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freitasm

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#243553 18-Dec-2018 09:30
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Just received - interesting parts in bold:

 

 

The Commerce Commission has today released its 12th Annual Telecommunications Monitoring Report, which reveals that fibre is poised to overtake copper as the main way kiwi households access the internet.

The report shows that as at 30 September 2018 there were 668,850 households and businesses connected to fibre, an increase of 45% from 2017. Meanwhile, copper connections dropped 19% to 755,000 over the same period. Copper connections make up 46% of all fixed broadband connections, while fibre is now at 40%.

“This year is a tipping point in favour of fibre broadband as New Zealanders continue to transition from the old copper network to fibre networks capable of delivering much faster speeds. We expect this trend to accelerate, with 1.4 million households and businesses now able to connect to fibre,” Telecommunications Commissioner Dr Stephen Gale said.

“New Zealanders are continuing their love affair with data-hungry applications, with monthly data usage for broadband and mobile continuing to surge. The average mobile data consumption is up almost 70% on last year to 2GB, while the average broadband data usage is up almost 50% to 172GB. More than 70% of households now have no data cap. On the other hand, landline connections have continued to decline, with over 40% of households now opting to not have a home phone.

For mobile, pricing of a basic mobile plan in New Zealand remains relatively competitive when compared to equivalent offerings in Australia.

“Higher-use mobile plans have shown big price decreases. Of particular interest, a high use [mobile] plan with 300 calls and 5GB of data is $35 cheaper than in 2017. However, this is still more expensive than the comparable plan in Australia,” Dr Gale says.

“While it appears there are good price and quality options available to consumers, retail telecommunications remains a priority for the Commission, especially in the areas of billing, contract terms, marketing, and switching practices. We are continuing to use all of the tools at our disposal, including new powers under the Telecommunications Act to improve retail service quality and make more information available to aid consumer choice.”

The full report can be found on the Commission’s website

 





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wratterus
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  #2146930 18-Dec-2018 09:50
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Impressive uptake in Fibre connections. 

 

 

 

Do you know where they draw the line with what is considered 'mobile'? For example, is this just smartphones, or is it anything with a SIM? And connections like Netspeed's RBI for NZMCA members that gets carted around the country....?

 

2GB average for just smartphone/LTE tablet users seems high to me, but if customers that are on a 'fixed' (netspeed, wireless nation etc) wireless service are included, then it seems very low. 

I'd guess Spark/Vodafone's fixed wireless would be counted as 'normal' broadband? 







freitasm

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  #2146932 18-Dec-2018 09:52
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If you look at copper + fibre uptake it adds up to  86%. My guess is the 14% remainder will be satellite, WISPs, mobile broadband and coaxial cable... I will confirm.





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howdystranger
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  #2146945 18-Dec-2018 10:20
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I think if they used Warehouse Mobile the cheapest low use plan would be even cheaper!




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  #2146948 18-Dec-2018 10:38
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I wonder if LLU Unbundled DSL such as what Vodafone and Orcon run from the exchange would be in that 14%.


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  #2146949 18-Dec-2018 10:40
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Page 16 is a most telling slide;

Of the $1.66bn being invested by industry, around half is by the fibre companies. That leaves about $780m for mobile networks (which consumes about $500m imho), or just $280m for non plumbing stuff - product development etc.

That’s quite a small pot to share amongst so many companies... would explain why there’s so little new and interesting beyond rateplans.




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  #2146952 18-Dec-2018 10:44
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BarTender:

 

I wonder if LLU Unbundled DSL such as what Vodafone and Orcon run from the exchange would be in that 14%.

 

 

I expect that comes under 'other' in the infographic (4%)





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freitasm

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  #2146956 18-Dec-2018 10:48
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Well, if I had looked at the document thoroughly instead of skipping to the sections... There's an infographic on page 3, so I am pasting it here. And this is what I received from the ComCom (confirming what I said before):

 

"The pie chart in the infographic details the remainder as Fixed wireless and Other. Fixed wireless includes fixed mobile broadband connections and major WISPS. Other is coaxial cable. The data delivered over fixed mobile broadband connections should be counted as broadband data rather than mobile."

 





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  #2146962 18-Dec-2018 10:51
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hio77:

 

BarTender:

 

I wonder if LLU Unbundled DSL such as what Vodafone and Orcon run from the exchange would be in that 14%.

 

 

I expect that comes under 'other' in the infographic (4%)

 

 

Yup.. Just reading the report now: Number of unbundled lines (000's) - 2018 - 53k

 

 


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  #2147086 18-Dec-2018 13:27
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BarTender:

 

Yup.. Just reading the report now: Number of unbundled lines (000's) - 2018 - 53k

 

 

Thats just terrible. When I think of how much money was spent by telstraclear, vodafone and the others... lots of stranded investment i think...





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howdystranger
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  #2147089 18-Dec-2018 13:33
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antoniosk:

 

BarTender:

 

Yup.. Just reading the report now: Number of unbundled lines (000's) - 2018 - 53k

 

 

Thats just terrible. When I think of how much money was spent by telstraclear, vodafone and the others... lots of stranded investment i think...

 

 

Surely they got a reasonable return on their investment already?


hio77
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  #2147090 18-Dec-2018 13:34
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antoniosk:

 

BarTender:

 

Yup.. Just reading the report now: Number of unbundled lines (000's) - 2018 - 53k

 

 

Thats just terrible. When I think of how much money was spent by telstraclear, vodafone and the others... lots of stranded investment i think...

 

 

Chorus have been doing some pretty big pushes to get customers off UCLL too.

 

In terms of vectoring, i suppose it's in their best interest to get UCLL gear out. Also means they could possible renegotiate and nolonger half to do the whole cabinet bay for UCLL stuff - Such wasted space!





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  #2147262 18-Dec-2018 18:40
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Total fibs about the mobile pricing in Australia. There are plenty of telcos (e.g. Amaysim) that give you unlimited calls, SMS and 1GB of data for A$10 ($10.56).


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