D-Link ANZ has announced a new modem router and it's packed with power and packed with features. It can bring a huge leap in capacity, speed, and range for the most demanding of households. It can replace your ISP-supplied NBN modem, it brings AX3000 Wi-Fi 6 tech, giving fast and efficient connectivity all around.
If you've wanted to replace your telco-supplied NBN modem but couldn't because you have a landline, D-Link has you covered with the brand new DSL-X1852E. This AX1800 Wi-Fi 6 VDSL2/ADSL2+ modem router with VoIP is an all-in-one device with universal NBN/UFB and DSL connectivity in Australia and New Zealand. It offers WPA3 encryption, VLAN tagging, gigabit LAN, support for two handsets, and much more.
According to a newly published report by Dell’Oro Group, total global revenue for the Broadband Access equipment market increased to US$3.6 B in 2Q 2021, up 7% year-over-year (Y/Y). Growth came from spending on both Cable and PON infrastructure.
It's been a day of tech talk on how broadband networks around the world are a mix of FttN, VDSL, DOCSIS, Fibre and more, with Korea Telecom's own GiGA Wire tech very successful in Korea.
NBN Co, the company rolling out Australia's national broadband network, says it will be adding G.fast technology to its technology mix next year, to enable faster speeds over copper wires.
Wireless broadband provider NetComm Wireless has released to the market its new generation VDSL/ADSL Wireless AC1600 Gigabit Gateway (NF17ACV) that it says will deliver a “fast and powerful wireless experience” as households move to the National Broadband Network or New Zealand’s Ultra-Fast Broadband (UFB) fibre networks.
In a wide-ranging address at a Sydney conference Malcolm Turnbull has insisted that FTTN and copper cabling can deliver sufficient broadband speeds.
Armed with a report from respected consultancy Analysys Mason The Coalition has delivered another attack on the Government's broadband policy but its arguments don't always apply to Australia.
Is there no end to the amount of functionality chipmakers can pack into a single device? Not only does the latest offering from Broadcom support ADSL+ and VDSL2 on the upstream side, it has the latest technologies for squeezing more out of copper: vectoring and bonding and on the downstream side it supports 802.11n WiFi, DECT for cordless telephony support and home automation, VoIP and ethernet switching.
The Coalition might have another weapon in its battle to push alternative technologies against the Government's $43b, predominantly FTTH, National Broadband Network: a UK company claims to have technology that can deliver up to 400Mbps over existing copper, at less than 10 percent of the cost of FTTH.
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