More NBN Co Submissions (Services and PoI)

November 9, 2010 2 comments

Just a small update which will be followed up with more in the next week or so. It’s been busy with NBN Co partaking in another round of industry engagement, this time around their wholesale service specification and a joint engagement with the ACCC around their planned PoI implementation. I have submitted a number of responses to these two engagements, all of which are becoming increasingly critical of NBN Co’s growing monopoly footprint and power.

I will write up a number of summary posts for each of these submissions, however in the meantime they can be downloaded using the following links:

That’s a fair bit of reading (I know because it was a fair bit of writing too). Read more…

Future applications that justify a NBN

October 25, 2010 8 comments

I noticed a post just recently by journalist Stilgherrian, asking what future applications and services should be used to sell the NBN (National Broadband Network) benefits. He notes in his post that “the government’s expensive-looking TV adverts are nothing but vague generalities” and asks if anyone can come up with a more interesting list of applications that justifies the call for “more bandwidth”. I felt inclined to respond and did so with the following: Read more…

Submission to Senate on NBN Implementation Study

As noted in my earlier post, the Australian Government officially released the much heralded KPMG/MCKinsey NBN Implementation Study to both the Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy (DBCDE) and the Senate Select Committee on the National Broadband Network. Pretty much immediately the DBCDE established a public wiki for discussion (no longer available) and the Senate Committee set a deadline of the 27th May 2010, for public feedback regarding the Implementation Study recommendations (found here).

This post is a more approachable highlight of key points and observations from my review of the KPMG/McKinsey Implementation Study submission to the Senate Select Committee on the National Broadband Network. Read more…

Updates are pending …

May 20, 2010 1 comment

Just a quick note to my regular readers (and the various itinerant visitors). There are a couple of substantial posts pending release, however as a direct result of some recent engagements they are delayed … momentarily. Read more…

Finally, NBN Co agree to talk with me

May 14, 2010 1 comment

Today I met with Matthew Lobb (NBN Co Senior Advisor, Industry Engagement) and Jamie Chard (NBN Co Architect) at the NBN Co Sydney office. Fundamentally I wanted to discuss the concerns that I had been raising since February this year around their planned Point of Interconnect (PoI) models and their planned QoS implementation. Read more…

Twitter stream summary of NBN Implementation Study

May 10, 2010 1 comment

Last Thursday the Australian Government finally released the much heralded McKinsey/KPMG NBN Implementation Study. Costing the Government roughly $25million and taking over 9 months to prepare, the final report weighed in at just over 500 pages and almost 3Mb in size (which brings it close to being worth roughly $1 per bit). This post is just the raw tweets stolen directly from my live twitter stream (#nbnis). A more traditional critique will be forthcoming soon. Stay tuned for more. Read more…

ZDNet Twisted Wire – Will the NBN limit competition?

Further to the previous interview, Phil Dobbie interviewed myself (again) along with Geof Heydon (again) and Graeme Dollar for ZDNet’s latest Twisted Wire podcast on “Will the NBN limit competition?“.

Again Phil Dobbie brings his unique style and energy to the podcast format and in process uncovers a few new concerns for our rapidly evolving (or is it devolving, …. maybe just stagnating) telecommunications industry.

Well worth setting another twenty minutes aside to listen to.

Review of NBN Co Wholesale Bitstream Products engagement

April 21, 2010 1 comment

In December 2009, NBN Co released a wholesale products consultation paper (NBN001) to the public as part of a planned and ongoing, open industry engagement process. In their own words, they noted that:

NBN Co’s role is to realise the Australian Government’s vision for the development of a next generation national broadband network. To do this successfully, we need to consult widely to ensure our plans for the network meet the current and future needs of our wholesale customers and the wider Australian community.

Interested parties were invited to return submissions back to NBN Co for review by mid February 2010. In the meantime, NBN Co held two open industry briefing sessions, one in Sydney and the other in Melbourne, the latter of which was recorded and published online. In late March 2010, NBN Co released their summary of the collective open industry feedback and published a subset of the responses onto their website. This post is my review and summary of those submissions, or at least the subset that engaged in an open fashion and allowed their submissions to be made available to the public, for open review, against NBN Co’s own summary review. Read more…

ZDNet Twisted Wire – What will the NBN look like?

I was recently interviewed by Phil Dobbie, along with Geof Heydon and Paul Brooks, for ZDNet’s Twisted Wire podcast on “What will the NBN look like?“. Apart from providing a very approachable summary of the terminology used when discussing the Australian NBN; Phil also highlights some of the areas of current debate, namely retail versus wholesale discussions and the confusion around local versus aggregated PoI locations.

Well worth setting twenty minutes aside to listen to.

Network pricing strategies: tiered vs spot vs flat

This is intended to be a fairly exhaustive overview of the various options available to a next generation telecommunications carrier for pricing its products and services into a market. Managing pricing is increasingly important as telco operators around the world consolidate their multiple (legacy) infrastructure platforms into a single (next-generation network) platform (typically utilising IP/Ethernet/MPLS/D-WDM). I’ll also highlight some of the various strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats (SWOT analysis) associated with each approach. I intend to keep this analysis at a reasonably high level to make it more easily approachable and digestible. In reality, I could quite easily write an entire textbook on this subject alone (any publishers interested?). Thus I will not be including all the technical proofs or justifications for each condition or approach here (you can pressure me directly for those if you really desire them). So, without further ado, let’s embark upon our quest. Read more…