
Internode has installed its own DSLAM (Digital Subscriber Line Access Multiplexer) equipment at the Nuriootpa telephone exchange, allowing it to deliver faster, lower-priced and more innovative broadband services to customers in and near the town. Benefits of Internode's new equipment include access to:
Internode chose to install its own DSLAM equipment in the Nuriootpa exchange because of a Federal Government-funded Regional Backbone Blackspots Program to create affordable competitive fibre-optic links between remote and regional areas and metropolitan cities, where major Internet links are located.
Backhaul company NextGen has created a major three-state fibre-based connection that links Adelaide with Nuriootpa (SA), Broken Hill (NSW), and Mildura (VIC). This major fibre-optic run creates a circuit with an existing fibre-optic connection between Mildura and Melbourne.
The lighting up of Internode's 200th installed DSLAM occurs in a milestone year for Australia's largest privately-owned broadband company. Last May, it celebrated 20 years since Simon Hackett established the company, which has about 200,000 fixed broadband customers and is on track for revenues of $200 million.
Internode managing director Simon Hackett said the availability of Internode's innovative ADSL2+ services at Nuriootpa helped fulfil the company's vision of delivering the benefits of broadband throughout Australia. "Internode has always been about more than just broadband in the cities," he said.
"As well as our award-winning networks on Yorke Peninsula and in the Coorong Region, we've installed our own DSLAM equipment in many other regional locations. It has irked us that a town as close to Adelaide as Nuriootpa was inaccessible due to unrealistically high backhaul charges, so it's a real pleasure today to give the residents and businesses of Nuriootpa access to the best we have to offer.
"The good news is that we expect to light up DSLAMs we've installed in Broken Hill and Mildura in the next week or two, delivering the benefits of competition to people in those two towns as well."