Kevin Rudd wants turbocharged broadband for the kids

November 3, 2008 – 11:13 pm
New levels alright, but not of leadership.

New levels of something alright, but it sure ain't leadership.

Our PM is a little confused with what the party plan is. He wants turbocharged education and high speed broadband for our kids. Here’s what he’s been running around saying today:

“Mr Murdoch is right, a 21st century economy demands a 21st century education system,” he [Rudd] said.

“An education revolution is our response, investing in the quantity of money we put into the education system, the quality of that investment.
That’s what Australia needs for the future, together with a high speed broadband revolution which will turbocharge education in this country into the 21st century.

Amazing eh. Absolutely amazing. The only place Rudd and Conroy are turbocharging education and broadband to is the dark ages.

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  1. 5 Responses to “Kevin Rudd wants turbocharged broadband for the kids”

  2. what? a politician going back on his work, well I’m shocked!

    only way this censorship won’t go through is if we make it so

    Remember, remember the Fifth of November

    By conan1989 on Nov 3, 2008

  3. Why do I get the feeling that what Rudd wants and what Fielding wants are two completely different things?

    Either that, or he’s hoping the turbocharged internet will balanced out the filter’s ability to slow it down.

    Think about it. A Filter that slows down internet AND a plan to boost the internet speed in Australia? What he wants is to create the filter to “protect the kids” and use the Fibre Optic High speed internet plan to boost the speed of the net to compensate.

    Not that I think the plan will work, but I can see where his train of thought lies.

    By RBS on Nov 4, 2008

  4. What a contradiction. We both want to filter the net, slowing it to a crawl AND have higher-speed transfer rates? So in other words it will be exactly the same speed it is now, cost more, and deny us access to 4.95 billion completely innocent websites (assuming that the false filtering rate remains at 3%). Sounds like a great plan Ruddkipz.

    By Zannek on Nov 4, 2008

  5. Let’s revisit the site mentioned in the Somebody Think of the Children blog

    http://www.somebodythinkofthechildren.com/filter-vendors-smiling-ready-to-cash-in/

    which points to (amongst other items)…

    http://www.commsday.com/node/279

    “Soul executive chairman David Teoh dropped the bombshell today, claiming that Australia doesn’t even need a fibre rollout. “This is not a decision which has been taken lightly but, at this time, we believe that Soul’s funds and resources are best employed in delivering great value products and services to Australian consumers,” said Teoh.

    “Soul is not convinced about the immediate need for a national broadband network especially in the current economic climate. With more than 300,000 broadband subscribers including 180,000 subscribers using TPG’s high speed ADSL2+, Soul is a large participant in the broadband market in Australia. Currently, our ADSL2+ customers can obtain a connection speed averaging in excess of 14Mbps, which is faster than the base speed being sought for the NBN.”

    ===================

    Luke Coleman at Friday 5pm AEST
    October 24th, 2008

    =======================

    refer also to this item (which I posted to the ACS ELSIC (Australian Computer Society Economic Legal and Social Implications Committee) mailing list on the 30th November 2007

    http://business.smh.com.au/aapt-asks-who-wants-highspeed/20071129-1drs.html

    AAPT asks: who wants high-speed?
    Matt O’Sullivan
    November 30, 2007

    AUSTRALIA’s third-largest telephone company, AAPT-PowerTel, has cast doubt on consumers’ demand for higher broadband speeds from a planned $8 billion national network, arguing that it could become a “white elephant” if the process is rushed.

    The new Labor government has given top priority to building a high-speed broadband network as part of a public-private partnership, offering speeds of at least 12 megabits per second to 98 per cent of the population within five years.

    But AAPT-PowerTel’s chief executive, Paul Broad, said consumers in markets overseas have yet to show much demand for broadband speeds
    faster than 8 megabits per second.

    “The fundamental question is, ‘what is the demand’?” he told the Herald. “And if they do want it, why would you need a government to subsidise it?”

    His comments came as the prime minister-elect, Kevin Rudd, yesterday named Stephen Conroy as minister for communications, broadband and the
    digital economy.

    ———————

    Bob

    A (mostly) satisfied customer of TPG and listed as a member of ELSIC..

    ( http://www.acs.org.au/index.cfm?action=show&conID=acselsic )

    refer also the ACS “Regulation of the Internet” page

    http://www.acs.org.au/boards/cab/regulation.html

    “This page was last updated on: 18 November 1999″ (prior to the new dark age of media rhetoric and only moderately useful regulation)

    Please note that any opinions expressed are mine unless otherwise indicated and NOT necessarily the views of any organisation of which I’m a member.

    By Bob Bain on Nov 4, 2008

  6. http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/10/22/2397620.htm

    The Federal Government’s “education revolution” has come under attack from one of its own backbenchers.

    In an outburst in Parliament, New South Wales MP Julia Irwin called for a massive Commonwealth allocation of resources for public schools.

    Ms Irwin attacked the Government’s plan to compare school performance standards.

    She said the education changes proposed by Labor so far were hardly a revolution.

    ====================

    http://news.theage.com.au/national/education-revolution-on-track-gillard-20081022-569e.html

    October 22nd. 2008

    NSW Labor MP Julia Irwin told parliament on Tuesday the phrase “education revolution” was a misnomer because the Rudd government was locking-in the coalition’s favouritism of private schools through its funding legislation.

    “It seems to me that the national reform agenda has been put on hold for four years and the real education revolution is a long, long way off,” Ms Irwin said.

    =================
    http://en.epochtimes.com/n2/australia/australia-quotes-6133.html

    “It seems to me that the national reform agenda has been put on hold for four years and the real education revolution is a long, long way off.” – NSW Labor MP Julia Irwin hits out at her party’s education policy.

    “That education revolution has died in the Bay of Pigs.” – Liberal MP Stuart Robert says the government’s education revolution ended before it began.

    http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,24535126-5005961,00.html

    Rudd ‘has education mess on his hands’

    hum…

    By Bob Bain on Nov 4, 2008

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