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Timeless Quotes - Sadly The Late Paul Shetler - "Its not Your Health Record it's a Government Record Of Your Health Information"

or

H. L. Mencken - "For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong."

Wednesday, July 15, 2020

This Seems Like A Major Development In Home Internet Services.

This appeared a few days ago.

Thursday, 09 July 2020 15:43

Optus 5G home Internet is an NBN killer

By Sam Varghese

For a while now, there have been mutterings here and there that the NBN Co's vain attempts to raise its average revenue per user — which has the fancy acronym ARPU — will face a real challenge once 5G gets a foothold in the community and retail service providers decide to use it to challenge the government monopoly.

That day seems to have arrived. I've just been playing around with one of the very real challengers, one that would definitely give the good folk at NBN Co some sleepless nights. Singtel Optus has started selling a service it calls Optus 5G home Internet – and, believe me, it is a real NBN killer. I can judge because in a few months' time I would have been on the NBN for three painful years.

Optus' solution to the bandwidth problem — which the NBN has illustrated in black and white — is simplicity itself. A 5G Nokia modem, in pristine white and looking every bit Scandinavian, is the only thing that's needed, along with a connector, of course. (This is what is meant by plug-and-play - though with Microsoft, which invented the term, it was always plug and pray.)

There are a number of LAN ports, one WAN port, a USB port, and a USB-C port at the bottom of the modem. The details one needs to connect are also there.

All one has to do is sign up, wait for the modem to arrive in the mail, and then plug it in. It comes all fitted out and ready to go. Oh, and by the way you need to be in an area that is covered by the Optus 5G network. (but then you knew that, right?)

That network now covers a wide band of Melbourne; the coverage in the suburb I live in, Doncaster, is not complete so I drove down to my son's house six kms away, and found a good, strong signal. It was where I learnt of the service as Optus had distributed flyers in that suburb, Bellfield.

When the modem is switched on, a number of spots of light appear on the top and gradually they settle down and the central one turns to green once it has connected to the 5G network.

After that, one can fiddle around a bit to try and improve whatever bandwidth one gets. The old rule of line of sight applies and you could find out where your nearest mobile tower is and align the modem with it; this website will tell you. Else, you could place the modem a bit higher than the floor – which is where I first placed it.

The speeds are very impressive. I got a top download speed of something over 400Mpbs. There were consistent 300Mbps+ speeds. Upload speeds were in the 20s, but on some days it went up to 40+. The speeds plus the cost — $70 per month — make it a very attractive proposition for anyone who wants a decent connection to the Internet.

More here:

https://itwire.com/reviews-sp-288/networking/optus-5g-home-internet-is-an-nbn-killer.html

At $70 a month with unlimited data this rather sound like the answer to a maiden’s prayer. I wonder how quickly the coverage will  come to other capitals?

Sadly a check finds it is not available for me right now but is coming!

This is going to drive the unresponsive jerks who run the NBN to do a great deal better to keep their customers and not loose a fortune of taxpayer’s money! There is not a month goes by that I don’t find myself falling back to my Telstra 4G dongle for Internet access.

David.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

This will be interesting to observe as network utilisation increases or peaks. Can’t say I have ever been overwhelmed by Optus.