suitability for any particular purpose. This Podcast and any information, advice, opinions or statements within it are not to be used as a substitute for professional medical, psychology, psychiatric or other mental health care or natural medicine health care. Chris & Filly Functional Medicine recommends you seek the advice of your doctor or other qualified health providers with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Inform your doctor of any changes you may make to your lifestyle and discuss these with your doctor. Do not disregard medical advice or delay visiting a medical professional because of something you hear in this Podcast. To the extent permissible by law Chris & Filly Functional Medicine and the Ending Body Burnout Show Podcast will not be liable for any expenses, losses, damages (including indirect or consequential damages) or costs which might be incurred as a result of the information being inaccurate or incomplete in any way and for any reason. No part of this Podcast can be reproduced, redistributed, published, copied or duplicated in any form without the prior permission of Chris & Filly Functional Medicine.
I loved Dr Kristy Goodwin's latest book ‘Dear Digital, We need to talk' and lapped up our conversation with practical brain-based top tips to tame our tech habits. Habits that in recent years has seen us living in an ‘always-on' digital culture - and we know this is contributing to burnout. Do you feel it? As one of Australia's digital wellbeing and productivity experts, she is focused on the neurobiology of peak performance with her latest book sharing practical tips on how we can ‘tame' our tech habits. She has worked with top organisations such as Apple, Deutsche Bank, Bank of Queensland, Challenger, Westpac, DLA Piper, Westpac, McDonald's, Westfield, Randstad, the Reserve Bank of Australia, Cuscal, State Street, National Broadband Network and Foxtel. Hear her top tips in our conversation and give yourself a head start to down your digital tools and reduce your tech stress. ----------------------- Craving inspiration? I send an email each Sunday about leadership reflection, tops tips to build an intentional & sustainable life and other things that have captured my attention and are too good not to share! Sign up here: https://www.bravefeminineleadership.com/leadershipinspiration Loving the podcast? Leave us a short review. It takes less than 60 seconds & will inspire like-minded leaders to join the conversation Are we friends? Follow us Instagram LinkedIn
In this episode of Better Thinking, Nesh Nikolic speaks with Kristy Goodwin about practical brain-based hacks to tame tech habits and strategies to decode the neurobiology of peak performance in the technological era. Dr Kristy Goodwin is one of Australia's leading digital wellbeing and performance experts (and mum who also deals with her kids' techno-tantrums!) She's a researcher, author, speaker and media commentator who provides science-backed solutions to optimise wellbeing and productivity in a digital world. Kristy draws on cutting-edge neuroscience and research to explain the profound impacts technology has on our performance and health, without prescribing digital detoxes and going #laptopless. Kristy worked as an educator before becoming an academic and speaker. She's worked with clients including Apple, Westfield, Bank of Queensland, Macquarie Bank, Foxtel, the National Broadband Network, JP Morgan, McDonalds, NSW Department of Education and Optus. She's spoken at national and international conferences, schools, workplaces and medical conferences throughout Australia. Kristy's on a mission to empower people to foster healthy and realistic digital behaviours that support peak performance and wellbeing. Episode link at https://neshnikolic.com/podcast/kiristy-goodwinSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The telecommunications industry has been a crucible of competition and regulation for decades, and it's now on the frontline of debates ranging from digital platforms to AI and data. Industry veteran Richard Feasey connects the history and the future of technology and regulation. Plus antitrust in sport and horror, a new chapter for the National Broadband Network, and more… Jenny Dempsey on the evolution of telephone numbers "A Good Walk Spoiled" from Malcolm Gladwell's Revisionist History podcast New York Times, "PGA Tour Can Bar LIV Golfers From Playoff, Judge Rules" Department of Justice vs Penguin Random House and Simon & Schuster True History of the 2022 Variation of the Special Access Undertaking Meet the Gilbert + Tobin Competition + Regulation team See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
“During the pandemic, Broadband has saved economic collapse and the health system collapse” says Phil Sorsky, Senior Vice president of Worldwide Sales at CommScope. When you think about it, one of the unsung heroes of the last 2 years has been technologies that kept us connected to our families and our work.With the lines between “home” and “office” increasingly blurred due to the rise of remote working, access to reliable connectivity is crucial so that local economies and communities can truly thrive.In the latest episode of The Actionable Futurist Podcast, we explore the future of 5G and fibre technologies and what we can expect around the corner.We also looked at what can be done to narrow the digital divide, especially since we're now relying on online services even more as a result of the pandemic.Phil has more than 20 years of telecommunications industry experience, having worked for Juniper Networks, Adobe Systems, Cisco Systems and AT&T, and he is a graduate of the University of Birmingham in the UK.In this episode we also discussedNarrowing the digital divideHow 5G can solve the "last mile" problem?The state of 5G in the UKThe rise of "community fibre"Will every home be connected to fibre in the UK in 10 years?How Covid accelerated high-speed broadband adoptionWould a National Broadband Network concept work in the UK?Why Fibre is the answer for faster broadbandThe societal benefits of faster broadbandHow broadband has saved lives and economic collapse during the pandemicCybercrime post-pandemicWill we see more 5G use cases?The uses of 5G with IoTFemtocells to help mobile coverageNew innovations to drive new servicesWhat new developments have come out of the pandemic?3 Actionable things for this weekMore on PhilPhil on TwitterPhil on LinkedInCommScope websiteYour Host: Actionable Futurist® Andrew GrillFor more on Andrew - what he speaks about and replays of recent talks, please visit ActionableFuturist.comfollow @AndrewGrill on Twitteror @andrew.grill on Instagram.
Australia has some of the slowest internet speeds in the world and the federal opposition wants to highlight that fact in the lead-up to the next election. Labor's promising to spend $2.4 billion if it wins government to upgrade the National Broadband Network, giving 1.5 million homes and businesses access to higher speed internet. This is a Russian language content. - Скорость интернета в Австралии одна из самых низких в мире, и федеральная оппозиция привлекла внимание к этому в преддверии следующих выборов. Лейбористская партия в случае победы обещает потратить 2,4 миллиарда долларов на модернизацию национальной сети NBN, которая предоставит 1,5 миллионам домов и предприятий доступ к высокоскоростному интернету.
Paul Spain talks with Singapore based Vaughan Baker (My Republic) about matters affecting Telecommunications in New Zealand and around the region -with not only NZ insights - but discussion about Australia's National Broadband Network and Singapore's Next Generation Nationwide Broadband Network.
SBS Finance Editor Ricardo Gonçalves speaks with NBN Co CEO Stephen Rue following the company's annual results.
SBS Finance Editor Ricardo Gonçalves speaks with NBN Co CEO Stephen Rue following the company's annual results.
