THE FINALISTS the JUDGES Winners to Be Announced at Fullerton Hotel Sydney, April 6 from 7-9Pm

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

THE FINALISTS the JUDGES Winners to Be Announced at Fullerton Hotel Sydney, April 6 from 7-9Pm Winners to be announced at Fullerton Hotel Sydney, April 6 from 7-9pm Master of Ceremonies: James Valenne Special guest of honour: Federal Minister of Communicaons, the Arts and Cybersafety Paul Fletcher THE FINALISTS BEST SATELLITE PROVIDER * Optus BEST TELECOM MARKETING INITATIVE * NBN Co * Optus for the FIFA Womens World Cup * Cisco for Internet for the Future BEST VIRTUAL NETWORK OPERATOR * MNF Connexus for Pay It Fwd * Belong * Skymesh for Satellite Internet Markeng Cam- * Circles.Life paign * Dodo Mobile * Vocus for Less Grrr and More Ahhh BEST FIXED BROADBAND PROVIDER BEST TELECOM LAW FIRM * Aussie Broadband * Allens * Optus * Bird&Bird * Vodafone * Clayton Utz * King & Wood Mallesons BEST MOBILE OPERATOR * Telstra BEST TELECOM NETWORK VENDOR * Vodafone * Casa Systems * Ciena Blue Planet THE JUDGES * Cisco * Ericsson * TELSYTE managing director and principal ana- * Nokia lyst Foad Fadaghi * HKBN chief technology officer and former NBN BEST FIXED WIRELESS PROVIDER CTO Gary McLaren * Optus * CommsDay chief editor and former CWI editor Simon Dux * Field Soluons Group * Mindshare Communicaons principal Veronica Kennedy-Good BEST IOT PROVIDER * IIC president and former ACMA chair * NNNCo Chris Chapman * Taggle Systems * ACCAN CEO Teresa Corbin * Telstra * Former TRANSACT architect Robin Eckermann BEST CLOUD PROVIDER * AMTA CEO Chris Althaus * DGIT * CommsDay founder and CEO Grahame Lynch * Telstra Congratulaons to all finalists! Contact [email protected] for booking informaon .
Recommended publications
  • Annual Report 1999
    Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman Annual Report 1998–1999 TM Free, independent, just, informal and speedy resolution of complaints about telecommunications services. TM TELECOMMUNICATIONS INDUSTRY OMBUDSMAN LTD ACN 057 634 787 TELEPHONE +61 3 8600 8700 FACSIMILE +61 3 8600 8797 FREECALL™ 1800 062 058 FREEFAX™ 1800 630 614 TTY 1800 675 692 TRANSLATOR & INTERPRETER SERVICE 131 450 WEBSITE www.tio.com.au PO BOX 276 COLLINS STREEET WEST, MELBOURNE VICTORIA 8007 AUSTRALIA LEVEL 15, 114 WILLIAM STREET, MELBOURNE VICTORIA 3000 AUSTRALIA TELECOMMUNICATIONS INDUSTRY OMBUDSMAN 1998-99 Annual Report CONTENTS 1998-99 AT A GLANCE 2 STATEMENT FROM THE CHAIRMAN OF COUNCIL 4 STATEMENT FROM THE CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD 6 OMBUDSMAN’S OVERVIEW 8 TIO OPERATIONS 10 COMPLAINT HANDLING 16 TELEPHONE SERVICE INVESTIGATION ISSUES 20 INTERNET SERVICE INVESTIGATION ISSUES 32 PROFILE OF COMPLAINANTS 36 GLOSSARY 40 MEMBERSHIP LIST 42 DIRECTORS’ REPORT AND FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 50 Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman ANNUAL REPORT 1998-1999 1 1998-99 AT A GLANCE TIO membership increased by 62% to number 866 Total number of complaints increased by 23.5%, numbering 64,394 1998-99 saw a continued rise in the number and complexity of complaints lodged with the TIO. The total number of complaints handled by the TIO increased by 23.5% to 64,394. Because some cases include more than one issue, a total of 67,023 issues were raised by complainants. The continued increase in complaint Total number of complaints numbers is mostly due to greater public An increase of 23.5% over the awareness of the TIO, compensation previous year, includes 10,258 available under the Customer Service non-allocated complaints.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2018 Legal Notice
    Annual Report 2018 Legal Notice NBN Co Annual Report NBN Co Limited (NBN Co or the Company) This Annual Report is for the year ended is wholly owned by the Commonwealth of 30 June 2018 and provides information Australia as a Government Business Enterprise about the Company and its subsidiaries (GBE), incorporated under the Corporations (together referred to as the NBN Co Group Act 2001 and operating in accordance with or the Group). the Public Governance, Performance and The Financial report was authorised for Accountability Act 2013 (Cth) (PGPA Act). issue by the Directors on 9 August 2018. Legal Notice The Directors have the power to amend and reissue the Financial report. Copyright subsists in this Annual Report. NBN Co owns that copyright. Other