NBN brings up fixed broadband figures

 

Consumers keep their connections.

Australia was expected to gain five places in fixed line broadband penetration globally by 2013 with Gartner predicting a 14 percent rise in the number of households connected in that time.

In a report released today, Gartner said that 55 percent of Australian households had a fixed broadband connection in the home at the end of last year.

That placed Australia 19th in a list of the most wired countries in the world.

But the figure was expected to jump to 69 percent in five years, catapulting Australia up world ranks to number 14 at the expense of countries like Japan.

A total of 422 million households will have a fixed broadband connection in the home this year, up from 382 million households last year, Gartner said.

"The market will steadily grow with nearly 580 million households having a fixed broadband connection by 2013," the firm said.

"Consumers may be watching their household expenditure, but dropping their broadband connections is not on the top of their agendas as a way to reduce outgoings," said Amanda Sabia, principal research analyst at Gartner.

South Korea was expected to remain in the top spot with penetration growing from 86 to 93 percent.

Singapore was expected to be the only new entrant in the top five. Like Australia, it is in the process of rolling out a next-generation fixed broadband network.


NBN brings up fixed broadband figures
"Years ago when Telstra had the FMO, Future Mode of Operation project, it was to change from analogue to digital mode for all Telephone subscribers. All phones lines were digitised at their local ..."
By FLashy
 
 
 
Comments: 2
MerariSchroeder
Sep 28, 2009 6:43 PM
The stats are regarding "fixed line broadband penetration". "at the expense of countries like Japan." of course we'll surpass them, they're very techno-gadgety and are even trailing LTE/4G already.

So what the stats are saying is, Australia will begin winning a race, which other countries are leaving behind. One day everyone overseas will just have one mobile phone, one communications device, with one infrastructure behind it and pay one communications bill. We will still be paying off the failed NBN venture with higher taxes and we will once again be dependent on Telstra's infrastructure (this time mobile).
FLashy
Sep 29, 2009 2:04 AM
Years ago when Telstra had the FMO, Future Mode of Operation project, it was to change from analogue to digital mode for all Telephone subscribers.
All phones lines were digitised at their local exchange, and then entered the network.
Next was to be a network where everyone would have an IP address, sadly this was in the "too hard" basket for Telecoms companies to build for Telstra.
Now as we come into the "Internet" age, perhaps this is not so far away.
An integrated service to customers, containing a VOIP phone, with an ADSL internet connection. There are comapnies in Australia that provide IP (via LAN) PABX services, where local connections for phones are via the local LAN, and external are via an external server.
If only Telstra could offer such a service via the copper network, as NBN is so far off in the future.
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