It's virtual E3 season, with dozens of major games announcements over the weekend. Here's just a few of that caught our eye.Bethesda's Starfield had its first game footage, though still incredibly vague apart from the obvious "you'll be on spaceships visiting far away worlds" vibes. But the big news was the confirmation this game is the first Bethesda title to be announced as a full Xbox exclusive, scheduled for release on November 11, 2022. It was notable that the combined Xbox and Bethesda event was opened not by Microsoft's Phil Spencer but by Bethesda's Todd Howard, a big statement on the unification of the massive developer with the platform giant.In another crucial development during the Xbox event was the consistent foregrounding of how most every game was announced as day one on Xbox Game Pass, pushing the subscription service as the primary mode of access to Xbox first-party games, but also that Xbox Cloud Gaming is no longer being mentioned as a side project but as one of the 'platforms' games are being launched on. At every end screen where platforms were mentioned, Xbox Cloud Gaming sat clearly alongside Xbox Series consoles and Windows 10 PCs. That pre-announcement of the increased cloud delivery format made it easy to just slide this in everywhere, but it is perhaps the most important development for the future of Microsoft's gaming business – as a service you join, not a box you buy.Elsewhere in E3 news, dozens of games have had announcements and dates across the various conferences, including Left 4 Dead spiritual successor Back 4 Blood coming on October 12, Halo Infinite still coming 'this year' but getting an entirely free multiplayer mode, a Jack Sparrow crossover in Seat of Thieves, Ubisoft announced a new Mario + Rabbids game coming next year, Diablo II Resurrected is coming September 23, Rainbow Six Extraction is coming September 16, Tiny Tina's Wonderlands – a Borderlands fantasy D&D inspired spin-off – is coming early 2022, Forza Horizon 5 is taking this show to Mexico, and perhaps my personal favourite of the show so far is a vampire shooter called Redfall from the team behind Dishonored.The Federal Court has approved the $112M settlement in the robo-debt court battles, with presiding judge Bernard Murphy has delivered an unequivocal rebuke to the federal government, calling it an unlawful program. "The proceeding has exposed a shameful chapter in the administration of the Commonwealth social security system and a massive failure of public administration... It should have been obvious to the senior public servants charged with overseeing the robo-debt system and to the responsible minister at different points that many social security recipients do not earn a stable or constant income..." The settlement means the federal government does not have to admit any liability regarding the scheme.https://www.zdnet.com/article/federal-court-approves-au112m-compensation-in-settlement-for-robo-debt-failure/NBN Co is considering whether to pursue a request to have its monopoly broadband provider status revoked in markets where it is facing competition from 5G services. The National Broadband Network is held to a special access undertaking agreement until the year 2040, which must have any changes or updates cleared by the ACCC. The NBN points out that one in three homes are not using the NBN, calling this a reflection of the dynamic nature of the market and not that the NBN is delivering a poorer quality of service than alternatives in many locations. NBN has a long term target of of 73-75% uptake, which has been pushed outward over the years from an original target of 2021 out to today's target of 2024.https://www.itnews.com.au/news/nbn-co-says-5g-competition-is-challenging-its-monopoly-status-565686Google has just opened up Google Workspace for everyone that has a Google account, allowing people to go beyond just collaborating on documents and folders toward a much more unified space for p... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The National Broadband Network has suggested the first major overhaul to how its pricing is structured for resellers, with the existing price structure an eternal point of argument due to the Connectivity Virtual Circuit (CVC) charge which puts excess charges for data consumption onto resellers with no real association to the cost of providing the service. So NBN has tabled a new proposed pricing scheme that removes CVC while increasing base charges, with indexed increases in charges at rates above annual inflation. That's a big catch, and major telcos are cautiously considering the proposal, with the clear concern that a new method of enforcing the same or greater pricing is still far from ideal.https://www.itnews.com.au/news/nbn-co-offers-to-axe-cvc-in-exchange-for-yearly-price-hikes-565579Turning to the pandemic, the system for giving Australians a verification of their COVID-19 vaccinations is now at the ready, with word the Australian Immunisation Register (AIR) will be updated as part of every Australian's myGov account and linked with Medicare, with a COVID vaccination certificate available from next week once people have received their second shot. All healthcare providers will be required to upload vaccination data into the system from July onward within 10 days of vaccination taking place.https://www.zdnet.com/article/covid-19-vaccine-digital-certificate-coming-this-week-for-australians/In global tax news with big implications for the tech industry's use of clever accounting to dodge paying taxes, the G7 nations have agreed to a minimum corporate tax rate of 15% to build consistency and, with consistency, reduce the incentives to apply complex practices to offshore revenues based on spurious loopholes over where the IP of a company resides.https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-06-06/g7-agrees-to-tax-multinationals-more/100193646Apple has kicked off its second virtual WWDC early this morning with a keynote video event featuring all the big new software updates users and developers should expect when iOS 15, watchOS 8 and macOS Monterey launch later this year. Last year was a major overhaul of the basics, and this year sees a lot of new features big and small spread out across iPhones, iPads and Macs. FaceTime is getting one of the smoothest systems we've seen for syncing music or videos remotely, and you will also now be able to schedule a FaceTime call and share it with Android and Windows friends. AirPods will be able to read notifications, Spatial Audio is coming to AirPods while watching your Apple TV, Siri will be arriving in third-party devices, iCloud is getting VPN and Hide My Email features for free and support for your custom domains for the first time. And in privacy updates Mail will now block tracking pixels and Safari will hide IP addresses to make it even harder for you to be tracked without your consent. Loads more we'll unpack on this week's Byteside podcast (yes, it's back this week).In a dazzling display of optimism, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos has announced he intends to be aboard the first ever crewed flight to space for his space company Blue Origin. The sub-orbital New Shepard flight is set to take off on July 20, and as mentioned in the previous line this is the first EVER crewed flight for the spacecraft, making it an incredibly dangerous endeavour. SpaceX has been sending crews to the ISS multiple times now and even Elon Musk still hasn't decided to take a joyride. And he's crazy.https://www.cnet.com/news/jeff-bezos-will-fly-on-blue-origins-first-crewed-rocket-to-space/In gaming, Dungeons & Dragons has revealed the first details of the next campaign adventure setting, The Wild Beyond The WitchLight, which brings players into the Feywild for the first time in the current 5th Edition of the game. We don't know much yet, but the cover suggests a circus setting that probably has some dark hidden secrets behind the scenes. They... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
أضرب الفنيون المتعاقدون مع الـNBN عن العمل لمدة أسبوعين. ويطالب هؤلاء بتحسين أوضاع عملهم "غير المقبولة" والتي يقول بعضهم إنهم تحملوها لسنواتٍ طويلة ولم يعد بامكانهم الاستمرار.
Prince Philip's death may be the moment Prince Harry mends bridges with the Royal Family following his Oprah Winfrey car crash interview. The government-owned company in charge of the National Broadband Network treated their employees to Christmas parties that cost a whopping $655,000 over three years. Early data shows the number of Victorian businesses either collapsing or winding up their operations amid financial stress is on the rise in the wake of JobKeeper ending. And in sport, the Western Bulldogs won't be offering skipper Marcus Bontempelli a mega-year deal, but chief executive Ameet Bains remains hopeful of having a contract locked away within a month. For updates and breaking news throughout the day, take out a subscription atheraldsun.com.au See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
在澳洲,在政府積極大力推動 NBN 上網計劃下,不少家庭由原來的 ADSL 轉到 NBN。然而,NBN 未在全澳普及之際,又面臨另一大對手,Starlink 的衛星上網服務。在今集《科技世界》中,科技專家馮家杰(KK Fung)會向大家解構 Starlink 上網服務,並與 NBN 作出比較。到底兩者有何不同,請收聽 KK 與盧婉霞一節《科技世界》。
On this edition of Cory Talks… It's a sh*t show in Canberra at the moment. You'd be hard pressed to find an adult Australian who is not aware of the truly disturbing rape allegations in the nation's capital and a claim of a historical rape involving a very senior Australian government minister and Senator. The Federal Government has a completely different stance on how to proceed (quite simply, closing the case). But Australian's are angry and upset… and rightly so. I'll present a timeline of events as they've happened since the last podcast. There will be #March4Justice protest rallies around the country including at Parliament House Canberra on Monday 15th March at noon. Two Royal Commissions came to an end this past week. A federal one into the Aged Care sector. One state RC into the Mental Health system in Victoria. Making the announcements, Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews. Spot the difference between these leaders. One admitted fault, accepted recommendations and promised change. The other flew into defensive mode. Australian Senator calls a former staffer a lying cow after making rape allegations. Triple earthquake off New Zealand and resulting tsunami alert. Blowout in the cost of Australia's digital future, the National Broadband Network. It could have cost a whole lot less if politics was not involved. Western Australia joins Victoria in launching a Royal Commission into Crown Resorts and Casino after a damning report in New South Wales banned Crown from opening a casino in that state. Australian music industry legend and founder of Mushroom Records, Michael Gudinski has passed away. The Queen's video chat to Australia. Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras 2021 is given the thumbs up despite operating in a COVID safe environment with social distancing. Trump 2024… please tell me it's not true!!! Kayleigh McEnany, the former White House Press Secretary joins Fox News to the amazement of no one. Dolly Parton in fine voice as she prepared to get the COVID-19 vaccine. Guest: - Don't forget to subscribe if you haven't already and turn notifications on so you can be alerted when there's new episodes out. The show's available on Anchor, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Podchaser, RadioPublic, Spotify and Stitcher. Cory Talks website – https://cory.media/corytalks Cory Talks email – send via the website Cory O'Connor on Twitter – www.twitter.com/corymedia I source information from a variety of sources, most commonly ABC News Australia, Independent Australia and The Guardian. CORY TALKS. A PODCAST FROM CORY.MEDIA www.cory.media --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/corytalkspodcast/message
The NBN was supposed to provide all Australian homes with reliable, super-fast internet connections. As many of us adjust to living and working from home, connected with our jobs, friends and family online, has it lived up to its promise?
The NBN was supposed to provide all Australian homes with reliable, super-fast internet connections. As many of us adjust to living and working from home, connected with our jobs, friends and family online, has it lived up to its promise?
Gelişmiş ülkeler arasındaki en yavaş internetlerden birine sahip olan Avustralya'da federal hükümet, NBN internet ağına yatırım yapmaya karar verdi. Ancak bazı uzmanlara göre bu geç alınmış bir karar.
