https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL2206/S00030/download-weekly-60-million-for-more-rural-connections.htm
|
| ||
Download Weekly - $60 million for more rural connections |
||
Digital economy and communications minister earmarks
$60 million for more rural connections.
He says $43 million of that is set aside to “improve network capacity and speeds where rural users have been experiencing slow broadband. This includes, but is not limited to, settlements in the Far North, Gisborne, Manawatu-Whanganui region, Taranaki, Southland and the Waikato.”
This is on top of the earlier Rural Capacity Upgrades Clark announced in February and brings the current round of spending on rural network upgrades to $90 million.
Clark says tens of thousands of rural residents
will benefit from the spending and that is on top of the
second phase of the Rural
Broadband Initiative which has another year to
run.
Clark says the Remote Users Scheme will formally launch later this year.
There is another $2 million to extend the connected marae programme for up to two years. Clark says the extra money will allow for more marae to connect.
He says: “More than 560 marae have been connected through this initiative so far, with most of them located in rural areas, serving as hubs for their communities. I look forward to seeing more marae connected in the coming months”.
The government’s goal is for new or improved braodband to reach 99.8 percent of New Zealanders by the end of 2023.
The TDR deal with 941 incidents, compared with 935 in the previous half year. Billing, customer service and network performance remain the most complained about issues. Over the course of the year these areas saw fewer complaints as new problems emerged.
Enquiries about installation and transfers increased. The TDR says this is because of people moving to fibre and experiencing delays.
In the fourth quarter of the year the number of mobile complaints and enquiries from 2degrees customers doubled, while Vodafone and Spark’s numbers were much the same. There was a smaller leap in activity for 2degrees’ broadband complaints. Spark, Vodafone and Vocus all registered an increase in the number of complaints in Q4 when compared to Q3.
Complaints about home phones have trended down over time as people switch from traditional copper connections to fibre connections.
One finding in the latest report is that peak download speeds on MyRepublic’s Fibre Max plans have dropped by around 95 mbps since the last report. The company’s users see peak download speeds of around 650 mbps compares with an average across the industry of 824 mbps. The company says it is working on improvements to fix this.
Sky says: “As previously communicated, in parallel with its evaluation of potential investment opportunities, Sky has been exploring options to return capital to shareholders and accelerate organic investment in the business to drive further growth.”
The company says it will update shareholders on its capital management plans no later than the full year results announcement which is due on August 25.
A report from the Dell’Oro Group says the telecom equipment market grew between four and five percent during the first quarter of 2022. It says demand for ‘wireline’ equipment is robust while growth in wireless is modest. Huawei remains the largest vendor despite the ban by western nations although it is losing market share.
Japan has introduced a law that makes online insults a criminal offence that could land people with a year in prison. The law was introduced after a TV personality killed themselves after receiving images of self harm and hateful comments on social media.
Background information. A recent YouTube video featuring NCSC director Lisa Fong provides a quick, articulate overview of the cyber security centre’s work.
$60 million for more rural connections was first posted at billbennett.co.nz.
Sign up for The Download Weekly, a free newsletter rounding up New Zealand telecommunications news.
Home Page | Headlines | Previous Story | Next Story
Copyright (c) Scoop Media