We've had it at home for about 6 months , it leaves our old system for dead. no complaints at all.
Cheers Ean
We haven't got the NBN in our locale yet, but from what I have heard it's not all that it's cracked up to be, We have ADSL2 but this new NBN is slower for some than the system it replaces.
Ye we will all be forced to accept it when it arrives.
News report
NBN has a message for Australia: 'If you want high-speed internet, you are going to have to pay more' - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
We've had it at home for about 6 months , it leaves our old system for dead. no complaints at all.
Cheers Ean
Yes, if you opt for the slowest speed, you pay less.
If you want a faster speed, you pay more.
I use internet in two locations. One has FTTH and the other has FTTN.
The FTTH connection is the slowest plan and is adequate but regularly falls way below the advertised speed.
The FTTN connection is the fastest plan and regularly has multiple users. It regularly performs well.
My advice is to start with the slowest plan. You can always go for the next speed up if you find it's not fast enough.
have been happy with it but i have the wireless one (out country)
a lot of issues with it are ether they have put enough nodes/base station in to deal with the volume of traffic on it or the company you are with throttles your speed down (so they can buy less data and speed)
i had issues with the throttling and changed company and been fine since other then when they had to upgrade the base station to handle to volume of traffic.
but if i could get decent amount of gigs for a decent price 4g will out perform the nbn fixed wireless but very costly.
the biggest mistake for nbn is only going fiber to the node not house as once they stop putting it in they will need to go and change all the copper again to fiber but that's what happens with vote grabbing rather then future building
my nbn is faster than my adsl by a long way.
but im also paying more per month for the same data quota
At home (Ravenshoe) we had 4g, went to Wireless NBN.
Cheaper, Faster & lots more GB or MB or whatever they measure it by.
Very happy.
Now organizing to have Sky Muster NBN put in at The Roadhouse, expensive to set up & a lot more than we pay at home per month but currently we constantly run out of MB & can never get anything repaired.
So, here's hoping?
Jonesfam
From adsl2 to FTTN,,
same plan, new $$, tripled the speed.
works 95% of the time,,
"How long since you've visited The Good Oil?"
'93 V8 Rossi
'97 to '07. sold.
'01 V8 D2
'06 to 10. written off.
'03 4.6 V8 HSE D2a with Tornado ECM
'10 to '21
'16.5 RRS SDV8
'21 to Infinity and Beyond!
1988 Isuzu Bus. V10 15L NA Diesel
Home is where you park it..
[IMG][/IMG]
My fixed wireless speed was good...... was. I guess everybody around here is on it now.
Cheers
Slunnie
~ Discovery II Td5 ~ Discovery 3dr V8 ~ Series IIa 6cyl ute ~ Series II V8 ute ~
Had it now for about seven years I reckon. The first set up was terrible in the cable routing, my grand daughter could have done a better job. Since been rerouted. Been happy with the speed we pay for with very few outages, although they do seem to come at the worst time.
cheers
blaze
I'm on satellite, so a bit different. Cheaper than the previous satellite setup, but hardly a perceptible improvement in performance. The big problem is the "Fair Use Policy" that restricts satellite NBN customers to about 50GB/month, about a third of the usage of NBN's average customer, and less than the annual increase of this average. And, of course, there is the usual satellite lag, about 100times what many would consider acceptable!
With any NBN connection, there is the possibility of congestion or poor performance on part of the NBN's network. This would apply especially to wireless (too many on one sector of the tower), on satellite (too many on the particular beam), or FTTN (too far from the node). But congestion on your ISP's network is more likely - NBN charges to the ISP for connection are a lot higher than the ISP would have been paying Telstra, and also, for most ISPS, there is the problem that there are 101 points of interconnection round the country. The ISP has to provide or pay for the connection between the local one of these and their machines. Again, more cost than with ADSL. As a result, most ISPs are not buying enough capacity for the number of customers and the plans they are selling.
As a general rule, avoid ISPs that have any unlimited plans.
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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