On this episode of Democracy Sausage, journalist Sarah Ison, political scientist John Warhurst, Marija Taflaga, and Mark Kenny discuss the federal budget and the return of ‘fibre to the premises’.After years of political battles over the National Broadband Network, why has the government now decided to build ‘fibre to the premises’? What lies ahead in next week’s federal budget, possibly one of the most important in Australia’s recent history? And is the federal opposition losing a fight for relevance, or is Labor leader Anthony Albanese just doing what he can with a difficult hand? On this Democracy Sausage, our expert panel - political correspondent for The West Australian Sarah Ison, Emeritus Professor John Warhurst, regular podleague Dr Marija Taflaga, and host Professor Mark Kenny - talk about the federal budget and helping voters make more informed decisions at election time.John Warhurst AO is an Emeritus Professor of political science at ANU. His expertise is centred on Australian government and politics, especially parties, elections, lobbying, and church-state relations.Sarah Ison is a political correspondent for The West Australian.Mark Kenny is a Professor in the ANU Australian Studies Institute. He came to the university after a high-profile journalistic career including six years as chief political correspondent and national affairs editor for The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, and The Canberra Times.Dr Marija Taflaga is the Director of ANU Centre for the Study of Australian Politics and a lecturer in the ANU School of Politics and International Relations.You can access smartvote Australia, a project of The Australian National University, here.This year’s ‘Australia in the World’ lecture with Pat Turner AM will be broadcast live on ABC News and Sky News at 12.30pm on Wednesday 29 September. You can find more details here.Democracy Sausage with Mark Kenny is available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. We’d love to hear your feedback for this podcast series! Send in your questions, comments, or suggestions for future episodes to podcast@policyforum.net. You can also Tweet us @APPSPolicyForum or join us on the Facebook group.This podcast is produced in partnership with The Australian National University. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Tsoom fwv Morrison qhia tias nws yuav tsim kom tau cov National Broadband Network uas siv cov optical fibre txuas kiag rau tej neeg tej vaj tse kom tau siv internet ceev tab sis pab nom Labor tau tib tias tus tsoom fwv no tsis kub siab nws tus tsoom fwv tej tswv yim uas tau pib txij xyoo 2009 thiab nws tau muab tso tseg rau xyoo 2013 es tam sim no ho tig rov qab mus ua tej hauj lwm no dua thiaj nkim nyiaj nkim sij hawm thiab plam cib fim zoo ntau yam.
Millions of Australians will be able to enjoy high-speed internet lines under plans to upgrade the National Broadband Network (NBN) - Jutaan warga Australia akan dapat menikmati saluran internet dengan kecepatan tinggi di bawah rencana untuk meng-upgrade National Broadband Network (NBN)
On this edition of Cory Talks... BREAKING: Victorian Health Minister Jenny Mikakos resigned on the weekend after Premier Daniel Andrews' testimony at the inquiry into the handling of hotel quarantine in the state. If you're an Aussie Rules footballer or family member, should that entitle you to special treatment during COVID-19 times? A robodebt for one Centrelink Disability Support Pensioner that can never be paid. ABC News Online readers help out Melbourne man Raiyan Chowdhury. It's my good news story for this episode. National Broadband Network about face from the Federal Government. Aussie cricketer and commentator Dean Jones dies of a cardiac arrest in India. Guest: - Tracey McGee is a good friend of mine and she's very creative and talented. Hear Tracey talk about "kibo by Tracey". Tracey's contact details are on my website... www.corytalks.com/guests.htm Don't forget to subscribe if you haven't already and turn notifications on so you can be alerted when there's new episodes out. Cory Talks on Twitter - www.twitter.com/CoryTalksPod Cory Talks website - www.corytalks.com Cory Talks email - send via the website I source information from a variety of sources, most commonly ABC News Australia, Independent Australia and The Guardian. CORY TALKS. A PODCAST FROM CORY DIGITAL MEDIA CREATOR. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/corytalkspodcast/message
Millions of more Australians will be able to access high-speed internet, under a new plan to upgrade the National Broadband Network.The federal government is being criticised for back-flipping on its position, more than a decade after Labor introduced the proposal. - मोरिसन सरकारद्वारा राष्ट्रिय ब्रोडब्याण्ड संरचनामा सुधार गर्ने केही दिन अघि गरिएको घोषणाका साथ अबको केही वर्षमा थप लाखौँ मानिसहरूले अत्यधिक गतिको इन्टरनेट सेवा प्रयोग गर्न सक्ने बताइएको छ।
Η ομοσπονδιακή κυβέρνηση ανακοίνωσε σήμερα μια αναβάθμιση δισεκατομμυρίων, που θα δώσει τη δυνατότητα σε εκατομμύρια νοικοκυριά στην Αυστραλία να έχουν μεγαλύτερες ταχύτητες όταν χρησιμοποιούν το διαδίκτυο.
Millions more Australians will be able to access high-speed internet, under a new plan to upgrade the National Broadband Network.
If that sounds familiar, it could be because it mirrors the former Rudd Labor Government's original vision for the National Broadband Network.
More than 3300 National Broadband Network themed scams have been reported and the community has lost more than $300,000, according to Jane McNamara from NBN Co. Jane told Oliver Peterson NBN themed scams were among the most common scams reported to Scamwatch and a new information sessions programs is being launched. See omnystudio.com/policies/listener for privacy information.
In this episode, we talk to the team behind National Broadband Networks NBN Co's PMO during the construction phase. We're going to talk about how they overcame project challenges, with the sheer size of the programme not to mention the technology and volume of data and work required to build Australia's optic fibre infrastructure and network. Welcome to Keith Farrell, Andrew Tse and Sunil Chand.NBN Co Limited, known as simply NBN, is a publicly-owned corporation of the Australian Government, tasked to design, build and operate Australia's National Broadband Network as the nation's wholesale broadband provider. During the construction phase in 2012/13, A team was developed to help steer the construction efforts and ensure this project would succeed. The team on this pod were known back then as Construction - Programming and Analysis of CP&A. As the largest infrastructure project in Australia's history, NBN was the subject of significant political contention and has been an issue in federal elections. The Liberal Party initially stated that the "Multi-Technology Mix" (MTM) would be completed by 2016, however, this was changed after the election to 2019 and then again to 2020. The project cost jumped from the Liberal Party's estimated $29.5 billion before the 2013 federal election, to $46–56 billion afterwards. In 2016 NBN Co. said it was on target for $49 billion, but by late 2018 the estimated final cost was $51 billion.During 2013 further challenges to the construction team were laid. The MTM was selected as the approach to the broadband provision by the Liberal-National coalition in the lead up to the 2013 Australian federal election.After the 2013 election, the Abbott government announced immediate changes to the NBN rollout & was moved from FTTP to 'alternative technologies' such as fibre to the node. The government limited the rollout of FTTP to those areas already in development. Later implementation of the (MTM) began with the promise of earlier completion and significant cost savings compared to the earlier approach. The predominant change was the adoption of a mixed copper-optical technology with fibre to the node (FTTN). Studies and a strategic review were commissioned.As you can imagine this made planning, measuring and controlling the project across the country very difficult, with some 3,000 projects planned for delivery and consistently moving targets. For Sunil's industry-leading tools visit https://p6pal.com/ if you would like to connect with our guest. You can reach them hereSunil Chand https://www.linkedin.com/in/sunildeochand/Keith Farrell https://www.linkedin.com/in/keithfarrell/Andrew Tse https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrew-tse-6301918/#PAYITFORWARDSubscribe today at https://www.projectchatterpodcast.com/or visit our socials:Twitter: https://twitter.com/projectchatterFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/projectchatterpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/projectchatterpodcast/Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/projectchatterpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCoudjc2m0ttmAkyvBnf8EnThis podcast sponsored by:JustDo.comPlanAcademy.com
Call and Chain is a podcast of the Institute of Technology and Network Economics on Internet, telecoms, distributed ledger and other technologies and their impact on daily life. In this episode we review the history of Australia's NBN, which is due to be completed in June 2020 and look at the friction between subsidy and competition in that country.
We acknowledge the sacrifice of our fallen heroes, and discuss former PM Malcom Turnbull's testy responses to criticism of his new book. Then chat about the knock-on effects of tumbling oil prices and how to save the Great Barrier Reef.NewsCongrats to the staff of Wired magazine for forming a union.“Private” Zoom messages can be seen by the creator of a meeting.It’s possible for employers to read private slack messages.Former PM Book Tour NewsFormer Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s book was pirated by a staffer working for current PM Scott Morrison’s.Turnbull has responded testily to even light criticism for his policies while in office.He was also responsible for the gutting of Australia’s National Broadband Network.War, huh?It’s Anzac Day in Australia. Australians were encouraged to play the last post at dawn from their driveways.The reverence of Anzac Day was pushed by Prime Minister John Howard in support of the Iraq War.Corporations are known for their awkward tributes to fallen soldiers.Oil prices are badOil prices are bad! How bad? So bad oil producers are paying buyers to take oil off their hands.Australia’s government is stockpiling oil storing it in the US for “emergencies”.The head of Australia’s organisation to post-COVID economic recovery is pushing gas and oil drilling.They’re also pushing for reductions in environmental regulations.Smoking the ReefThe Great Barrier Reef is dying, and quickly.Scientists are trying to use geo-engineering to try to save the reef.…funded by the same government that is pushing for increased coal production.Jobkeeping up with the JonesLawyers and accountants are overrepresented amongst employers applying for the Jobkeeper payments from the government.The Victorian Liberal party are applying for Jobkeeper.Victorian Trades Hall have started a program called Jobscammer, for employees to dob in bosses who are cheating the Jobkeeper program.Conservative politicians are starting to push for the increased Jobseeker rates to be maintained once the Coronavirus disaster is over.In Italy and Mexico, organised crime are taking over the holes in the social support systems left by governments.The Guardian have published a series mini articles by vulnerable people.Nationalise itVirgin Australia has gone into voluntary administration.Perth Airport has put bulldozers in front of Virgin’s planes to try to force payment of debts.The Ararat Advertiser has closed, leaving a 16 year-old student as the city’s only source of local news.ActionsListen to Ararat’s Latest — Ararat’s now only remaining souce of local news.Give us a review in your podcast app!Music credits“Nationalise It!” — Written and performed by Brendan McPherson“Rock Thing” — by Creo
The NBN was supposed to provide all Australian homes with reliable, super-fast internet connections. As many of us adjust to living and working from home, connected with our jobs, friends and family online, has it lived up to its promise?