than Glossary as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968 Defined terms within this Annual Report (Cth), the Annual Report (in part or as a should be read in conjunction with the whole) cannot be reproduced, published, Glossary on pages 175 to 179. communicated or adapted without the prior written consent of NBN Co. Any request or inquiry to so use the Annual Report should be addressed to: The Chief Financial Officer NBN Co Limited Level 11, 100 Arthur Street North Sydney NSW 2060 Australia © 2018 NBN Co Limited ‘nbn’, ‘bring it on’, ‘Sky Muster’, ‘gen nbn’ and the Aurora device are trademarks of NBN Co Limited. ABN 86 136 533 741 © 2018 NBN Co Limited. 1 NBN Co Annual Report 2018 Contents Annual Report 2018 1 Overview 2 3 Remuneration report 71 About NBN Co 2 2018 Results summary 4 4 Corporate
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 1998 Annual Report
    Cover_Final 12/10/98 9:22 AM Page 1 TELECOMMUNICATIONS INDUSTRY OMBUDSMAN INDUSTRY TELECOMMUNICATIONS Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman 1997–98 ANNUAL REPORT 1998 ANNUAL REPORT 1998 ANNUAL TM Cover_Final 12/10/98 9:09 AM Page 2 Mission Statement The Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman (TIO) was established in 1993 to provide free, independent, just, informal and speedy resolution of consumer complaints about telecommunications services. The TIO is an office of last resort — customers must first give their telephone company or Internet service provider a reasonable opportunity to resolve their complaint. Independent of government, the telecommunications industry and other interested bodies, the office of the TIO is accessible to residential and small business consumers who remain dissatisfied after lodging a complaint with their service provider. All carriers and eligible service providers are required to be members of the TIO. Free, independent, just, informal and speedy resolution of complaints about telecommunications services. The Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman Ltd ACN 057 634 787 Telephone: 03 8600 8700 Facsimile: 03 8600 8797 Freecall™: 1800 062 058 Freefax™: 1800 630 614 TTY: 1800 675 692 Translator & Interpreter Service:131 450 Website: www.tio.com.au PO Box 276 Collins Street West, Melbourne Victoria 8007 Australia Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman 1997/98 ANNUAL REPORT Contents 1997/98 at a Glance 2 Statement from the Chairman of Council 4 Statement from the Chairman of the Board 6 Ombudsman’s Overview 8 TIO
    [Show full text]
  • Corporate-Plan-Report-2020-2023.Pdf
    NBN Co Limited Corporate Plan 2020-23 Plan Corporate Corporate Plan 2020–23 Legal Notice Introduction Disclaimer The Corporate Plan 2020–23 has been This plan contains various long-range plans, prepared by NBN Co Limited (NBN Co) for its projections, high-level estimates and other shareholder ministers, the Hon Paul Fletcher forward-looking information (Estimates). and Senator the Hon Mathias Cormann Those Estimates are based on the best (Shareholder Ministers) as required by the considered professional assessment of Public Governance, Performance and present economic and operating conditions, Accountability Act 2013 (Cth) (PGPA Act) present Commonwealth Government policy, (in particular section 95(1) (b) of the PGPA and a number of assumptions regarding future Act), the Public Governance, Performance events and actions, which, at the date of this and Accountability Rule 2014 (Cth) (PGPA document, are expected to take place. Rule), the Commonwealth Government The Estimates involve known and unknown Business Enterprise Governance and risks, uncertainties and other factors beyond Oversight Guidelines (January 2018) (GBE control that may cause NBN Co’s actual Guidelines) and Australian Government results, performance or achievements to be policy as communicated to NBN Co by the materially different from any future results, Commonwealth from time to time (together, performance or achievements expressed or Reporting Obligations). implied by the Estimates. The reporting periods covered by this While the Estimates are based on the best plan are FY20 to FY23 inclusive. The first considered professional assessment, the reporting period covered by this plan is FY20. Management team and officers (as defined The fourth, and the last, reporting period in the Corporations Act) of NBN Co does covered by this plan is FY23.
