Saturday September 6, 2008 9:25 AM AEST
Skip Navigation LinksPC Authority > News > Gulf widens for ADSL and ADSL2+ users

Search News

Gulf widens for ADSL and ADSL2+ users

Gulf widens for ADSL and ADSL2+ users
Jul 3, 2008
 | 7 Comments 
Tags: iiNet | Naked | ADSL2+
iiNet's bigger download quotas don't solve the big catch for those stuck on plain ADSL, and wanting big download quotas on faster plans.
As we've noted before, the increase in ADSL2+ competition is great news if you're close enough to a compatible, port-free exchange, but for the many Australians still on ADSL, the gulf is widening, and even wireless data is starting to catch up with some plans offering around 6GB of data.

Following iiNet's recent announcement of new plans - including increased download quotas such as the massive 100GB Naked Home 5 ADSL2+ plan - we took a look at how they compare to standard ADSL plans. As a comparative point, iiNet's Naked Home 5 ADSL2+ service would give you 100GB of download capacity (40GB/60GB peak/offpeak) for $89.95 all up.

Including a $30 phone rental (which gives you $50 effective to utilise), the most data-rich nationally available plan with a speed of better than 1.5Mbit on Whirlpool.net.au we could find for ADSL-only customers was Aanet's $45 Kickstart 2 plan, which would give you 15GB of downloads at a 1.5Mb speed rate. It is possible to get comparable amounts of data for $50, but you start dipping down into the barely-broadband world of 256Kbps accounts to do so.

The changes in plans do make iiNet an attractive proposition, especially for heavy iTunes users, as it's the major ISP in the country that doesn't count iTunes data against caps. It also benefits from a more generous "off-peak" timing schedule, between 2am and 12 noon; competitors such as iPrimus and TPG do offer more data-heavy plans but load most of the data into a compressed 3am to 9am time period.
Ads by Google

Comments: 7
nickmarlow1
Jul 5, 2008 4:01 PM
well this is good for people who can access iinet dslams, however, to say that people on plain "old" adsl are missing out is really a bit much. There is many people who would love to be able to get adsl even, or even something with comparable pricing to adsl

As for 256k being "barely-broadband", while i can understand while you would feel that way, i would certainly appreciate a reliable 256k connection shaped with at least 5-10gb of data for less than $50 a month. That would make me happy.


Comment made about the PC Authority article:
Gulf widens for ADSL and ADSL2+ users?
iiNet's bigger download quotas don't solve the big catch for those stuck on plain ADSL, and wanting big download quotas on faster plans.

What do you think? Join the discussion.
austhome
Jul 5, 2008 10:49 PM
Hi all, I was wondering how does ADSL and ADSL2 speeds compare with Optus cable broadband. I'm got cable broadband with them and I like its speed but is the others faster for downloading.
rider23320
Jul 6, 2008 2:51 AM
It's about time. Australia has been behind the world with internet downloads since the start. In countries such as the U.S.A there are no limits what-so-ever.
Alex Kidman
Jul 7, 2008 1:38 PM
Hi Nick,

Certainly, there's a fair share of people who are still without access to ADSL; my comment was more to do with the fact that virtually any application that requires "broadband" internet won't be thinking in terms of the speeds you're likely to see with 256K services, as well as to illustrate the value gulf between ADSL and ADSL2 services (although that's as much a matter of the incumbent wholesaler as anything else).
ilic
Jul 7, 2008 4:51 PM
As a country resident on ADSL1 only, I think more money should be invested in getting the ADSL2 (or better) infrastructure built to more than just capital cities. I live in the second biggest regional center in SA and we still dont have ADSL2?
Why? Too expensive apparantly.
smurftech
Jul 7, 2008 5:44 PM
Hi Austhome,

Optus Cable on paper is about the same as ADSL2@ 20mbps, but because of how Cable works it will generally be slower as your bandwidth on cable is shared with everyone else connected to the same node as you(normally everyone is the same street for example), so if everyone in your street is on cable and using it at the same time your connection can be slowed alot, but your connection will generally be alot faster than standard ADSL. The up side is with Cable your ping(time for data to go to/from a server) will normally be on average better than adsl/adsl2+, which is good if your a gamer, and you are less likely to have connection issues than Adsl/Adsl2.
Lee05
Jul 7, 2008 8:09 PM
We are stuck in a group of areas (new suburbs) with an old sub station so ADSL2 is a join the queue. We are still waiting for a vacant port to become available. Telecommunications Ombudsman is unable to assist because the basic is available and that is all they have to do. Now on wireless but it is more expensive
Login or register to submit a comment.


PC Authority iPhone 3G Coverage!

PC Authority Magazine

Issue: 131 | October, 2008

Australia's premier computer magazine, PC Authority gives you the facts, opinions and insight to make informed PC and tech purchasing decisions.


PC Authority Magazine