https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL2107/S00074/spark-expands-uncapped-fixed-wireless-broadband-footprint.htm
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Spark expands uncapped fixed wireless broadband footprint |
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Last week Spark extended what it calls its ‘uncapped’ fixed wireless broadband footprint. It now reaches another 500,000 potential customers.
The company’s Unplan Metro plan, yes that’s right and yes, it does sound weird, is now available at 1.2 million homes. The expanded fixed wireless broadband footprint includes towns and the rural areas where it is more needed.
Spark says that covers around
two-thirds of all homes and more than 10 percent of rural
households.
Performance and reliability is not as good as fibre, but it is better than your practical alternatives.1
If you can get fixed wireless at your address - that is not always a given2 - it installs fast. Spark will courier a modem and you could be online within an hour of it arriving.
It may be worth buying a low-end fixed wireless plan if you have limited broadband needs or are on a tight budget. Spark has a Basic plan for $45 a month with 40GB of data.
That’s more than enough for almost anyone who doesn’t use streaming, video conferencing or online gaming. You’ll be able to make voice calls and handle a limited number of Zoom meetings each month.
Otherwise, for a lot of people fixed wireless represents poor value. In almost every case you’ll be able to buy a faster, more reliable fibre plan with fewer restrictions on data downloads for less money. A number of people were let down by fixed wireless broadband when working from home during lockdowns.
That’s the
case even if you buy fibre from Spark, which is among the
most expensive options on the market.
In comparison no-questions-asked 100Mbps unlimited fibre plan from Spark is $90. You can buy similar plans elsewhere for up to $20 less. Flip has a fibre plan that works out at around $60 a month.
An all-you-can-eat 1Gbps fibre plan from Spark
costs $110. A mere $15 more than the wireless plan. That’s
a faster speed that most people need. Yet it means there
will never be any limits on your broadband activity even
with a house full of internet fanatics.
This is vague. You have to dig around to get a clear picture of what it could mean. But in simple terms it means Spark can kick you off if it decides you are using too much data.
In other words, it is neither
uncapped or unconstrained in the usual sense of those words.
The Commerce Commission may yet have something to say about
this description.
Spark CEO Jolie Hodson said earlier this year she would like to move between 30 and 40 percent of landline customers to wireless by 2023.
It’s a lucrative business.
Wireless services piggyback off the cellular networks used to connect mobile phones. It requires extra investment to support fixed wireless, but that’s incremental.
The technology bypasses the wholesale fibre networks. More to the point they bypass the fees charged by fibre companies. Spark and Vodafone make a higher margin from wireless broadband than from fibre.
In the past customers have had a mixed
experience with wireless. Network upgrades and the switch to
5G will improve that, but the technology is not for
everyone.
Spark expands uncapped fixed wireless broadband footprint was first posted at billbennett.co.nz.
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