    [Show full text]
  • NBN: a Guide for Consumers
    NBN: A Guide for Consumers NBN: Fast Facts The National Broadband Network (NBN) is public utility infrastructure that will cover all premises in Australia. It is being built by NBN Co Limited – a wholly Government-owned company. The NBN will consist of fibre-optic cable to 93% of premises. The remaining 7% of premises mostly in rural and remote areas will get fixed wireless or satellite connections. You will still buy your phone and internet from service providers such as Telstra, Optus, iiNet and Primus. You won’t deal with NBN Co. Connecting your premises to the NBN doesn’t mean you have to sign up for a phone or internet service if you don’t want to. The NBN will be used first for the internet and for carrying phone calls, with more services such as TV, movies, video telephony, smart metering and health monitoring becoming available in the future. If you are happy with your existing phone handset, you can keep it. The existing copper-wire telephone network will be disconnected in stages as the NBN is rolled out. In wireless and satellite areas, the copper network will be maintained for at least ten years. You will get a Network Termination Device or “NBN box” inside your premises or in a few cases on the outside wall. You do not need to rewire your house. NBN Co will provide a one-off back-up battery to people who get connected. This back-up battery will power a regular phone plugged into the NBN box for up to five hours in the event of a power failure.
    [Show full text]
  • Corporate Plan Corporate 2 21 2
    Corporate Plan Corporate 2 21 2 NBN Co Limited Corporate Plan 2021 NBN Co Corporate Plan 2021 Legal Notice Introduction This plan contains various projections, high-level estimates and other The Corporate Plan 2021 has been prepared forward-looking information (Estimates). by NBN Co Limited (NBN Co) for its This plan also contains Estimates in respect shareholder ministers, the Hon Paul Fletcher to periods after 30 June 2024, including in MP and Senator the Hon Mathias Cormann the long-term financial outlook section. (Shareholder Ministers) as required by the Public Governance, Performance and These Estimates are based on the best Accountability Act 2013 (Cth) (PGPA Act) (in considered professional assessment of particular section 95(1) (b) of the PGPA Act), present economic and operating conditions, the Public Governance, Performance and present Commonwealth Government policy, Accountability Rule 2014 (Cth) (PGPA Rule), and a number of assumptions regarding the Commonwealth Government Business future events and actions, which, at the date Enterprise Governance and Oversight of this document, are expected to take place. Guidelines (January 2018) (GBE Guidelines) The Estimates involve known and unknown and Australian Government policy as risks, uncertainties and other factors beyond communicated to NBN Co by the control that may cause NBN Co’s actual Commonwealth from time to time results, performance or achievements to be (together, Reporting Obligations). materially different from any future results, This Corporate Plan has been prepared for performance or achievements expressed the 2020–21 financial year (FY21) and covers or implied by the Estimates. the reporting periods FY21 to FY24. While the Estimates are based on the best considered professional assessment, the Glossary Management team and officers (as defined Defined terms within this Corporate Plan in the Corporations Act) of NBN Co do not should be read in conjunction with the give any guarantee or assurance to any third Glossary on pages 58 to 60.
