First off check what technology is being used in your area. This will be useful for context:

https://www.nbnco.com.au/connect-home-or-business/check-your-address.html

A lot of buildings end up with FTTB but your description suggests to me that you may end up with FTTN or FTTC.

Regardless, each residential address will have a separate NBN service. Afterall each residence can choose to go with a different RSP (the new name for an ISP).

Rob

On Tue, 14 Nov 2017, Dr Bob Jansen wrote:

Does anyone know what the situation is when the NBN connects to a building that has more than one Internet connection? Our building, a converted factory with multiple appartments, has two connections on two physical phone lines, one to TPG and the other to Telstra. Will each connection be upgraded or will they have to be joined in a single physical connection? If a single physical connection, can more than one ISP provide internet services?

BobJ

---------------
Dr Bob Jansen
Turtle Lane Studios Pty Ltd
122 Cameron St, Rockdale NSW 2216, Australia
Ph (Korea): +82 10-4494-0328
Ph (Australia) +61 414 297 448
Resume: http://au.linkedin.com/in/bobjan
Skype: bobjtls
KakaoTalk: bobjtls
http://www.turtlelane.com.au

In line with the Australian anti-spam legislation, if you wish to receive no further 
email from me, please send me an email with the subject "No Spam"
_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
Link@mailman.anu.edu.au
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link


--
Email: rob...@timetraveller.org         Linux counter ID #16440
IRC: Solver (OFTC, Freenode and Snoonet)
Web: http://www.pracops.com
I tried to change the world but they had a no-return policy
_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
Link@mailman.anu.edu.au
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to