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Conroy compiles evidence for CDMA shutdown

By Mitchell Bingemann
10 January 2008 12:29PM
Tags: conroy | cdma

A report detailing the pros and cons of Telstra’s Next G network has arrived at the desk of Communications Minister Stephen Conroy to help him decide if the new network is ready to replace the moribund CDMA service.

With a January 21 deadline looming before he makes his final decision, Conroy must decide if Telstra’s Next G network provides equivalent or better coverage than the current CDMA service.

The report, which was compiled by the Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA), is just one piece of evidence that needs to be considered before Conroy can make his public announcement. His department must weigh up whether equivalent services are being provided, such as voice calls, SMS, internet, pre-paid and post-paid options, as well as car-kit/aerial equipment.

“I will carefully consider all the relevant evidence provided before making my decision,” he said.

Existing customers are also being given the chance to provide feedback on their Next G experiences by calling 1800 883 488.

Meanwhile, with the January 28 switch off fast approaching, Telstra has ramped up efforts to make sure existing CDMA customers switch to the Next G network before CDMA access is withdrawn.

“There's been a sudden surge in the number of enquiries we're receiving in Telstra call centres and in our shops since the New Year, indicating that Australians know that the clock is ticking down on the old CDMA network,” said Telstra Country Wide Director, Gary Goldsworthy.

He added that the telco has started to introduce travelling kiosks to hundreds of regional and remote locations across Australia to sell NextG handsets and provide technical support ahead of the shutdown.

Customers who do not switch to Next G before the January 28 deadline will be given a 30 day grace period to switch their existing mobile number to another network before it expires and is passed to new users.

   


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Thoughts on this article? Add a comment below.
Comments: 5
You have to ask yourself; would anybody who really relies on their mobile and is on the CDMA network be waiting until the 21st of January to find out if the network is or isn't closing down on the 28th, before arranging to port to Next-G?
iTnews - comments icon Posted by StewartJan 10, 2008 4:35 PM
As one who relies heavily on his mobile for work and who has tested this so called great Next G system in the areas where I do most of my work, I all hope that CDMA is NOT turned off. It covers about 35% of the area I work in and that will be a disaster for people like me.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by Robert BurlingJan 10, 2008 4:53 PM
Agreed. The point I was (perhaps not too successfully) trying to make) is that the government leaving it so late to make the decison on whether CDMA is switched off is essentially forcing CDMA users to go with Next-G anyway, or risk having nothing on the 29th of January!
iTnews - comments icon Posted by StewartJan 11, 2008 3:50 PM
Tested 3 Next G blue_tick phones against my CDMA, near Mt Garnet in North Qld on Sunday 06/02/08 All 3 Next G did not have a signal at all, but my CDMA worked fine right beside them. The phone were 2 LG's & 1 Samsung. Telstra is once again ignoring the safety of persons who really depend on communication in remote areas where it can be a matter of life or death.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by Stephen ReevesJan 12, 2008 11:54 PM
I am a builder working at Church Lane Mt. Wilson NSW 2786. I have continuity of work there. CDMA phones are the only mobiles that work on this site, the 3G phones can't even get text messages through. Telstra should be sure 3G is better than CDMA before they shut it down. Right now it definitely is far from that goal. 3G also does not work along Bells Line of Rd. in many spots.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by Ian MuirJan 15, 2008 12:20 PM
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