Telstra progresses Point Cook RIM-to-fibre swapout

 

1500 home owners to know their options shortly.

Telstra will reach out to residents of 1500 homes at Point Cook in Melbourne "shortly" to advise them of their options when part of the suburb is migrated to fibre.

A spokesman for the telco told iTnews that the build was on track for completion in early May at which point customer connections would begin.

Telstra announced the decision to roll out fibre to 1500 homes at Point Cook near Melbourne in late December.

"There's lots of pair gain systems but not enough access to ADSL so as we were exploring how to rectify that, providing fibre made the most sense," a spokesman said at the time.

The results of the deployment would be shared with NBN Co.

The project represented a test case for pair gain-to-fibre migration in an NBN world. Pair gain systems - including remote integrated multiplexers (RIMs) - were a gateway to ADSL services for many residential users, particularly those in housing estates constructed in the past decade.

Residents in suburbs on Telstra RIMs have long complained about the speed of internet services.

NBN Co revealed on Monday it was finalising its own selection of "first release sites" across Australia where it will validate its network design in areas it believes replicate the challenges it will experience nationwide.

They included "a suburban area" with semi-detached homes and multi-dwelling units (MDUs), plus, "a smaller rural town" and "other places between the two" location types.


Telstra progresses Point Cook RIM-to-fibre swapout
"wjc; I'm in Point Cook, and I can assure you that the majority of people in the area are currently on dialup or overpriced and unreliable wireless due to pair gain network topology. I doubt many ..."
By Murderous Dan
 
 
 
Comments: 2
wjc
Feb 14, 2010 1:24 PM
RIM/PAIR GAIN VICTIMS UNITE - BLAME TELSTRA AND ITS BOARD.
Well - how wonderful - 1,500 home in Victoria - but for the rest - NOTHING from Telstra. We small business people in SE Queensland have been on the RIM/Pair Gain Telstra "mess" for a long time and it now has to be seen as a massive security issue... YES - national security.

At 35Kbits/sec try keeping your Windows system patched or even the virus list upt to date..You cannot.
Any Internet banking contract or the like that goes on and on about keeping your system patched and up-to-date as well as running the latest and greates anti-virus software has to be seen as TOTALLY IMPOSSIBLE to abide by and must be considered as an unrealisable contract by the home/small business user.

And the excuse that this doesn't matter since malware is not aimed at dial-up users is simply nonsense from personal experience. The new generation of targetted Trojans don't care or, worse, can LOVE dial-up - constant change of IP address, turn-on/off at random, simplified malformed packet structures, etc. etc.

Mr Thodey and Minister Conroy need to put their heads together NOW to get those RIM/Mux/Pair Gain victims in Australia OFF those pathetic systems as quickly as possible....yes in 2010 ... not just pull fibre to those who already have ADSL2+ in lucky city areas.

Also, remember, for dial-up people, websites, including those in Government, that use Flash video become complete denial-of-service sites for us on pair gain and there appears to be NOT COMPULSION at all to provide the "TEXT ONLY" sites we used to have. (oh - and we have never even seen such things as YouTube!)
Murderous Dan
Feb 15, 2010 9:02 AM
wjc; I'm in Point Cook, and I can assure you that the majority of people in the area are currently on dialup or overpriced and unreliable wireless due to pair gain network topology. I doubt many residents consider themselves to be in a "lucky city area", and ADSL2+ is just a dream for most.
Point Cook is a well known internet black hole. It's taken years of complaints to even get this small scrap off the broadband table.
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