iiNet launches "Terabyte" plan

 

"Simplified" plans separate peak and off-peak times for businesses.

Perth ISP iiNet has announced plans to offer up to one Terabyte of broadband data per month for customers who bundle phone and internet services.

From Friday, residential customers could download up to 500GB during "peak times" and another 500GB between 1am and 9am for $99.95 on bundled ADSL 2+ or $119.95 on bundled ADSL 1.

This was a fivefold quota increase on iiNet's previous largest ADSL2+ plan, which offered 100GB peak and 100GB off-peak for $129.95 per month.

The new pricing schedule (pdf) would cut the number of iiNet's bundled ADSL2+ offerings from seven to four plans that ranged from $29.95 for a total quota of 20GB to $99.95 per month.

Other broadband offerings would also be "simplified". Instead of seven current Naked Business DSL "anytime quota" offerings, iiNet has introduced three plans that range in price from $89.95 for 50GB+50GB on- and off- peak data to $149.95 for 300GB+300GB.

CEO Michael Malone said the ISP had moved to simplify plans and meet Australians' "increasing appetite for fast broadband and online content".

But "this isn't about big plans - it's about sustainable plans," he said.

"iiNet is moving Australian broadband forward," he said. "We've built a high performance network over the past five years, including great long term deals with our suppliers.

"We have oodles of bandwidth and it's about time we used it."

iiNet's one-Terabyte announcement came two days after announcing its 2010 annual results and a week after rival ISP Internode unveiled its "simplified" offerings with a maximum quota of 240GB.

The announcement also followed iiNet's plans to acquire AAPT's consumer business for $60 million, which would see it take over 113,000 DSL customers in September.

When the acquisition was announced last month, iiNet's chief regulatory officer Steve Dalby said the ISP was unlikely to continue with the unlimited plans offered by AAPT.

Dalby said that unlimited plans "might be good for bragging rights" but were unnecessary given that most subscribers could live on much smaller monthly quotas.

Copyright © iTnews.com.au . All rights reserved.


iiNet launches "Terabyte" plan
"Of course the NBN fibre is for home subscribers not for business, so all those tight a*sed businesses will have to pay normal rates to upgrade their services."
By FLashy
 
 
 
Comments: 8
cheapskate10
Aug 18, 2010 5:14 PM
I think that the "Terabyte" plan is a bit misleading. It should be called a 750GB plan as best.

At ADSL1 speeds you could only download roughly 1 GB/hour so on off peak, so that would be 500 Peak + 250GB Offpeak/month at best. If Australian plans are to be taken seriously then why do they continue to insult our intelligence.
MrOrange
Aug 19, 2010 11:03 AM
The 1TB plan has an 8 hour offpeak period. Running at 8Mbit means you can download ~690GB/month.

The only thing misleading here is your post.
johnpro2
Aug 19, 2010 1:32 PM
I currently have a 12GB Telstra plan with 10 months to run.At nearly $80/month it is in the upper price brackets. As soon as ADSL2 comes here{48KM N of Bris} I am going naked and parting with Telstra once and for all.

1 TB is for businesses I suspect ..?

Jp
Ezy2Confuze
Aug 19, 2010 5:46 PM
I'm currently on the existing ADSL 2+ Business 4 plan with static IP address, so as I don't get the new peak and off peak rates automatically - besides which I don't have to worry about this off-peak/peak rubbish as it's all one big pool - I can easily drop back to the Business 2 plan and still have a higher quota. Too bad I'm less than 2KM's from my local exchange and in West Perth, yet I go no higher than 13Mbps because we seem to have rubbish lines. I've already had tests run and the problem is in the street.
Digger11
Aug 20, 2010 10:05 AM
Should attract all of the file leechers.
rycrozier
Aug 20, 2010 10:58 AM
On that logic, I doubt it since iPrimus is offering more quota on its "terabyte" plan.
FLashy
Aug 20, 2010 3:44 PM
Ezy2Confuze, why not ask your IT consultant to go fibre now and get an Ethernet 100MB/s Internet connection as do so many businesses in Perth.
There is fibre all around you..........
FLashy
Aug 20, 2010 3:47 PM
Of course the NBN fibre is for home subscribers not for business, so all those tight a*sed businesses will have to pay normal rates to upgrade their services.
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