The NBN was supposed to provide all Australian homes with reliable, super-fast internet connections. As many of us adjust to living and working from home, connected with our jobs, friends and family online, has it lived up to its promise?
Telecommunicatie specialist Paul Budde heeft er een hard hoofd in dat het gammele Australische NBN netwerk daadwerkelijk het toenemende gebruik van het internet aankan nu dat een groot deel van de arbeidskracht vanuit huis werkt. Maar: "Online bedrijven gaan ons wel uit deze economische recessie halen".
The National Broadband Network will hold up despite an expected surge in traffic, says Federal Communications Minister Paul Fletcher. Mr Fletcher says the NBN was prepared for an increase in demand as Australians were forced to work from home and he was confident the network would withstand the surge. "We are going to see a significant increase in traffic," he said. "We are not taking this for granted and we have set up a team to handle situations as they arise. "With the NBN roll-out now 94% complete, it is a network that has a much greater capacity than the networks it replaced... we are in a better position than we were a few years ago."
Telecommunications expert Paul Budde agrees with Telstra chair John Mullen who said the NBN has been a huge waste of resources and a drain on taxpayers. He points the finger at Australia's lack in long term plans and policies. - Telecommunicatie expert Paul Budde is het helemaal met de Telstra voorzitter John Mullen eens die van de week zei dat de NBN weggegooid geld is. Hij legt de vinger op de zere plek: het gebrek aan lange termijn denken van de Australische overheid.
After an embarrassing delay, I'm back to whinge about travel, gastro, Amazon Kindle Select and Australia's National Broadband Network. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/chrisrosser/message
Tom Money has worked in the corporate world in Recruitment and HR since 2004; notably managing one of the largest and most efficient recruitment drives in APAC at Nbn. Taking this experience and Lean training he decided to make some changes to the HR industry and moved into Lean Six Sigma and process improvement. Tom is an accredited Lean Six Sigma Black Belt. Using Lean Six Sigma methodology and recruitment best practice he has helped businesses grow and transform. At the National Broadband Network of Australia, the largest infrastructure project in the world, involving connecting 8m homes to fast broadband and heavy media scrutiny, he helped them expand from 1800 to 6000 FTE in 18 months. Managing to increase the output of the team, increase customer satisfaction and reduce the working hours of team members. Working with the likes of Lumesse, Cielo, Talentia and the Association of Labour Providers, Improve and Consult has scores of operational and process improvement projects under their black belts.
The National Broadband Network, or NBN, is a new way to bring internet and phone services to Australians. By 2020, most homes and businesses will be connected to it. - Reteaua nationala de Internet rapid, (NBN), reprezinta o noua cale prin care australienii pot folosi serviciile de internet si telefonie.Pana in 2020, aproape toate locuintele personale si comerciale vor fi conectate la retea.
The National Broadband Network, or NBN, is a new way to bring internet and phone services to Australians.By 2020, most homes and businesses will be connected to it.
The National Broadband Network, or NBN, is a new way to bring internet and phone services to Australians. By 2020, most homes and businesses will be connected to it.
Foundations of Amateur Radio During the week a friend reminded me that the process of determining what's happening within a shack comes with experience. In my day job my whole skill-set can be summed up with one word: "debugging", in all its many and varied guises, fixing code, hardware, business processes, skill-sets, what ever it may be. The process is pretty much, figure out what's going wrong, find out what shouldn't be happening and attempt to join the mismatch together with anything from gaffer-tape to good old fashioned hard yakka. Back on topic, the question my friend asked was about their WSPR receiver which had stopped making spots. If you're not familiar, WSPR, Weak Signal Propagation Reporter is a way of listening at specific times on specific frequencies for a signal and when received and decoded, publishing the spotted signal on a website. Their first thought was the antenna, that's where the signal comes from, so if that's not working, the rest fails. Pretty good first guess at figuring out what might be wrong. There is an adage somewhere, not sure of the exact wording, but it goes a little like this: if you don't know where to start, start somewhere, anywhere, and go on from there. Based on that the question became: How can I simply test my antenna and should I buy an SWR meter? If you're not familiar with how WSPR actually works, it's a radio receiver connected to a computer running software that decodes the signal and reports it across the Internet to a website that logs reports from around the globe. That sentence hides a level of complexity that boggles the mind if you start digging, but I'll give you a hint, it's not needed in this case. In my own experience with WSPR, my computer would crash regularly and get slower and slower. It turns out that I'd configured it to store a copy of each signal, as an audio file, so the computer drive was chock-a-block full of audio files. End result was crashing. I've also had issues with the WSPR site being unavailable and in Australia we're currently in the middle of rolling out our brand new not so shiny National Broadband Network which in turn causes Internet outages all over the place. While the antenna was a great place to start eliminating issues, there were several other candidates that could also cause issues, none of which required much in the way of effort to eliminate. As a bonus the antenna was also used for a weekly net and a quick scan with a spectrum analyser revealed that it was working just fine. A day later I got a follow-up email, turns out that the station they were listening for, an automatic WSPR beacon nearby had changed frequencies and that meant that it wasn't being received. One plus One equals Three. So, the lesson in all this is that two minds are better than one and that you can both be wrong at the same time. One thing I really love about amateur radio is that the problem domain is huge. You can think of amateur radio as two stations talking to each other, or you can imagine a place where there is so much variability that exploration in and of itself is the activity. Now that I've moved, I should fire up my WSPR receiver and see what gives. Which reminds me, what WSPR spots have you seen and if you're allowed to transmit WSPR with your license, how far have you been heard? I'm Onno VK6FLAB
In this episode of In The Shed Ando & Clarky take a look at the National Broadband Network and what has gone wrong with the roll out, drawing from their own exsperiances working & organising on the project. Sham contracting, rorting and obsolete technology slowing down the growth of a nation.
