Our mission is to publish news stories regarding the telecommunications scene in New Zealand. Our mission is no longer to vilify Telecom, but any company that attempts to monopolize on New Zealand's network. We will provide news on changes in the industry and physical network, as well as updates on the Local Loop Unbundling.

Welcome to Telescum

This is the new home of all things Telecom related happening in NZ with discussions and comments, the latest news, and of course general information.

We have chosen to use a "Website Content Management System" for this site design so it is much easier for contributors to edit the pages, and add stories without programming knowledge.

If you would like to take over Telescum as it new admin, please email me at admin [at] telescum [dot] co [dot] nz

Vodafone launches new broadband network

Friday June 06, 2008

Broadband competition in New Zealand has heated up, with Vodafone today introducing its new, high-speed 'Red' network.

The launch of the ADSL2+ network has been made possible by 'local loop unbundling' - allowing companies to install their own equipment in Telecom exchanges - which began last year.

Vodafone chief executive Russell Stanners said the company had already unbundled over half of Auckland's exchanges, and would have completed all 41 by the end of the October.

See Full Story: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=5&objectid=10514815

Telecom to be Prosecuted

The official statement says:

"The Commission has decided to prosecute Telecom and Xtra for alleged breaches of the Fair Trading Act in that the companies allegedly engaged in conduct that was liable to mislead the public as to the characteristics of services and made false or misleading representations about the performance characteristics of the Go Large plan"

'Naked DSL' prices set

From: http://www.stuff.co.nz/4322858a28.html

Stuff.co.nz | Thursday, 13 December 2007

LATEST: Buying broadband connections without an accompanying phone line is now a step closer.

The Commerce Commission today issued its final determination on the price Telecom must sell wholesale broadband connections to its competitors.

The ruling on unbundled bitstream access should speed the uptake of "naked DSL" connections - those without a traditional phone service - and boost Web-based phone services such as Skype.

Xtra voted worst ISP for third year running

This years Consumer Institutes ISP survey has put Xtra at the bottom of the list with most customers voting it the worst ISP for the third year in a row.

Only 42% surveyed said Xtra was good, or very good.
25% surveyed rated Xtra as poor, or very poor, making it the lowest scoring ISP in NZ by a large margin.

This was in wake of empty promises on Xtra's behalf, and multiple, avoidable outages.

Once again, lack of redundancy causes outage

Once again, lack of redundancy on behalf of Telecom has caused intergral and emergency services to go offline for the most part. Around 6.05am on Sunday the power to a network building on Mayoral Drive was cut, affecting broadband, email authentication, as well as Telecom's own and other customers computer services such as databases, paging systems and eftpos.

Power wasn't restored until around 9.15am.

Staff in 111 call centres had to use pen and paper and write down the information to give to police, fire and ambulance. Luckily no emergency calls were missed.

TSO supposed to be helping, but blocking competition

The Telecommunications Service Obligations is an agreement between the government and Telecom to keep line rentals cheap (by linking them to the CPI), and provide free local calling. However now it is stifling investing in networks.

The government released a discussion document in August on the agreement in, set up 17 years ago when Telecom was privatised.

TUANZ, in a submission on the document has stated that the TSO is stopping companies from introducing new technology and putting money into networks, and creating unintended "perverse and anticompetitive" consequences.

Balance critical for Broadband

OK, so we probably already knew this but the president of Internet protocol for French telecommunications giant Alcatel-Lucent says "Anything that can support business in an efficient way is critical for an economy."

That president is Basil Alwan, and is in NZ this week.

Telecom to pull plug on School Sponsorship

Telecom is pulling the plug on sponsoring technology in NZ schools.

It has stated that it is cutting the 14 year programme because its objectives have been met. However it is trying to find sponsors to continue with the project. So does that mean the objectives weren't met, or only Telecom's objectives were met?

The programme has pushed $120 million dollars into schools since it started in 1993.

Kevin Kenrick to leave Telecom

Another one bites the dust.

Kevin Kenrick, the Chief Operating Officer Consumer is leaving Telecom to take up a role as CEO of House of Travel.

Kevin was responsible for the disastrous change to Yahoo Mail [TBC] and the decommissioning of the old 025 network [TBC].

Scoop: Open in Window | Link

Yahoo!Xtra

Syndicate content