https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL2206/S00018/hard-to-respect-flawed-network-readiness-index.htm
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Hard to respect flawed Network Readiness Index |
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Tuanz and Vodafone remind us that New Zealand needs to focus on digital performance. See New Zealand tech slipping behind.
There is no room for complacency. Every other nation wants a competitive digital economy. They are all running towards the same goals.
Standing still is not an option. Any nation not keeping up with the pack risks becoming uncompetitive.
To
make a case for more action, Tuanz draws on the Portulans
Institute’s Network Readiness Index.
There are places
where the data and tables do not pass a basic sniff test.
Many of the measures in the report are meaningless. In other
cases, the writers infer a huge amount from the slimmest
evidence.
Keep in mind this is at a time service providers introduced the world-class 8 Gbps Hyperfibre. 2021 saw the Rural Connectivity Group plug rural broadband and mobile network gaps. Many New Zealanders moved to better broadband plans in the year.
By any standard New Zealand ‘access’ moved forward in 2021.
It’s possible the drop in the table is because 26 other countries moved forward faster than New Zealand.
Possible, but not
likely.
This puts us at 70 in the world in this category. It is our worst performing area in the access index.
If 3G covers 99.46
percent of New Zealanders, that means 0.54 percent are not
covered. That’s a total of 28,000 people.
We have world class access, yet Portulans Institute ranks New Zealand 70 places behind Australia.
Australia is 44 in the world for the percentage
of population covered by “at least a 3G mobile network”.
Its 3G coverage figure is 99.87 percent. This implies there
are 43 countries on that list have an even higher proportion
with 3G coverage.
In practice the gap between 99.46 and 99.87 percent doesn’t make any difference on a day to day basis.
And that's before you think about the likely margin of error in those numbers. Hint: It's likely to be more than one in a thousand.
The
reality is that both countries have good 3G coverage scores.
Neither is perfect, but New Zealand's 99.46 percent is no
handicap.
That's because both countries are cities. Smothering a city in 3G is not the same as providing services throughout a country.
It’s a safe bet
that Auckland and Melbourne are closer to 100 percent
coverage than the countries they sit in.
Choosing to make a big deal out of a few thousandths difference in 3G coverage and ignoring fibre is a choice. It could be rational, but it feels arbitrary.
Many of the items the Portulans Institute
measured have that arbitrary feel. Under “content” the
report measures Github commits and Wikipedia edits. Sure,
they measure something. Yet are they important components of
a nation’s digital readiness?
We could go on. There are questionable assumptions and measurement through the report. It’s not worthless, but nor is it a valuable pointer to relative performance.
There’s a good case for benchmarking our performance against other nations. But let’s not get excited about a poor global network readiness index report. It’s a distraction.
The argument for better digital performance stands on its own merit, not on some spurious set of figures made up by an otherwise unheard of think tank in Washington DC.
Hard to respect flawed Network Readiness Index was first posted at billbennett.co.nz.
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