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NBN outages and service status in Biloela, Queensland

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  • NBN generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Biloela, including 0 direct reports.

The National Broadband Network (NBN) is an Australian national wholesale open-access data network project and offers landline phone and internet network.

Problems in the last 24 hours in Biloela, Queensland

The chart below shows the number of NBN reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Biloela, Queensland and surrounding areas. An outage is declared when the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line.

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NBN Issues Reports Near Biloela, Queensland

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in Biloela and nearby locations:

  • WhiplashUnited
    Mickey Dee (@WhiplashUnited) reported from Thangool, Queensland

    Imagine as a company sending a technician to a private house NBN install then when it’s time to give us the internet, they decide to give it to the school next door then cancel it without contact. ******* hopeless. Only 3 things on my street. House, school, small airport. Idiots.

NBN Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • msignau
    msau (@msignau) reported

    @robb_j_m This of course ended up driving the total cost of the NBN through the roof as they had to take on copper lines that had not been maintained properly for over a decade & assemble a franken-network copper, fibre & HFC networks that had massive maintenance costs.

  • Paradoxa18
    Paradoxa (@Paradoxa18) reported

    @robb_j_m live beyond NBN only about 150k from Melbourne had dial up originally then adsl2 but no home net for years despite paying for access now only mobilenet & my phone one of many network blocked that was January when irl the roadside letterbox disappeared #offline

  • larry_the_van
    Graham Heathcote (@larry_the_van) reported

    @wilburston @robb_j_m $110 per month is more expensive than most NBN plans - unless you’re out of NBN range and need satellite, Starlink will never be better - it’s physically impossible.

  • xjet
    xjet (@xjet) reported

    @eevblog @Hobbie4C Perhaps there's been a huge surge in demand for bandwidth from those cellsites since the NBN outage? Everyone has the same idea as you and bandwidth is finite. The more concurrent users, the lower the throughput.

  • kaijuergs
    rustikalfox 🌿 (@kaijuergs) reported

    wasn't notified of the @NBN_Australia planned outage today and just spent the last 30 minutes thinking wtf wrong with this thing 💀

  • mez_spy
    Mary Spy (@mez_spy) reported

    @AjaxXanthe See if you can get extra mobile data from your provider. We had an NBN issue a couple of years ago & not sorted for more than 2 weeks. We could get additional data on mobiles or a dongle for home

  • cuffs1971
    Craig Phillips (@cuffs1971) reported

    @whereisaaron @robb_j_m @NBN_Australia That doesn't work with infrastructure. This only works in a production line environment where the fixed costs are spread over a higher volume produced. Infrastructure increase as the demand goes up. More people more lines, more nodes more exchanges, more costs. Its not fixed.

  • bek_lenin
    bek_lenin (@bek_lenin) reported

    @robb_j_m NBN is free, however the providers are the ones who charge. But the infrastructure itself has always been free. They upgraded our home for free, changed over faulty equipment, for free. As for price get about 300mbps DL for $80 a month. Not bad. Super reliable. Happy.

  • diss_presso
    Max (@diss_presso) reported

    @BrowntownBrew @robb_j_m But real world demand was lower as no zoom or Netflix. But anyway - it’s moot. The government could buy every Australian household a starlink dish (2.5x faster than NBN) for <$6B - and we’re still not finished, having spent 10x that. The doomed NBN had the absurdist aim of connecting every sleepy country town with top shelf fibre whilst legally enforcing slow internet in our metropolitan centres (the only places where fibre is even economically viable). This is exactly what the libs predicted at the time and were ridiculed for it. How about just connect the high population centres (you know, the ones who actually need the internet for their livelihoods) and let rural people move to the city if they want 1gbps, and then later spent a few billion buying the rest starlink if we really wanted to continue pissing money up the wall (or just letting them buy it themselves, with their own money, if they really wanted it). You aren’t angry enough.

  • jimboot
    Jim Stewart (@jimboot) reported

    @eevblog @Aussie_BB Been on on Starlink maybe 5 years. I can remember one outage because of a Solarflare. Wireless NBN was every other day. Good old Govt again