Malcolm Turnbull has been in Newcastle to deliver the annual Barton Lecture at the University of Newcastle. 1233's Carol Duncan spoke with him at length about the National Broadband Network, Tony Abbott, same-sex marriage and leadership.Malcolm Turnbull and Carol Duncan in the 1233 studios. If you want to know why Malcolm is holding a pomegranate, you will have to listen to the interview. (ABC Local:)On the eve of Malcolm Turnbull's visit to Newcastle, the New Zealand parliament voted to redefine marriage as a union between two people, becoming the first country in the Asia-Pacific region to do so.CAROL DUNCAN: Why do we still not have this right for Australians?MALCOLM TURNBULL: We can (do this here) but as you know the parliament considered the matter last year and voted against it. But it's open to coming back again.There is certainly much more rapid change in this area than many of us, including myself, had anticipated. In addition to New Zealand legislating, the UK is in the process of doing so, France has done so, there are now I believe 10 US states where gay marriage is legal so the trend is only going one way. I think the changes in New Zealand and the UK are going to have a very big impact (on same sex marriage legislation in Australia).If you go back to the 1850s when there was a case in England called Hyde v Hyde in which a judge gave what became the classic definition of marriage for a long time which is a permanent union between a man and a woman. He did so on the basis that this was what was accepted in what he described as 'all of Christendom'. We wouldn't use that term any more but if you were sitting in a court in London or anywhere else today and you had to ask yourself 'what is the accepted definition of a marriage in the western world, or in countries of a dominant Christian tradition, however you wanted to define it, you certainly couldn't say it is a permanent union betwewen a man and a woman because there are so many of those countries, very substantial and important countries, which recognise gay marriage, so there has been a big change.I would have said this was going to take a long time but I think it will happen sooner rather than later. It will become increasingly difficult for Australia to maintain opposition to arrangements which are accepted in countries with which we are so close, which we have so many people going to and from, so many people coming here from New Zealand. I think there has been a big seachange in this and it's happened incredibly rapidly, within the space of a couple of years."CAROL DUNCAN: It is often suggested that you don't actually believe in the policy on broadband that you are having to present for the coalition, or that you don't really believe it is the best option for Australians.MALCOLM TURNBULL: It is, I have absolutely no doubt about it. If I wasn't a politician, if I was back in my old job in the business world and the government, any government, asked me to advise on what the best course of action would be, I would describe exactly what our policy is because you get the right balance between the level of investment, affordability - being able to price the internet access at a price that people can afford, and speed, giving people the services that they need. So I think we've got the balance right."The problem with Labor's scheme, let's be quite frank about this, Labor has said they're going to run fibre optic cable into 93% of Australian households. We criticised it as being too expensive. We actually think this project will cost $94bn, taking a very long time, it's running way behind schedule. After four years they've got less than 20,000 people connected to the fibre and they'll be lucky by June 30 to meet 15% of their targets.CAROL DUNCAN: In 2003, Telstra executives told a Senate inquiry that the copper network had to be replaced, that it was 'five minutes to midnight' for the copper network. Should we be relying on the copper network at all for such a massive piece of infrastructure?MALCOLM TURNBULL: You've got to remember that under our scheme we are replacing almost all of the copper. The only copper that would remain in the customer access network is the last four or five hundred metres to the premise, and the reason for not replacing that is that as long as it is in good condition, as long as the length is short, you can deliver very high speed broadband - up to 100 Mbps - so you can deliver very high speed broadband, certainly more than fast enough for what people want and what people value, but you save a gigantic amount.The depressing thing about these networks is that it's really the last mile, it's actually less than a mile, that costs all the money because it's so labour intensive.CAROL DUNCAN: What about those areas where the existing copper network, in some cases up to 100 years old, will not be good enough for the job?MALCOLM TURNBULL: If that's the case, your area would be a candidate for either having that copper remediated at the time of the build, and we've taken account of that in our policy, or if you've got areas that have got endemic problems in terms of maintenance and water penetration then you may replace them with fibre and do so now.So you just have to be pragmatic and practical about it but the changes are literally, you're talking about saving $60bn."CAROL DUNCAN: In January 2013, Bloomberg's list of international internet speeds indicated that large parts of the world are already accessing speeds faster than 25Mbps, so is cutting the fibre at the node to save money now simply a false economy if over the longer term we have to continue to make very large investments in the very near future to upgrade the coalition's alternative NBN?MALCOLM TURNBULL: No, I don't believe you'll need upgrades in the very near future.Most people will get by 2016 on the fixed line upgraded network 50Mbps or better. We've said 25 Mbps is the minimum, that is the direction that we will give NBNCo as the minimum, so they have to do it on the basis that nobody gets less than that.Our goal, and our direction to NBNCo will be that by 2019 to ensure that at least 90% of the people on that network have not less than 50Mbps.CAROL DUNCAN: Singapore offers a download speed of about 50Mbps on average, Japan is rolling out a 1Gigabit (1000Mbps) network ...MALCOLM TURNBULL: Which is useless by the way, for a residential customer, it's a marketing gimmick.CAROL DUNCAN: Should we be building two networks, one for industry and research, the other for domestic users or simply investing one big network to cater for all needs?MALCOLM TURNBULL: If your question is 'should you be providing higher rates of bandwidth to industry and research and businesses than you do to residential consumers' the answer is obviously yes, because they've got market for it.You can spend a gigantic amount of money, $94bn, and connect every cottage, every flat and every townhouse in Australia to a fibre optic cable that's capable of running at 100 Mbps or ultimately at 1Gb, the vast majority of those customers have no use for, no value for and will not pay you for those very high speed services. So you're making a gigantic investment upon which you can get no return and as a consequence you end up having to charge people a lot more.You've got to remember that under Labor's plan, this is not my figure, this is what they have said in their own documents given to the ACCC and their own corporate plan 'wholesale prices will treble over the next 10 years for broadband access'. Now they've (prices) been coming down for the last 10 years and it's no wonder they'll go up because if you're investing so much money in the network then you've got to get a return on it."I think a very important thing to bear in mind is that we've got to be practical and hard-headed about this. This is serious money. We're talking about all the other infrastructure investments we need to make in Australia. The great virtue of telecoms networks is that, unlike a bridge, you can expand them incrementally, bit by bit."CAORL DUNCAN: Could it be expected that to delay the full roll out of fibre will increase future cost of completing the equivalent work as designed into the government's NBN? We often see major cost blow-outs with delays in major infrastructure construction across the country.MALCOLM TURNBULL: Let's assume that we can spend $900 on average to get a premise up to the most part 50Mbps but no-one less than 25Mbps, and we can do that now. And let's assume it's going to take us the best part of another $3,000 to get them up to 100Mbps and up to 1Gb with FTTP, but let's assume that there's not going to be any demand for that very high speed in those residential areas for, say, 10 years, I'm saying you would be better off postponing that investment, keeping that extra $3,000 in your pocket, earning a return on it somewhere else or not having to borrow it, and then when the demand is there making the investment then. It's just labour costs, labour costs will rise with the price of inflation but so will everything else.But the big difference is if you build a bridge you cannot build a bridge with demand just 10 years ahead because you can't just keep adding lanes every 10 years. You've got to think ahead 30, 40, 50 years.With a telecoms network, you've got the ability to build it for now and the foreseeable future, and you've got the ability to upgrade it progressively over time as demands change, and you don't really know what the demand's going to be, and above all as technologies develop. And so while postponing investment until it's needed may seem a bit hard-headed and sounding too much like a canny accountant than a visionary politician, it actually makes great sense because if you postpone that investment until it's needed the opportunity cost on the money that you haven't invested and that would have earned no return in that time, so you've got your investment in your pocket or doing something else, but also when you do come to invest you're using the latest technology and that's a powerful argument to take a more steady and businesslike approach to it."All politicians are susceptible to grand gestures, but this is a case where you can actually be heard-headed, pragmatic, make the network affordable for both the taxpayer and the consumer and have the advantage of the best technology when you need it.CAROL DUNCAN: Why do you think that a lot of social media commentators suggest that you don't actually believe in the broadband policy that you are having to sell as Shadow Communications Minister?MALCOLM TURNBULL: I have no idea. I think they're transferring their own views to me.I can assure you that I do (believe in the coalition broadband policy).I've been involved in the internet in Australia since it really got going, I was one of the co-founders of Ozemail. I'm digitally connected, I'm online a lot, I'm not a luddite, but I'm just saying to you that you can achieve everything you want to do, get everybody online quickly and affordably, I mean remember this - people in the bottom 20% of incomes are nine times less likely to be online than people in the top 20%."CAROL DUNCAN: Can those in the bottom 20%, however, afford the $5,000 being suggested to connect to the coalition's alternative NBN?MALCOLM TURNBULL: No, you don't need a fibre optic cable. This is the great fallacy you are labouring under is the notion that to have access to the digital economy you need to have a fibre optic cable into your house. It doesn't matter what the technology is as long as you have the speed that enables you to do all the things you want to do."Now, you talk about 25Mbps, and I say that as a minimum, with 25 Mbps you can stream, download simultaneously four high-definition video streams. That is a lot. You can do all of your e-commerce, all of your tele-conferencing ...CAROL DUNCAN: But there's been a television released this week that requires greater speeds than that.MALCOLM TURNBULL: The real issue is, are people prepared to pay for it. Are they prepared to pay for that investment.The answer is that you will never get a return, at least I don't believe, I cannot foresee a time when you can get a return from residential consumers for those very very high speeds. If I'm wrong, and it doesn't matter whether I'm right or wrong, because the flexibility is in the network.We will build it so it is capable of being upgraded to FTTP as and when demand requires it."CAROL DUNCAN: Do you believe there is a perception that women don't like Tony Abbott very much, that women aren't comfortable with him.MALCOLM TURNBULL: I'm not sure that's right. I think that's something that's asserted and I know one woman who doesn't like him very much - that's his opponent the Prime Minister - but you look at Tony, I mean there he is, he's got two lovely daughters and he's got his wife and he works with plenty of women in his office.The proposition that Tony Abbott is a misogynist I think is just wrong. You can make a lot of other points about him but the idea that he is a woman-hater is just nonsense.CAROL DUNCAN: I often see comments about the September federal election along these lines, "I wouldn't vote for the Liberal Party under Tony Abbott, but I would vote for it under Malcolm Turnbull."MALCOLM TURNBULL: That's very flattering and I'll always accept a compliment, you don't get a lot in politics. All I can say is that I am part of the Coalition collective leadership team. We are not electing a President. Tony Abbott is the leader, he will be Prime Minister if we win.CAROL DUNCAN: For better or worse a lot of Australians do actually vote on personality.MALCOLM TURNBULL: Yes but there is more than one personality in a government and there is more than one personality in an opposition, too, and so we are a team.So you might prefer Malcolm Turnbull to Tony Abbott or you might prefer Tony Abbott to Joe Hockey or Julie Bishop to all of us, but the fact is that we're all part of that group. We're a package deal.So all I can say to those people who say 'I'd rather have Malcolm Turnbull than Tony Abbott' is thank you, very much for that generous sentiment but I'd still urge you to vote Liberal because I will be there. I am part of the leadership team and it is a collective leadership team."CAROL DUNCAN: So for those people who aren't comfortable with Tony (Abbott) you'll be there to rein him and make him behave in the ways that perhaps they wish?MALCOLM TURNBULL: Well I'm not sure what they want me to rein him in on? When you ask people about that they keep on talking about his swimming attire. I don't know that that's my responsibility.CAROL DUNCAN: Are people perhaps concerned that his obviously strong faith will interfere with his policy-making decisions?MALCOLM TURNBULL: Well, I don't think there's any evidence for that. He's a very practical person. He recognises the Liberal party and indeed Australia is a very broad, diverse community.We use the expression 'a broad church' not to express that we're all religious but that there's a wide range of views, and as the leader you've got to accommodate all of those views and I sought to do that when I was leader.CAROL DUNCAN: There are lots of points that you two differ on, how hard is that?MALCOLM TURNBULL: Well we differ famously on the question of the republic but that is, in effect, a free vote issue in the Liberal party so there are plenty of Liberals who think we should be a republic, Peter Costello comes to mind, but there are plenty that don't - John Howard and Tony Abbott are staunch monarchists so the Liberal party survives notwithstanding differences of opinion.We have a common purpose in restoring capable, competent government that seeks to enable people to do their best rather than telling them what is best. So we've got a philosophy of government but we don't agree on every issue.
