Tuesday, 5 April 2022

Labor invents $20m wrought to find rural mobile coverage blackspots - Aussie Post in on scam.

There are TWO rural issues here - the first is that this "finding all the black spots" issue, is a pure fucking scam.

The second one is that the network erectors, have trimmed the fat down to the bare bones in terms of capacity of users and capacity of data through put.

So issue one first.

Fucking BULLSHIT - Everyone knows where the black spots are - and MOST of them are NOT on the Australia Post mail truck routes.

A lot of people have reported these and other issues, usually fuck all is ever done, and no feed back is ever given.

So there are HUGE amounts of reports of black spots and dead areas..... Already in existence.

People have been complaining about all of the black spots for ages.

It's noted when and where all the signals drop out - that is known. It's not the phone call that disappears, it's the PHONE that disappears out of the network.

I do not know the exact algorithm, but when phones go into an area, disappear off the network and then reappear 5 or 10 or 15 Km up the road, that is flagged as a black spot or an area of NO SIGNAL.  This is typically a THROUGH an dead area, on a highway etc.

AND in areas where there phones disappear off the network, and never reappear, or only reappear when they come back into range,  these areas, such as where there are no towers, and or in areas where there is virtually no population, are are in mountainous areas, which block signals from everywhere except the town in the valley, these are also permanent black spots.

There are well established coverage maps.....

AND I know people who were paid to drive around - with reception meters logging the signal strength - all over Australia (in the networked areas). So this job has already been done.

So the $20 million is going a pissing into the wind pass for some ingenious corporate cash grabbing and nothing else.


In regards to the now normal 4G phones, and not the 4G with external antenna and extended ranges, I know locations that are slight dips, in the landscape, between towns, where there is NO signal for like 150 meters... and these places are showing up as tiny little dead spots.

So for all intents and purposes - these coverage maps are "pretty much" DEAD ON. 

https://www.optus.com.au/living-network/coverage

Lots and lots of wide open spaces, with fuck all people and fuck all coverage.



An accurate enough dead spot - a small dip in the landscape - of absolutely NO signal at all.

It could be summed up as being about 200 meters in diameter.




I put it forward that Albanese is a fucking make work wanker, pork barrelling for his Team Sleaze Mates.



Labor unveils $20m plan to use Australia Post trucks to find rural mobile coverage blackspots

Data from trucks to inform locations selected for upgraded regional telecommunications across roads, homesteads and national parks


The Labor leader, Anthony Albanese, announced the regional telecommunications policy at the National Farmers’ Federation conference. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

Josh Taylor

Tue 5 Apr 2022 17.17 AEST

Australia Post trucks would be used to find mobile signal blackspots under Labor’s plan to conduct a $20m independent audit of mobile coverage if it wins the federal election.


Speaking at a National Farmers’ Federation conference on Tuesday, the Labor leader, Anthony Albanese, unveiled the party’s regional telecommunications policy, including fitting mobile signal measurement devices on Australia Post trucks.


A centrepiece of the Coalition communications policy since 2013 has been the mobile blackspots program, with $380m invested and over 414,000 sq km of new coverage delivered as of February this year.


The government’s existing program has operated on an application and grant basis. However, Labor’s policy would use data collected from the Australia Post trucks on coverage, call reliability and data availability for the three carriers – Optus, Telstra and Vodafone – to determine the best locations to upgrade.


A trial of similar technology is under way in Austria, using Austria Post’s 8,000 vehicles and technology supplied by Ranlytics to measure 3G and 4G mobile connectivity on highways and main arterial roads, with plans to also test 5G.


Mobile coverage blackspots outside metropolitan areas were a key complaint to the 2021 regional telecommunications review. While telcos say 99.5% of the population are covered by mobile networks, this equates to just 33% of Australia’s land mass and the committee raised concerns about the accuracy of the measurement.

“Indeed, the committee has continued to hear of persistent mobile blackspots in many regional, rural and remote areas, particularly outside of regional centres, towns and transport corridors,” the report stated.

“This includes places like farming homesteads, local roads and national parks where there is demand for reliable mobile coverage to support productivity and public safety.”

The New South Wales Rural Fire Service told the committee it was concerned at the number of blackspots often with limited internet or just 3G coverage, stating it “has caused significant stress for many residents and put … stress on emergency operations.”


In the Morrison government’s response to the regional telecommunications review, it said independent audits of mobile coverage would be commissioned in 2022-23 and 2023-24, with the government considering “crowdsourcing” data on mobile network coverage and performance.

In the federal budget last week, the communications minister, Paul Fletcher, announced $418m in new funding for regional connectivity, including addressing blackspots covering 8,000km of roads and nearby properties.

Labor has pledged $400m for a fund for mobile connectivity on roads, regional homes and businesses that will be assessed by Infrastructure Australia, subject to community consultation.

Labor has also promised $200m for improving regional and peri-urban connectivity through mobile and fixed line internet upgrades and has promised $30m to connect farms, and farming technology.

“This is a comprehensive, targeted plan that will ensure better mobile coverage on roads, on farms and across regional communities, and better broadband too,” Albanese said.


“This is critical to modern agriculture and making sure Australian farms are as efficient and competitive as they can be.”

Vodafone said initiatives to improve mobile coverage are “welcome and overdue”.

“The need for a better-connected regional Australia is a must, not a nice-to-have,” a Vodafone spokesperson said.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

So issue two second.

Imagine a district has say 1000 people, and say there are 600 internet connections composed of base computers, and smart phones all tethered to the network...

OK when it's averaged out, you really ONLY need about 100 connections, to carry the AVERAGE levels of traffic through put - or connections and data transfer rates.

And this is kind of OK... except when everyone gets on the net first thing in the day.....

Say 200 people make 200 connections - internet connections and phone calls all at the same time.

It starts to congest up, slow right down and connections and phone calls drop out.

BUT if we get the combination of cold wet windy weather - and everyone goes indoors and gets on the internet.

AND It's a public holiday / school holidays / everyone is off work and school.

AND it's late in the afternoon and everyone has come inside for the evening meal etc.

AND everyone gets on the internet, doing social media, watching videos, gaming, checking the news, email etc., well the network that is geared to carry the minimum average, will actually come to a halt.

Pages will not open, connections cannot be made, opening all web pages just time out and won't load - phone calls drop out or it takes 5 or 6 phone calls to get a connection....

This is the other black spot in rural areas - the deliberate inbuilding of the minimum capacity infrastructure - the hardware and through put into and out of the network.

This is the other network conjobs for country people.


Add in the issue of the Criminal Parties fucking up the optical fibre to the house "broad banding of Australia" that was supposed to happen, so we could all get FAST connections, and multiple connections and fast throughput of data....

Now we get a dog shit internet....

AND deliberately built in UNDER CAPACITY on old copper to the home connections.

And a deliberately built in UNDER CAPACITY on the cellular networks.


Fuck the Criminal Parties... 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Vodaphone, Optus and Telstra - ARE full of shit - as are the profit skimming pricks in the Telecommunications Industry Ombudsmans office.

Vodaphone - the management of that lot does NOTHING about anything.

Optus is managed by the biggest pack of lying scamartists ever to fit a 2 person call center into a closet under the stairs.

And Telstra, that exists in name only, and only has foreign call centers and no one left in Australia to talk too.

They are ALL thieving, lying, scheming, scamming cunts.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


And Albanese - when you and the rest of these parliamentary criminals get tried and hung for genocide and treason... 


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