NBN Co refines access products

 

Finalising prices internally.

NBN Co has "refined or modified" 90 percent of the attributes of its fibre, wireless and satellite products as a result of 200 hours of consultations with 25 retail ISPs this year.

The network builder was also "putting together pricing to support its product constructs" this week but could not say when those prices would be made public.

The network builder's general manager of products Leica Ison told a Communications Alliance event in Sydney today that NBN Co had created the basic elements of its product designs in February.

The first basic product attributes included that they would be Layer 2, with an entry-level 12 Mbps down/1Mbps uplink, committed speed options up to 100 Mbps and peak speed options up to 1Gbps.

Ison said the product team "locked ourselves in a room" with NBN Co's techies, regulatory and commercial personnel to come up with the basic elements.

"I remember saying that the one thing missing in these workshops that we really needed for good product design was: What do our customers need?" Ison said.

"We're a wholesale-only product, so what do service providers need from our product design in order to be able to be successful in the market?"

Ison said the product team had spent the past nine months meeting and getting feedback from various ISPs on the design of its fibre, satellite and wireless products.

She described in detail the NBN Co's thinking on the fibre products, which would launch with "eight key speed tiers" and four traffic classes.

The starting point for fibre services would be 12 Mbps down/1 Mbps uplink. Other speed tiers included 25/10, 50/20, 100/40 and eventually 1 Gbps/400 Mbps.

"We're also adding some attributes around traffic classes, which allow service providers to partition traffic off to different services running across the network," Ison said.

The classes were real-time critical (class 1 – supporting quality voice and emergency services calls), multimedia video (class 2), transactional business data (class 3) and "bursty internet" (class 4).

The idea of the different traffic classes was to facilitate quality-of-service for different types of traffic running across the fibre NBN.

Speed tiers and traffic classes had been set for wireless and satellite but were not discussed at the event. However, a slide appeared to show the speed tiers for satellite would be 12/1 Mbps, 12/2 Mbps and 12/4 Mbps.

Ison also said that NBN Co was this week reviewing industry comments from its product design consultations that kicked off in August.

"We're putting together pricing to support those product constructs," she said.

"Internally, we're in the final stages of getting ready to finalise the pricing but I don't really know when they will be released."

New consultation

NBN Co's head of industry engagement Matthew Lobb also told attendees that NBN Co would soon begin consulting with industry on "how to become a 'come-on-board'" – a customer – of the next-generation network.

"We'll be putting out a paper on what the testing arrangements are and also on how next year is going to play out," Lobb said.

He said that once NBN Co had completed the rollout of its network in first release mainland sites, the company's focus would turn to "testing our operational capability, finalising operational processes and finalising our products".

"We'll work with the industry to bed those down before working on the next part of the network rollout," Lobb said.

"We're certainly trying to bed down our processes very carefully so we can handle the scale of [the NBN] project."

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NBN Co refines access products
"For those that don't think 12/1 speeds make sense, remember that the NBNco has to provide equal priced services across fibre, wireless and satellite so the minimum 12/1 speed is probably there so ..."
By Borgscan
 
 
 
Comments: 9
mad1k5
Dec 2, 2010 4:26 PM
Interesting, but I would like to see Quota's with the speed.

I think most people will pick 25 or 50mbit (I certainly will).

Good News for those on Sats with those speed too.
HubertCumberdale
Dec 2, 2010 6:52 PM
These speed tiers are just stupid. For a start 12/1 shouldn't even be an option. There should only be two options available 50/20 & 100/40, later on 50/20 should be dumped and 100/40 should become entry-level while adding the higher speeds too like 1000/400 etc.
umbria
Dec 2, 2010 7:24 PM
HC, I think the 12/1 option makes a lot of sense, since for the first decade there is a segment of the market who will mainly use it for voice calls.

Committing such a tiny share of the 2.5 Gbps capacity of a GPON to a few users on each unit may add a couple of years to its life before demand will rise to require the GPON to be upgraded to a 10 or 40 Gbps unit. Your predictions that the base speeds will rise over time are undoubtedly correct, though.
HubertCumberdale
Dec 2, 2010 9:35 PM
umbria wrote:
HC, I think the 12/1 option makes a lot of sense


Nonsense! it makes no sense at all. Remember one of the goals of the NBN is to fix the so called "digital divide" how is this a solution when the entry level plan is so low? They should be raising the standard not creating another situation where I still have to worry about the capacity of the connection at the other end, oh well so much for NBNco... of course it's not the end of the world but that's what you get for not consulting a visionary and expert like me on these matters.
franko12345
Dec 3, 2010 12:11 AM
I was hoping that the speeds would be symmetrical. 50/50 or 100/100.
The 12/1 option makes a lie out of Labours Ehealth plans. The idea of reliably upstreaming HD video for Ehealth with 1mb/s is laughable
Corsair
Dec 3, 2010 1:17 PM
12/1 would be better than what I am getting now.

At most, I get 3Mbit down and .30Mbit up.
cjawnik
Dec 3, 2010 1:30 PM
For me 12/1 will be way too low, but I can understand that I'm not the only person in Australia so it's good to make a broader range of options for all Australians.
EMwyres
Dec 3, 2010 2:34 PM
Having 12/1 is perfectly sensible...it will be obviously the cheapest option, and for those people who do very little with their connection, that's what they'll get.

Having a cheap and easy option will drive uptake of the NBN as a whole.
Borgscan
Dec 4, 2010 9:09 AM
For those that don't think 12/1 speeds make sense, remember that the NBNco has to provide equal priced services across fibre, wireless and satellite so the minimum 12/1 speed is probably there so that all three delivery methods can have the same base pricing.

So it does make sense.
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