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Location: Sydney, NSW
Member since 28 January 2011
Member #: 823
Postcount: 6761
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QUOTE: Aussie Broadband was the result of the amalgamation of Wideband Networks Pty Ltd and Westvic Broadband Pty Ltd, both of which had been trading since 2003. Wideband Networks Pty Ltd was formed by now Managing Director Phillip Britt and Chief Technical Officer (CTO) John Reisinger. Aussie Broadband is the fifth largest connector of new NBN connections in Australia. -- Wiki
From LinkedIn ...
Phillip Britt:
Managing Director
Aussie Broadband · Full-time
Jul 2008 - Present · 15 yrs 4 mos
Morwell, Victoria, Australia
Director
Communications Alliance Ltd
Dec 2020 - Present · 2 yrs 11 mos
Managing Director
Wideband Networks Pty Ltd · Full-time
Nov 2003 - Jun 2008 · 4 yrs 8 mos
Morwell, Victoria
General Manager Network Operations
Datafast Telecommunications Ltd
Jun 2000 - Dec 2002 · 2 yrs 7 mos
Melbourne, Australia
John Reisinger:
Chief Technical Officer
Aussie Broadband
Jan 2016 - Present · 7 yrs 10 mosJan 2016 - Present · 7 yrs 10 mos
Network Operations Manager
Aussie Broadband
Jul 2008 - Jan 2016 · 7 yrs 7 mos
Co-Founder
Wideband Networks
Jan 2004 - Jul 2008 · 4 yrs 7 mos
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Administrator
Location: Naremburn, NSW
Member since 15 November 2005
Member #: 1
Postcount: 7395
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Classic case: service-wise, every 'brand' taken over by acquisitive TPG went to the dogs.
TPG itself lost its way many years ago. Going back about four years, when this website was pretty much uncontactable more than 50% of the time was when TPG refused to repair faulty DSL connections, as they tried to push its customers onto its FTTB network.
I would have gladly shifted except TPG had stopped offering static IP addresses as well. Down the track, when I shifted home, things got sorted out and as far as Internet connections go, I've been fine, save for the occasional and understandable niggle. I'm on Superloop, which competes with Aussie Broadband for ex-Telstra/TPG/Optus customers who want more connectivity and less BS.
When companies become big they have the economies of scale to be able to afford to ditch their customer service practices that got them big in the first place and they can afford to trash their brands.
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A valve a day keeps the transistor away...
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Location: Sydney, NSW
Member since 28 January 2011
Member #: 823
Postcount: 6761
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When companies become big they have the economies of scale to be able to afford to ditch their customer service practices that got them big in the first place and they can afford to trash their brands.
It depends entirely on their management. What was left of Telstra's service reputation partially restored by David Thodey was wiped out by the Three Amigos: El Troppo Trujillo, Phat Phil and the Other Guy. El Troppo came to Oz with a reputation for driving up share price at the cost of investment and customer service, but yet the dopey government hired him. ¡Ay, caramba!
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Administrator
Location: Naremburn, NSW
Member since 15 November 2005
Member #: 1
Postcount: 7395
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The other bloke was Greg Winn. The Three Amigos wiped out Telstra's reputation and at that time, Telstra had by far the highest pricing and barbaric vertical integration policies in the utility's history. David Thodey actually came after Sol bailed and corrected many of Sol's mistakes. The other two clowns didn't wait to be sacked. They went with Sol.
The biggest laugh was Sol not being aware of the company he was about to lead - referring to it as "the little Aussie telco" when news broke in the US about his pending shift down under. Telstra was valued at $130bn at that time and Sol cut that in half during his tenure.
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A valve a day keeps the transistor away...
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Location: Hill Top, NSW
Member since 18 September 2015
Member #: 1801
Postcount: 2078
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Had a number of error 500's today.
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Location: Sydney, NSW
Member since 28 January 2011
Member #: 823
Postcount: 6761
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I have had timeouts too, and a period when isitdownrightnow.com said it was unreachable.
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Location: Sydney, NSW
Member since 28 January 2011
Member #: 823
Postcount: 6761
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Lots of protracted timeouts and 500 errors here.
Brad, maybe reboot that modem. Just maybe it's contributing to this problem?
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Administrator
Location: Naremburn, NSW
Member since 15 November 2005
Member #: 1
Postcount: 7395
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It's just the server having one of its hissy fits. I've rebooted it and hope this will settle it down a bit.
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A valve a day keeps the transistor away...
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Location: Hill Top, NSW
Member since 18 September 2015
Member #: 1801
Postcount: 2078
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Unable to connect yesterday due to continual error 500, however I see many new posts today. Shrug?
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Location: Belrose, NSW
Member since 31 December 2015
Member #: 1844
Postcount: 2476
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I go away and do something else, come back and it's OK.
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Location: Latham, ACT
Member since 21 February 2015
Member #: 1705
Postcount: 2174
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Thankfully this isn't on Optus lol.
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Administrator
Location: Naremburn, NSW
Member since 15 November 2005
Member #: 1
Postcount: 7395
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This is what Optus CEO, Kelly Rosmarin, had to say this afternoon when the system was back online:-
I believe at Optus we are a customer champion, and we go to great lengths to give our customers great value for money, excellent service and coverage and unique features they can’t get anywhere else.
https://www.smh.com.au/national/australia-news-live-rba-lifts-interest-rates-to-4-35-per-cent-pm-meets-with-chinese-premier-20231107-p5eiag.html
What an absolute crock of shit - pardon the Hogg Latin. The company I work for is an Australian-owned multinational bluechip and every Australian facility owned by this company was offline since 04:00 this morning up until a couple of hours ago. I am not authorised to comment on behalf of that company but I will say this, representing only myself, if this sanctimonious hubris from Optus continues there is a good chance it will become a customer backwater like Vodafone did about ten years ago.
Fair enough - sometimes things break - and I accept that but what doesn't wash is someone from a company's upper echelon coming out and sprouting rubbish like this without even a thought of offering its subscribers some sort of recompense.
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A valve a day keeps the transistor away...
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Location: Wangaratta, VIC
Member since 21 February 2009
Member #: 438
Postcount: 5389
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One has to wonder about Floptus. They put a tower up around the hypotenuse of a1mile by one mile triangle plus half the same distance, you can see it, but not the signal.
I am speculating that the NE & SE radiators look to the profit and the one my side is for aesthetics and to make it all look even.
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Location: Hill Top, NSW
Member since 18 September 2015
Member #: 1801
Postcount: 2078
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I don't use optus for anything so the outage was only a matter of mild curiosity.
I noticed on the TV that the optus spokepersons either had no idea what the problem was or didn't want to divulge it. By saying it's a "deep network problem" means they don't expect anyone to understand the technical mumbo-jumbo. The spokespersons most likely wouldn't have understood it themselves.
So, the question is, did someone do an upgrade that broke? or did someone do a stupid mistake (you're fired)? or was it just equipment failure? or was it a hack?
Will we ever find out?
It was funny on the ABC when the optus woman said "we have multiple levels of redundancy in case anything goes wrong", so the interviewer said "if that's the case, why did it stop working?"
Ummm... talk about foot in mouth.
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Administrator
Location: Naremburn, NSW
Member since 15 November 2005
Member #: 1
Postcount: 7395
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When an ABC journo asks a question that makes sense, it'll catch anyone off guard. That said, it does appear that a "change" rather than an "upgrade" occurred and that may end up being the cause. All networks do have single points of failure somewhere and this is where human error will end up being noticed.
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A valve a day keeps the transistor away...
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