Malcolm Turnbull has been in Newcastle to deliver the annual Barton Lecture at the University of Newcastle. 1233's Carol Duncan spoke with him at length about the National Broadband Network, Tony Abbott, same-sex marriage and leadership.Malcolm Turnbull and Carol Duncan in the 1233 studios. If you want to know why Malcolm is holding a pomegranate, you will have to listen to the interview. (ABC Local:)On the eve of Malcolm Turnbull's visit to Newcastle, the New Zealand parliament voted to redefine marriage as a union between two people, becoming the first country in the Asia-Pacific region to do so.CAROL DUNCAN: Why do we still not have this right for Australians?MALCOLM TURNBULL: We can (do this here) but as you know the parliament considered the matter last year and voted against it. But it's open to coming back again.There is certainly much more rapid change in this area than many of us, including myself, had anticipated. In addition to New Zealand legislating, the UK is in the process of doing so, France has done so, there are now I believe 10 US states where gay marriage is legal so the trend is only going one way. I think the changes in New Zealand and the UK are going to have a very big impact (on same sex marriage legislation in Australia).If you go back to the 1850s when there was a case in England called Hyde v Hyde in which a judge gave what became the classic definition of marriage for a long time which is a permanent union between a man and a woman. He did so on the basis that this was what was accepted in what he described as 'all of Christendom'. We wouldn't use that term any more but if you were sitting in a court in London or anywhere else today and you had to ask yourself 'what is the accepted definition of a marriage in the western world, or in countries of a dominant Christian tradition, however you wanted to define it, you certainly couldn't say it is a permanent union betwewen a man and a woman because there are so many of those countries, very substantial and important countries, which recognise gay marriage, so there has been a big change.I would have said this was going to take a long time but I think it will happen sooner rather than later. It will become increasingly difficult for Australia to maintain opposition to arrangements which are accepted in countries with which we are so close, which we have so many people going to and from, so many people coming here from New Zealand. I think there has been a big seachange in this and it's happened incredibly rapidly, within the space of a couple of years."CAROL DUNCAN: It is often suggested that you don't actually believe in the policy on broadband that you are having to present for the coalition, or that you don't really believe it is the best option for Australians.MALCOLM TURNBULL: It is, I have absolutely no doubt about it. If I wasn't a politician, if I was back in my old job in the business world and the government, any government, asked me to advise on what the best course of action would be, I would describe exactly what our policy is because you get the right balance between the level of investment, affordability - being able to price the internet access at a price that people can afford, and speed, giving people the services that they need. So I think we've got the balance right."The problem with Labor's scheme, let's be quite frank about this, Labor has said they're going to run fibre optic cable into 93% of Australian households. We criticised it as being too expensive. We actually think this project will cost $94bn, taking a very long time, it's running way behind schedule. After four years they've got less than 20,000 people connected to the fibre and they'll be lucky by June 30 to meet 15% of their targets.CAROL DUNCAN: In 2003, Telstra executives told a Senate inquiry that the copper network had to be replaced, that it was 'five minutes to midnight' for the copper network. Should we be relying on the copper network at all for such a massive piece of infrastructure?MALCOLM TURNBULL: You've got to remember that under our scheme we are replacing almost all of the copper. The only copper that would remain in the customer access network is the last four or five hundred metres to the premise, and the reason for not replacing that is that as long as it is in good condition, as long as the length is short, you can deliver very high speed broadband - up to 100 Mbps - so you can deliver very high speed broadband, certainly more than fast enough for what people want and what people value, but you save a gigantic amount.The depressing thing about these networks is that it's really the last mile, it's actually less than a mile, that costs all the money because it's so labour intensive.CAROL DUNCAN: What about those areas where the existing copper network, in some cases up to 100 years old, will not be good enough for the job?MALCOLM TURNBULL: If that's the case, your area would be a candidate for either having that copper remediated at the time of the build, and we've taken account of that in our policy, or if you've got areas that have got endemic problems in terms of maintenance and water penetration then you may replace them with fibre and do so now.So you just have to be pragmatic and practical about it but the changes are literally, you're talking about saving $60bn."CAROL DUNCAN: In January 2013, Bloomberg's list of international internet speeds indicated that large parts of the world are already accessing speeds faster than 25Mbps, so is cutting the fibre at the node to save money now simply a false economy if over the longer term we have to continue to make very large investments in the very near future to upgrade the coalition's alternative NBN?MALCOLM TURNBULL: No, I don't believe you'll need upgrades in the very near future.Most people will get by 2016 on the fixed line upgraded network 50Mbps or better. We've said 25 Mbps is the minimum, that is the direction that we will give NBNCo as the minimum, so they have to do it on the basis that nobody gets less than that.Our goal, and our direction to NBNCo will be that by 2019 to ensure that at least 90% of the people on that network have not less than 50Mbps.CAROL DUNCAN: Singapore offers a download speed of about 50Mbps on average, Japan is rolling out a 1Gigabit (1000Mbps) network ...MALCOLM TURNBULL: Which is useless by the way, for a residential customer, it's a marketing gimmick.CAROL DUNCAN: Should we be building two networks, one for industry and research, the other for domestic users or simply investing one big network to cater for all needs?MALCOLM TURNBULL: If your question is 'should you be providing higher rates of bandwidth to industry and research and businesses than you do to residential consumers' the answer is obviously yes, because they've got market for it.You can spend a gigantic amount of money, $94bn, and connect every cottage, every flat and every townhouse in Australia to a fibre optic cable that's capable of running at 100 Mbps or ultimately at 1Gb, the vast majority of those customers have no use for, no value for and will not pay you for those very high speed services. So you're making a gigantic investment upon which you can get no return and as a consequence you end up having to charge people a lot more.You've got to remember that under Labor's plan, this is not my figure, this is what they have said in their own documents given to the ACCC and their own corporate plan 'wholesale prices will treble over the next 10 years for broadband access'. Now they've (prices) been coming down for the last 10 years and it's no wonder they'll go up because if you're investing so much money in the network then you've got to get a return on it."I think a very important thing to bear in mind is that we've got to be practical and hard-headed about this. This is serious money. We're talking about all the other infrastructure investments we need to make in Australia. The great virtue of telecoms networks is that, unlike a bridge, you can expand them incrementally, bit by bit."CAORL DUNCAN: Could it be expected that to delay the full roll out of fibre will increase future cost of completing the equivalent work as designed into the government's NBN? We often see major cost blow-outs with delays in major infrastructure construction across the country.MALCOLM TURNBULL: Let's assume that we can spend $900 on average to get a premise up to the most part 50Mbps but no-one less than 25Mbps, and we can do that now. And let's assume it's going to take us the best part of another $3,000 to get them up to 100Mbps and up to 1Gb with FTTP, but let's assume that there's not going to be any demand for that very high speed in those residential areas for, say, 10 years, I'm saying you would be better off postponing that investment, keeping that extra $3,000 in your pocket, earning a return on it somewhere else or not having to borrow it, and then when the demand is there making the investment then. It's just labour costs, labour costs will rise with the price of inflation but so will everything else.But the big difference is if you build a bridge you cannot build a bridge with demand just 10 years ahead because you can't just keep adding lanes every 10 years. You've got to think ahead 30, 40, 50 years.With a telecoms network, you've got the ability to build it for now and the foreseeable future, and you've got the ability to upgrade it progressively over time as demands change, and you don't really know what the demand's going to be, and above all as technologies develop. And so while postponing investment until it's needed may seem a bit