Australian Internet Users Badly Served - Study

Published: 27 July 2001 y., Friday
Only 73 percent of Australian Net customers have modem connections of at least 28.8kbps, compared with about 80 percent in the US, 90 percent in the UK and almost 100 percent in Canada. Only 60 percent of rural and remote users had data transmission rates of at least 28.8kbps, although this is double the 30 percent recorded in 1998. The Productivity Commission said 30 percent of the copper wire network was more than 30 years old although Telstra had recently promised to upgrade all lines to allow a minimum access speed of 19.2kbps. Meanwhile, availability or planned roll-out of alternative broadband technologies such as one-way satellite, ISDN or DSL was comparable to or ahead of the other countries, including New Zealand, Finland, France and Sweden.
Šaltinis: Newsbytes.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Lithuania's First 3G Call

Lithuania's acting president H. E. Arturas Paulauskas made the country's first 3G call over Omnitel's trial network on May 1st more »

3G will 'be the norm' in 2009

Seven out of ten Western European mobile users will have a 3G-enabled device within five years more »

New worm's got sass, but not much else

The security researchers at eEye Digital Security are not impressed with the Sasser worm more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

New Blade Servers

HP: Trim the Fat with Efficeon Blades more »

Spying software watches you work

Spyware has infected almost all companies polled for a survey about web-using habits at work more »

New form of digital radio launched

Nokia postions visual radio against DAB more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

A portal site DirectEurope

HP, Oracle, OTP launch portal site to assist applications for EU funds more »

IBM expands search push with Masala

Finding things is becoming a growing concern for IBM more »