On 12 November 2013 15:51, Tony Wright <tonyw...@gmail.com> wrote:

[ ... ]

 That is a typically deceptive political response and is a load of complete
> Liberal Party BS and Malcolm Turnbull lost any credibility he had with me
> when he said it. It won’t cost $20,000 a month for ANY household. A single
> household never needs a continuous stream of data getting a maximum of
> 1Gbps at all times, so it is shared among a whole bunch a households. So a
> single CVC line might be split between 10 to 20 houses.
>

There is nothing incorrect in what he said, 1gbps flat chat is $20K a month
wholesale. End of story. More over, that's *significantly more expensive* than
what you can buy today.

If Joe Punter uses less, great for him, but a school or a SME might want to
use more.

It begs the question, what is the average the NBN is designed for? Any sort
of application that involves bulk data transfers is out of bounds cost wise
- which is somewhat ironic.


>  On top of this, CVC charges will have to come down over time due to
> economy of scale. See:
> http://drpeering.net/white-papers/Internet-Transit-Pricing-Historical-And-Projected.php
>
> Historically, transit pricing has dropped by around 1/3rd every year
> since 1998.
>

CVC and IP Transit are *completely different things*. NBN Co doesn't even
sell IP Transit.

You need to pay for both. And you pay CVC even if the data is 'on net' and
never leaves your RSP (i.e. watching the TV or downloading freezone).

CVC isn't going to go down ever because there is no incentive for it to as
competitive technologies are outlawed (except for LTE, etc)

David.

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