hard-headed and sounding too much like a canny accountant than a visionary politician, it actually makes great sense because if you postpone that investment until it's needed the opportunity cost on the money that you haven't invested and that would have earned no return in that time, so you've got your investment in your pocket or doing something else, but also when you do come to invest you're using the latest technology and that's a powerful argument to take a more steady and businesslike approach to it."All politicians are susceptible to grand gestures, but this is a case where you can actually be heard-headed, pragmatic, make the network affordable for both the taxpayer and the consumer and have the advantage of the best technology when you need it.CAROL DUNCAN: Why do you think that a lot of social media commentators suggest that you don't actually believe in the broadband policy that you are having to sell as Shadow Communications Minister?MALCOLM TURNBULL: I have no idea. I think they're transferring their own views to me.I can assure you that I do (believe in the coalition broadband policy).I've been involved in the internet in Australia since it really got going, I was one of the co-founders of Ozemail. I'm digitally connected, I'm online a lot, I'm not a luddite, but I'm just saying to you that you can achieve everything you want to do, get everybody online quickly and affordably, I mean remember this - people in the bottom 20% of incomes are nine times less likely to be online than people in the top 20%."CAROL DUNCAN: Can those in the bottom 20%, however, afford the $5,000 being suggested to connect to the coalition's alternative NBN?MALCOLM TURNBULL: No, you don't need a fibre optic cable. This is the great fallacy you are labouring under is the notion that to have access to the digital economy you need to have a fibre optic cable into your house. It doesn't matter what the technology is as long as you have the speed that enables you to do all the things you want to do."Now, you talk about 25Mbps, and I say that as a minimum, with 25 Mbps you can stream, download simultaneously four high-definition video streams. That is a lot. You can do all of your e-commerce, all of your tele-conferencing ...CAROL DUNCAN: But there's been a television released this week that requires greater speeds than that.MALCOLM TURNBULL: The real issue is, are people prepared to pay for it. Are they prepared to pay for that investment.The answer is that you will never get a return, at least I don't believe, I cannot foresee a time when you can get a return from residential consumers for those very very high speeds. If I'm wrong, and it doesn't matter whether I'm right or wrong, because the flexibility is in the network.We will build it so it is capable of being upgraded to FTTP as and when demand requires it."CAROL DUNCAN: Do you believe there is a perception that women don't like Tony Abbott very much, that women aren't comfortable with him.MALCOLM TURNBULL: I'm not sure that's right. I think that's something that's asserted and I know one woman who doesn't like him very much - that's his opponent the Prime Minister - but you look at Tony, I mean there he is, he's got two lovely daughters and he's got his wife and he works with plenty of women in his office.The proposition that Tony Abbott is a misogynist I think is just wrong. You can make a lot of other points about him but the idea that he is a woman-hater is just nonsense.CAROL DUNCAN: I often see comments about the September federal election along these lines, "I wouldn't vote for the Liberal Party under Tony Abbott, but I would vote for it under Malcolm Turnbull."MALCOLM TURNBULL: That's very flattering and I'll always accept a compliment, you don't get a lot in politics. All I can say is that I am part of the Coalition collective leadership team. We are not electing a President. Tony Abbott is the leader, he will be Prime Minister if we win.CAROL DUNCAN: For better or worse a lot of Australians do actually vote on personality.MALCOLM TURNBULL: Yes but there is more than one personality in a government and there is more than one personality in an opposition, too, and so we are a team.So you might prefer Malcolm Turnbull to Tony Abbott or you might prefer Tony Abbott to Joe Hockey or Julie Bishop to all of us, but the fact is that we're all part of that group. We're a package deal.So all I can say to those people who say 'I'd rather have Malcolm Turnbull than Tony Abbott' is thank you, very much for that generous sentiment but I'd still urge you to vote Liberal because I will be there. I am part of the leadership team and it is a collective leadership team."CAROL DUNCAN: So for those people who aren't comfortable with Tony (Abbott) you'll be there to rein him and make him behave in the ways that perhaps they wish?MALCOLM TURNBULL: Well I'm not sure what they want me to rein him in on? When you ask people about that they keep on talking about his swimming attire. I don't know that that's my responsibility.CAROL DUNCAN: Are people perhaps concerned that his obviously strong faith will interfere with his policy-making decisions?MALCOLM TURNBULL: Well, I don't think there's any evidence for that. He's a very practical person. He recognises the Liberal party and indeed Australia is a very broad, diverse community.We use the expression 'a broad church' not to express that we're all religious but that there's a wide range of views, and as the leader you've got to accommodate all of those views and I sought to do that when I was leader.CAROL DUNCAN: There are lots of points that you two differ on, how hard is that?MALCOLM TURNBULL: Well we differ famously on the question of the republic but that is, in effect, a free vote issue in the Liberal party so there are plenty of Liberals who think we should be a republic, Peter Costello comes to mind, but there are plenty that don't - John Howard and Tony Abbott are staunch monarchists so the Liberal party survives notwithstanding differences of opinion.We have a common purpose in restoring capable, competent government that seeks to enable people to do their best rather than telling them what is best. So we've got a philosophy of government but we don't agree on every issue.
Ah, 2017. A year when too much politics is not enough. What a year in Australia. What a year in the world.For the penultimate episode of this podcast for 2017, join us for this live and extremely wonkish conversation from the wilds of suburban Sydney with two smart and informed panellists.* Paula Matthewson aka @Drag0nista, political analyst and author.* Josh Taylor, news editor, BuzzFeed Australia.This episode was recorded in front of a live audience at the West Ryde Hotel in Sydney on Sunday 17 December 2017.There's talk of the Bellelong by-election, Australia's two-party political system, chocolate, the same-sex marriage postal survey, Donald Trump, China, and even the National Broadband Network. Amongst many other things.Full episode credits at:https://stilgherrian.com/edict/00071/
Australia's internet speeds are notoriously poor. This is backed up by a recent report ranking us 51st in the world when it comes to connection speeds. But what does a ranking like this actually mean and can the much-maligned National Broadband Network lift us back up? Producer/Presenter: Cheyne Anderson Speakers: Robin Braun, Professor of Telecommunications Engineering at the University of Technology Sydney Alice & Jason
Telstra restores calls but SMS still down It’s official: Google is sexier than Apple Vaya offers 70GB data for $65 a month Lego's launched a,"safe",social,network,for,under-13s,on,a,new,app,,called,Lego,Life. 'Father,of,Pac-Man',Masaya,Nakamura,dies Not,guilty,plea,in,landmark,Kodi,box,trial Trump's inauguration breaks live streaming records Australia’s longest running television show about video games has been cancelled Telstra mobile gadget to deliver downloads 10 times faster than the National Broadband Network Linksys’ mesh router system will bring better NBN Wi-Fi to Aussie homes
A report commissioned by the National Broadband Network (nbn) and the Regional Australia Institute has argued one in two Australians will need high level IT skills by 2030, while also retaining soft skills like communication and critical thinking.
A report commissioned by the National Broadband Network (nbn) and the Regional Australia Institute has argued one in two Australians will need high level IT skills by 2030, while also retaining soft skills like communication and critical thinking.
This episode Stephen Conroy explains the latest AFP raids on parliament over the National Broadband Network document leak and says he would die in a ditch for his sources. Katharine Murphy and Gabrielle Chan assess the fortunes of Malcolm Turnbull and Bill Shorten, why haven’t we heard much from the government lately and why does the opposition leader remind them of a rooster?
Brendan Clarke talks about why Australia needs the best technology for a National Broadband Network, James Jansson talks about why Australia needs a Space Agency, James Coffey talks about the Energy Policy of the Science Party. Produced and hosted by Ian Woolf Support Diffusion by making a contribution
This week's guests are Erik and Dan from GoHear who discus their local gig-finding app which syncs events with the soundcloud profiles of bands.The Byte team are also chatting about Facebook's role in national diplomacy, National Broadband Network policies in the upcoming election, and virtual reality technologies.Presented by Vanessa Toholka, Collin Jacobs and Dan Salmon.