    [Show full text]
  • PRIMUS TELECOMMUNICATIONS GROUP, INCORPORATED (Exact Name of Registrant As Specified in Its Charter)
    Table of Contents SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549 FORM 10-K x ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2010 OR ¨ TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 Commission File No. 0-29092 PRIMUS TELECOMMUNICATIONS GROUP, INCORPORATED (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter) Delaware 54-1708481 (State or other jurisdiction of (I.R.S. Employer incorporation or organization) Identification No.) 7901 Jones Branch Drive, Suite 900, McLean, VA 22102 (Address of principal executive offices) (Zip Code) (703) 902-2800 (Registrant’s telephone number, including area code) Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act: Title of each class Name of each exchange on which registered None N/A Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: Common Stock, par value $0.001 per share Contingent Value Rights Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act. Yes ¨ No x Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act. Yes ¨ No x Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.
    [Show full text]
  • National Broadband Network Etwork Goes Live on Mainland Australia D Australia
    National Broadband Network goes live on mainland Australia Residents in Armidale NSW become first to be connected to the NBN STRICTLY EMBARGOED UNTIL 12:00PM, 18 MAY 2011 The city of Armidale in rural New South Wales today celebrated becoming the first centre in mainland Australia to receive the National Broadband Network. The Prime Minister presided over the switch-on of superfast fibre optic broadband services to selected Armidale residents at an official ceremony this morning. The NBN will in the coming months enable an increasing number of residents, businesses, and medical and educational facilities in the Armidale First Release Site to receive broadband at speeds of up to 100 Megabits per second*. Residents are progressively being connected to the network as part of customer trials by four telecommunications providers who have already completed the certification process: iiNet, Internode, iPrimus and Telstra. The handful of Armidale customers who have been trialling the service over the past month now join those already connected to the network in Tasmania, where the three communities of Midway Point, Smithton and Scottsdale were brought online in August last year. This test phase is a critical step in building the network, working with telecommunications providers and integrating our operating systems as we aim to provide the best possible service throughout the future rollout. The launch featured demonstrations of education, health and business applications that will be enabled by the NBN as well as testimonials from some of the first Armidale customers connected to the network. Mike Quigley, NBN Co Chief Executive, said: “Today marks a significant milestone in our national rollout.
    [Show full text]
  • Transact's Foundation and Initial Rollout
    Published on Telsoc (https://telsoc.org) Home > TransACT's foundation and initial rollout TransACT's foundation and initial rollout Robin Eckermann [1] University of Canberra AJTDE - Vol 2, No 1 - February 2014 [2] [3] 36 [4] Abstract TransACT (2000- ) introduced Australia?s first VDSL network, offering a 'triple play' of voice, data (e.g. Internet access), broadcast and video-on-demand services in Australia?s capital city, Canberra, in competition with the incumbent carrier Telstra. TransACT's founding Chief Architect, Robin Eckermann, reminisces on the founding of TransACT and some of the lessons to be learned from this fore-runner of the National Broadband Network (NBN). Introduction 1 TransACT was a pioneering network by many measures. The deployment that began in 2000 after a four-year incubation period was one of the first to implement open access principles with the structural separation of local access and services. It took fibre deep into the access network, within 300m of the end-user, in a fibre-to-the-kerb (FTTK) architecture. It was the first network in the world to deploy VDSL technology (with a raw speed of 51.84 Mbps), enabling support of a triple play suite of services including broadcast-quality video. Fourteen years later, with the network now owned by iiNet (ASX: IIN), the original electronics are being replaced by VDSL2, enabling speeds of 100 Mbps over the original cabling. Many Australians can only hope that the NBN will provide similar capabilities in their areas over the next ten years. It was one of the highlights of my professional career to lead the creation of TransACT, with hands- on involvement in every aspect - designing the architecture, selecting the technology, developing the business models, defining the products and raising the investment needed to proceed.
