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So what is your "actual experience" of Fixed Wireless?
I only spent 15 years working for a global telco supplier designing and building networks and systems in Australia and through out Asia. and I only know a little bit about wireless access network as well as other types of customer access networks, including advantages and disadvantages of each technology, subscribers complaints and operators feedback.
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I think a lot of people like to criticize anything to do with the NBN because it suits their political bias.
I no longer work for any supplier or operator. I have no financial interests in any telecom technologies. I have no political barrel to push. My interest is just about providing some info to Bob.
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If you want to term our actual experience anecdotal, then be my guest.
I can only relate what we actually experience. This area never had, and now never will have, ADSL2 only plain old ADSL. Our exchange was never set up for ADSL2, not even (especially not?) by Telstra.
Anecdotal evidence relies on personal testimony. But what do I know? I only know it is important to note the events or drivers which have led to those anecdotes. In this instance, the copper local loop to the subscribers house was the reason that you could not get ADSL2. I suspect the exchange was never a problem. To get an exchange ready, it is an installation of new multiplexers or DSLAMs. However, any problem with the copper local loop can't be easily fixed. Your problem, which is quite common, was probably caused by either subscribers being too far away from the exchange, and/or the condition of the copper network is poor, and/or the work around put in place to get POTS to such far away subscribers addresses actually contributed to the deterioration of the ADSL signals. Since ADSL2 has much more stringent requirements in order to push data at a higher rate. ADSL2 is not therefore available at the subscriber's address, and subscriber's poor experience with ADSL is also probably because of the same set of events.
Knowing all this is important because it allows people to evaluate if described set of circumstances applies to them. The OP probably has experienced things quite differently given that ADSL2 is available to him and he is quite happy with its performance.
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You now even acknowledge that ADSL is subject to the same bottlenecks that Fixed Wireless is, which is different to what you said in your first post.
This is an incorrect interpretation of the facts that I presented. There are many customer access network options, one of which is the wireless access network or what is commercially known as fixed wireless (so customer don't get confused with the mobile network which is an entirely different network infrastructure). The other is fibre to the curb/node/house/building. The traditional copper local loop that provides the POTS (plain old telephone service) is also a customer access network. ADSL of both versions 1 & 2 are overlays of the copper local loop, providing extra functionality and digital bandwidth over the same legacy copper access infrastructure. Each subscriber's line is physically linked to a port in the multiplexer at the exchange. It is not possible to have a bottleneck in an ADSL access loop from other subscribers because the traffic is carried on a dedicated pair of wires all the way to the exchange. On the other hand, a wireless access infrastructure is akin to a passenger train. Many people travel on the same train and a train will get congested if too many are on the train at the same time. When NBN co decides its too costly to roll out FTTx in a particular area, the wireless access infrastructure which is much cheaper, will be deployed instead.
At the end of any of the access network, it terminates at the exchange. The multiplexers take the traffic off the access links which might either be a single ADSL line, one FTTx link or a one wireless access carrier and put them all on a bigger train. This bigger train forms one element of the backbone of the telecom network. It is this network that I indicated congestion is possible for the same reason.
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Bob38s, I would hold onto my ADSL as long as I could and if they are not taking the copper away.
if Bob is happy with ADSL2 and with the inherit problem in wireless access architecture, that seems a reasonable suggestion.
So I will now leave it to the experts with loads of actual experience.