What is artificial intelligence? What is artifical intelligence? And great answers to most of what we talked about, by a proper computer guy from Stanford University (Formal Reasoning Group) What is Skynet? (Wikia) What is computer chess? (Wikipedia) Google computer wins final game against South Korean Go master (Physics.org) Google has gotten very good at predicting traffic (Tech Insider) When will AI be created? (Machine Intelligence Research Institute) What is intelligence? (Machine Intelligence Research Institute) What is consciousness? (big think) What it will take for computers to be conscious (MIT Technology Review) Learning how little we know about the brain (The New York Times) Google traffic (Google) What is artifical consciousness? (Wikipedia) Kegan's 'orders of mind' (NZCR) Kegan's theory of the evolution of consciousness (Stanford University) Consciousness may be an 'emergent property' of the brain (Quora) A good discussion between Sam Harris and Neil deGrasse Tyson (Sam Harris' podcast) There are billions of connections in your brain (The Astronomist) The 'Go' game (Wikipedia) The number of possible Go games is reeeeally large...potentially more than the number of atoms in the universe (Sensei's Library) A comparison of chess & Go (British Go Association) Go & maths...the number of positions is scary (Wikipedia) There are also a lot of chess moves (Chess.com) What is a brute force attack? (Technopedia) How many moves ahead can hard core chess players see? (Quora) Deep learning in a nutshell – what it is, how it works, why care? (KDnuggets) Deep learning with massive amounts of computational power, machines can now recognize objects & translate speech in real time (MIT Technology Review) Google's 'DeepMind' deep learning start up (techworld) The Google Brain project (Wired) The Go computer was trained with 160,000 real-life games (Scientific American) Evolutionary computation & AI (Wikipedia) Genetic programming & AI (Wikipedia) So what's a robot then? (Galileo Educational Network) Professor reveals to students that his assistant was an AI all along (SMH) Hate Siri? Meet Viv - the future of chatbots and artificial intelligence (SMH) What is the connection between AI & robotics (wiseGEEK) Robotic limbs that plug into the brain (MIT Technology review) The Roomba vacuum robot (iRobot) The 'Robot or Not' podcast (The Incomparable) Expert predictions on when we'll see conscious machines: When will the machines wake up? (TechCrunch) Google AI: What if Google became self-aware? (wattpad) Will Google create the first conscious computer? (Daily Mail Australia) Google Consciousness...not affiliated with Google (Google Consciousness) Elon Musk does indeed have an AI company: Open AI (Wired) Evil genius with a fluffy cat (Regmedia) The Maltesers gift box (Mars) Will machines eventually take on every job? (BBC) When robots take all the work, what'll be left for us to do? (Wired) The travelling salesman maths problem (Wikipedia) A bunch of stuff about the travelling salesman maths problem (University of Waterloo) GPS became fully operational in 1995, but was proposed in 1973 (Wikipedia) How does GPS work? (Wikipedia) Digital diagnosis: intelligent machines do a better job than humans (The Conversation) What is Lyme disease? (Lyme Disease Association of Australia) Stuttgart (Wikipedia) Robot B-9: the robot from Lost in Space (Lost in Space Wiki) Robot B-9 in action (YouTube) Surgical robots (All About Robotic Surgery) Commercial planes are basically just big drones (Esquire) The AI in Google's self-driving cars qualifies as legal driver (Fortune) All the self-driving cars are learning from each other (The Oatmeal) Your future self-driving car will be way more hackable (MIT Technology Review) Google self-driving cars have driven more than 2 million km & have ony had 14 minor collisions (Wikipedia) Crazy animation of self-driving cars at an intersection (Co.Design) Self-driving cars could get their own lanes (wtop) Self-driving cars could lower insurance premiums (The Telegraph) Self-driving cars could lower insurance premiums (Wired) Australia's new National Broadband Network (nbnco) Tesla's cars now drive themselves, kinda (Wired) Australia's first autonomous vehicle test (Motoring) How AI is driving the next industrial revolution (InformationAge) Why bots are the next industrial revolution (Huffington Post) Humans need not apply: short video (C.G.P. Grey) Self-driving trucks are on the way (Basic Income) In the 2015 census there were 94,975 articulated trucks registered in Australia (Australian Bureau of Statistics) Driverless trucks move all iron ore at Rio Tinto's Pilbara mines, in world first (ABC Australia) Rio Tinto pushes ahead with driverless trains in Pilbara (SMH) Can Star Trek's world with no money work? (CNN Money) The economics of Star Trek (Medium) Jeff Bezos from Amazon (Wikipedia) Yes, the robots will steal our jobs. And that's fine (The Washington Post) I fear 'low-cost country sourcing' more than robots taking my job (Wikipedia) Flight prices are calculated by robots doing maths (Mathematical Association of America) Are airline passengers getting ripped off by robots? (Fortune) Is it true that once you search for a flight the algorithm will remember & put the price up? (Quora) Mac users may see pricier options (ABC America) Naked Wines Sir James Dyson (Encyclopaedia Britannica) Cheeky review? (If we may be so bold) It'd be amazing if you gave us a short review...it'll make us easier to find in iTunes: Click here for instructions. You're the best! We owe you a free hug and/or a glass of wine from our cellar
更多内容,请关注我们今天的微信,搜索:英语环球 NEWSPlusThe Internet speed in Australia is lagging behind the rest of the Asia-Pacific region.Australia ranked 44th globally based on its average connection speed, which fell almost 2 percent in the third quarter of last year to less than 7 megabytes per second.This has placed Australia behind a number of other countries and regions in the Asia-Pacific region, including South Korea, China's Hong Kong, Japan and Singapore.A report by the National Broadband Network suggests Australia's connectivity to high-speed broadband has not picked up the pace, with only 14 percent of the country being connected to high-speed Internet.lag behind v. 落后,落后于 该短语可以单独使用(类似不及物动词),也可后接名词(类似及物动词)。例句:In this day and age, if you don't have a basic understanding of the English language, you will lag behind for sure. (如今这个年代,如果完全不懂英语,你就肯定落伍了。)Don't lag behind others when you cross the street, OK? It turns to the red light pretty quickly. (过马路的时候别掉队,好吗?很快就转红灯了。)the Asia-Pacific region n. 亚太地区 广义上,可以包括整个环太平洋地区,即太平洋东西两岸的国家和地区。狭义上,指西太平洋地区,主要包括东亚的中国(含港澳台地区)、日本、俄罗斯远东地区和东南亚的东盟国家,以及大洋洲的澳大利亚和新西兰等国。megabyte n. 兆字节,百万字节 我们平时说起宽带速度,每秒可下载多少M的内容,这个M就是megabyte(正规的缩略语是MB);另外两个常用的概念是kilobyte(千字节,即KB)和gigabyte(千兆字节,十亿字节,即GB)。National Broadband Network (澳大利亚)国家宽带网络,简称NBNpick up the pace 加快步伐,提高速度例句:If you really want to meet the deadline, you have to pick up the pace now. Just sitting here and staring at the computer won't do you much good.(如果你想在截稿时间前完成任务,你必须得加快速度了。光坐在这里盯着电脑没用。)
This episode of The 9pm Edict heads into a eucalypt forest in search of the internet, and encounters a dog.You'll hear about the National Broadband Network's fibre-to-the-node trial, Russell Brand, Bertrand Russell, the 20th anniversary of a sarin nerve gas attack in Japan, the 25th birthday of the internet in Australia, the 60th birthday of nuclear power stations, Hillary Clinton and the mangoes, Google co-funder Larry Page's threat to kill 100,000 people, and the arsehattery of Village Roadshow co-CEO Graham Burke.And there's the dog, of course.And a cat. Sort of.But don't forget the dog.Episode notes and full credits are at:https://stilgherrian.com/edict/00026/
This week Bajo and Hex review The Walking Dead: Survival Instinct, Year Walk and Monster Hunter 3 Ultimate while Goose explores what the National Broadband Network is and how it will influence the Australian gaming community...
Labor’s promise of a budget surplus is as honest as Treasurer Wayne Swan’s hand on heart election promise not to bring in a carbon dioxide tax. And they are hiding expenditure they'd have to reveal if they were company directors. That socialist dream, the National Broadband Network, is a 40 billion dollar hole in the budget. As to Australia being the envy of the world, the deterioration in our budgetary position under Wayne Swan is even worse than that under the Whitlam years. The International Monetary Fund has just found the deterioration in our budget balance from 2006-07 was the fifth largest for the advanced economies - up with Greece, Iceland and Spain.
Scotland Yard's cybercrime unit has arrested a teenager it suspects of working as the spokesman for the Lulz Security hacking collective, officials said Wednesday. The Metropolitan Police's Central e-Crime Unit arrested a 19-year-old, the force said in a statement. His name wasn't released, but police said he was believed to be one of LulzSec's most prominent members. The hacker group Anonymous posted a message Tuesday to PayPal customers, urging people to close their accounts with the online payment service. Anonymous and fellow hackers Lulzsec accused PayPal of being unfair for refusing to allow donations to the controversial Wikileaks and for helping law enforcement track down hackers. An unemployed truck driver was charged Wednesday with hacking into an Australian broadband network provider in an alleged crime that police say could have caused significant damage to the national Internet infrastructure. David Cecil, 25, was charged in a court in New South Wales state with hacking into one of the National Broadband Network's service providers and numerous other businesses and websites in Australia and overseas since May.
Will the Government's $43 billion project be money well spent? We discuss the pros and cons of the National Broadband Network. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.