    [Show full text]
  • NBN Faces Double Cost Hit on Ageing Optus Network
    NBN faces double cost hit on ageing Optus network by David Ramli NBN Co spent $800 million to buy and reuse Optus' cable network. Now it may be forced to invest another $375 million to rebuild parts of the fading network because it isn't capable of delivering high-speed broadband to enough people. NBN struck the deal with Optus in 2012 to buy and convert the hybrid fibre-coaxial (HFC) network used for internet and pay TV. Where the last Labor government wanted to replace it with fibre-to-the-home technology, the Coalition pledged to save money and time by upgrading it instead and signed an updated contract last year. The draft of an internal NBN presentation this month says the Optus network is not "fit for purpose", lacks the capacity to support NBN services and must be upgraded or replaced at a cost of up to $375 million. This would be the latest cost increase at NBN since the Coalition took over in 2013. It revealed a potential cost blowout of $15 billion in August, citing higher than expected expenses. "Some Optus equipment [is] arriving at end of life and needs to be replaced," the presentation to senior executives said. "Optus nodes are oversubscribed compared with Telstra and will require node splits … 470,000 premises [in areas covered by Optus' network] would have to be overbuilt." The presentation warned that any of the planned works would "come at a significant cost" in terms of time and money. "NBN will miss its financial year 2017-18 ready-for-service targets by respectively 300,000 and 333,000 [premises]," it said.
    [Show full text]
  • Telecom New Zealand Selects Zuora
    Essential reading for the communications industry executive An iTWire publication www.commswire.itwire.com No: 1315 10 April 2014 The new NBN ‘Statement of Expectations’ The multi technology mix officially adopted Ziggy opens up Telco customers a bit happier Jabiru-1 a step closer Telecom New Zealand selects Zuora Boost for startups from SingTel initiative CommsWire (ISSN 2202-4549) is published by iTWire Pty Ltd. 21 Jenkins St, Caulfield South, Vic 3162 Editor: Graeme Philipson • [email protected] • Tel: 0418 609 397 Associate editors: Stan Beer • [email protected] • Peter Dinham • [email protected] Advertising: Director of Digital Media, Andrew Matler: [email protected] • Tel: 0412 390 000 Turnbull officially buries Labor’s NBN In a new ‘Statement of Expectations’ Malcolm Turnbull and Finance Minister Mathias Cormann have formalised the Government’s expectation of NBN Co. The previous Labor Government issued a number of ‘Statements of Expectation” to NBN Co which outlined the intended fibre to the premises policy it had developed. Now the Coalition Government has issued its own Statement (see below), which officially change the company’s goals. Labor's vision for a fully fibre NBN is now officially dead. The new instructions direct NBN Co to scrap Labor's FTTP strategy and use a mix of new and existing broadband technologies, which it intends to roll out more quickly than Labor's plan, giving an ‘optimised multi technology mix’ with slower average speed than FTTP. Meanwhile Malcolm Turnbull has defended delays to the NBN rollout, slamming Labor's previous NBN plan yet again.
    [Show full text]
  • Corporate Plan 2018-21 Legal Notice
    2018-21 Corporate Plan Corporate Plan 201 8 -2 1 Legal notice Introduction The Estimates involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other The Corporate Plan 2018-21 has been factors beyond control that may cause prepared by nbn co limited (nbn) for nbn’s actual results, performance or its shareholder ministers, Senator the achievements to be materially different Hon Mitch Fifield and Senator the from any future results, performance Hon Mathias Cormann (Shareholder or achievements expressed or implied Ministers) as required by the Public by the Estimates. Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (Cth) (PGPA While the Estimates are based on the Act) (in particular section 95(1)(b) best considered professional assessment, of the PGPA Act), the Public Governance, the management team and officers Performance and Accountability (as defined in the Corporations Act) Rule 2014 (Cth) (PGPA Rule), the of nbn do not give any guarantee or Commonwealth Government Business assurance to any third party that the Enterprise Governance and Oversight results, performance or achievements Guidelines (August 2015) (GBE Guidelines) expressed or implied by the Estimates and Australian Government policy will actually occur, and the Estimates as communicated to nbn by the should not be relied on or considered to Commonwealth from time to time be a representation of what will happen (together, Reporting Obligations). by any third party. The reporting periods covered by this Other than as required according plan are FY18 to FY21 inclusive. The first to Reporting Obligations, nbn and its reporting period covered by this plan officers have no obligation to update is FY18.
    [Show full text]