Hi :)
I think the distance between Australia and New Zealand is surprisingly large.  
Nothing like as close as i keep thinking it is.  

The Netherlands and Sweden are very atypical of European countries.  I think 
they have an extremely high tax-rate but that gets put into very high 
visibility projects instead of being sunk into black-holes such as "defence" or 
things that only the rich and famous or just people in the capital get to use.  

Regard from
Tom :)  



--- On Tue, 24/7/12, webmaster-Kracked_P_P <webmas...@krackedpress.com> wrote:

From: webmaster-Kracked_P_P <webmas...@krackedpress.com>
Subject: Re: New Zealand connection, was Fw: Re: [libreoffice-users] now can 
Purchase a NA-DVD
To: users@global.libreoffice.org
Date: Tuesday, 24 July, 2012, 15:35

On 07/24/2012 10:02 AM, James Knott wrote:
> webmaster-Kracked_P_P wrote:
>> That underwater cable network is used for both phone and Internet 
>> communication, since phone systems not seem to be converted to digital to go 
>> through the cables to give more "lines" of communication between countries
> 
> ????
> 
> Are analog trunks still in use anywhere?  The phone system has been digital 
> for many years, long before there was an Internet. It'd have to be an 
> extremely old cable to require analog trunks. Anything running over fibre 
> would most certainly be digital.
> 
They still have the cables and they are used.  Mostly they are used as digital 
trunk lines, but not every one has been converted do to their age.  The expense 
of laying a new fiber cable across a large body of ocean/sea is something that 
slows up the process of many parts of the world getting the better/faster 
connections.  The poorer the country, or the less number of potential users of 
the service, the longer it will take for the giant communication companies to 
spend the type of money needed to give these users the type of service many of 
us enjoy.  Europe has a better broadband system than most of the USA does.  I 
saw a program for places like the Netherlands and other European countries 
where they have a very large section of their country with fiber to the home 
and they have many different companies to choose from for broadband.  With that 
large competition for the broadband market, their Internet prices for 50 MB/s 
bandwidth is lower than my
 area of the USA for a 5 to 10 MB/s access.  We have just two options.  Cable 
modem service or a DSL service.  We pay $50+ a month for either.  On some 
science TV programming, they showed services for as little as $15 a month for 
the same services.  It all comes down to how good is their trunk system and how 
the marketing controls over those trunk lines are regulated.   For countries 
like New Zealand, they have to rely on a limited trunk cable on the ocean 
floor.  I would wonder if it was possible to run a trunk line from their nation 
to Australia.  Would it give them more access, or is Australia using the same 
trunk cable system as well.

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