ARLA/CLUSTER: Austrália opta pela Fibra Óptica ao invés do BPL
João Gonçalves Costa
joao.a.costa ctt.pt
Terça-Feira, 21 de Abril de 2009 - 12:56:17 WEST
The Australian Federal Government has announced its decision on
Australias National Broadband Network. In a surprise move, instead of
deploying a widely expected half-way-house fiber-to-the-node (FttN)
solution from a consortium of companies, the Government is moving ahead
with its own full-blown 100Mb/s fibre to the home rollout, (FttH). The
reported $43 billion project will include a mix of government and
private sector funding which may or may not include telecommunications
companies.
Telecommunications analyst Paul Budde states: "This is the most
ambitious infrastructure ever undertaken in Australia and will be the
most ambitious FttH network anywhere undertaken in the world. The
Australian Government is one of the few governments who, in a holistic
way, understand the importance of broadband across the various sectors.
This network is not just for high-speed Internet and entertainment but,
more importantly, for healthcare, education,
smart grids, etc".
This is good news for Australian's in general, and also for Australian
radio amateurs. Australia's largest telecommunications carrier,
Telstra, was excluded from the original selection process on the
grounds of submitting a non-compliant bid, however, as Telstra owns most of the
copper cable in the ground, any fiber-to-the-node solution which did
not include Telstra would have resulted in a variety of 'alternative'
access technologies used to connect the `node' to customers premises.
Although there may be many steps along the way, the predominant access
technology in Australian cities will now be fiber, and in less
populated areas will likely be wireless.
This decision would appear to remove the possibility of widespread
interference to radio communications from any network-wide adoption of
BPL technology, but still leaves as a concern the possibility of
interference from in-home use of BPL as an internal distribution
technology.
--
The decision by Australia to opt away from BPL is likely a major blow
to the world-wide implementation of this technology. This is because
other nations will look at Australia's decision to go fiber and based
upon it reconsider any commitment to BPL.
Fonte: WIA News
Mais informações acerca da lista CLUSTER