Gungahlin gains Senator support for RIM escape

Mar 12, 2010 11:36 AM
Tags: gungahlin | rim | telstra | point | cook | fibre | nbnco | nbn | conroy | lundy

Campaign turns to NBN Co and TransACT.

ACT Senator Kate Lundy will lobby NBN Co and the Communications Minister to prioritise the Canberra suburb of Gungahlin in the NBN rollout, backing a long-running campaign to take residents off Telstra RIMs.

Internet users connected to the Crace exchange in northern Canberra have long campaigned for better broadband services.

The area relied on pair gain systems - including remote integrated multiplexers (RIMs), which Gungahlin broadband activist Russ Gillon said were “simply not scalable or appropriate for modern internet usage.”

Apart from speed issues, RIMs offered a finite number of available broadband ports. When demand exceeded port availability, prospective users were placed on a wait list or told to take up alternative services like 3G broadband.

“Telstra’s failure to deliver by their persistent use of RIM technology in new areas underlines the urgency for the roll-out of the National Broadband Network,” Gillon said.

“I am disappointed Telstra continued to roll out RIMs, especially to high growth new areas such as Gungahlin.”

Lundy and Gillon would make “representations” to the NBN Co and would also “be providing a briefing to Minister Conroy about the ongoing negative impact of Telstra’s persistent use of broadband-blocking RIMs in the network.”

Gillon said he would also continue “working to have TransACT expand their current fibre roll out to include existing suburbs.

“I have been working on a submission to send to their board in an attempt to convince TransACT to do brownfields rollouts,” he said.

NBN Co has not taken a specific interest in RIM-to-fibre transitions at five test sites on the mainland.

Rather it would rely on data from a Telstra project announced late last year, where the incumbent would replace pair gain systems with fibre to 1500 homes at Point Cook near Melbourne.

Like Gungahlin, the area was well-known to be a broadband bottleneck due to its use of RIMs.

NBN Co’s network engineers will gain access to data gleaned from the RIM-to-fibre exercise at Point Cook as part of a negotiated ‘terms of engagement’ with Telstra.


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Gungahlin gains Senator support for RIM escape
"It is astounding how telstra can put such nasty infrastructure in new estates! Firstly it only caters for around 75% of residents in an estate, meaning a significant proportion miss out. Secondly, ..."
 
 
Comments: 4
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Lonski
Mar 13, 2010 7:28 PM
Its not just Gungahlin that has these issues, but almost every new housing development in Australia in the last 10 years!
mordie71
Mar 15, 2010 7:40 AM
Lonski is is right... it's not just one subrub in the ACT that's got this issue... It's in every state across
Australia - IN every CBD metro area. I had a 11 month battle just to get an ADSL port (not ADSL2+ as RIMs/CMUXs can't do that speed) -only "up to 8mb" meaning about 3MBs.

While fighting for an ADSL port I discovered through research and some good work by the people behind the ADSL2Exchange website (they have done goole maps of DA(RIMed/CMUXed) areas that have port issues) I could see how messed up the whole ADSL ports issue is ....They should be rolling out more ISAM (ADSL2+ supported) to these areas and up the access of ports - normal excuse? "not valiable" how can it be if they don't offer the ability! seesh ...
Some one should do a major study into the issue ...then you can see just how massive this issue is...and it's along way for been fixable now ...LONG way ...
mordie71
Mar 15, 2010 7:42 AM
oh btw a CMUX can only support out of the box giving 20% of all PSTN (phone lines) an ADSL port ...these boxes have about 410 PSTN lines ....
ashwin108
Jul 8, 2010 9:39 PM
It is astounding how telstra can put such nasty infrastructure in new estates! Firstly it only caters for around 75% of residents in an estate, meaning a significant proportion miss out. Secondly, for those who are lucky enough to be connected (unlike me), there is a deterioration in the speed of the internet when under load. 3G internet is horrible!
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