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TV Purchase help

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TV Purchase help
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  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    replied to RoninWC on last edited by
    #41

    @RoninWC said in TV Purchase help:

    Streaming such content however can be painful depending on your bandwidth, i.e. on ADSL it really rather sucks. And will eat up significant portions of your data allowance.

    Data allowance? ADSL?
    What backwater does this stuff exist in?

    NTAN 1 Reply Last reply
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  • NTAN Online
    NTAN Online
    NTA
    replied to Crucial on last edited by
    #42

    @Crucial said in TV Purchase help:

    @RoninWC said in TV Purchase help:

    Streaming such content however can be painful depending on your bandwidth, i.e. on ADSL it really rather sucks. And will eat up significant portions of your data allowance.

    Data allowance? ADSL?
    What backwater does this stuff exist in?

    It is known as "Malcolm Turnbull's Australia"

    CrucialC 1 Reply Last reply
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  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    replied to NTA on last edited by
    #43

    @NTA said in TV Purchase help:

    @Crucial said in TV Purchase help:

    @RoninWC said in TV Purchase help:

    Streaming such content however can be painful depending on your bandwidth, i.e. on ADSL it really rather sucks. And will eat up significant portions of your data allowance.

    Data allowance? ADSL?
    What backwater does this stuff exist in?

    It is known as "Malcolm Turnbull's Australia"

    Capping is more to do with the ISPs though. Australia is quite out of steps with the ISP plans compared to other countries.
    It can be to do with network investment though (or the Telstra backhaul charging) if they are using caps as a blunt tool to restrict peak bandwidth use.

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  • NTAN Online
    NTAN Online
    NTA
    wrote on last edited by
    #44

    Yes, and its because of the old network we had - a measure to discourage excess.

    Now, the old network is expected to run the new network, and its not doing a great job. I have a run of copper ~820m to my house from the nearest pillar, as I think I've described elsewhere. Max out around 17mbps, and others have it worse than they did with ADSL2+

    I'm not sure the "plus" is warranted 🤔

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  • RoninWCR Offline
    RoninWCR Offline
    RoninWC
    wrote on last edited by
    #45

    As NTA has said, the ICT infrastructure available in Aus from an ISP perspective is really atrocious. Previously I struggled using ADSL2+ whilst living in Wahroonga and my ISP was TPG. The nearest exchange was Hornsby and I was a couple of km's from the exchange. I was never able to exceed 10 Mb/s in download and generally it was around the high 7 Mb/s.

    Once it was 4-5 pm when the all the kids got home from school, the internet became virtually useless for streaming any content and files and was almost useless for gaming (yes, I'm a nerdy FPS gamer).

    The only saving grace was that with TPG I had an "unlimited" service and therefore wasn't capped in terms of download/upload. So whenever I could, I would just schedule downloads for the off peak times.

    I've now moved into a brand new apartment building in North Sydney which has NBN Fibre to the Premises (FTTP) with Telstra (gasp!) and I'm now in virtual ICT heaven with speeds achieving almost 100 Mb/s downloads and 20 Mb/s upload but I'm now capped at 1000 GB per month so I have to be careful streaming even Full HD content.

    Because I have Foxtel through Telstra, it is unmetered and so is Netflix thru the Telstra TV. The only Metered content service I have is Stan (which was a 3 month free trail with the Telstra TV) so I am just using that to watch the full series of Sherlock.

    Just my $0.02 worth on the topic of Aussie internet which I think on the whole is generally bloody aweful and I'm grateful I do not live in a rural/remote area which is being almost compeletely ignored by the Government and ISPs.

    NTAN 1 Reply Last reply
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  • NTAN Online
    NTAN Online
    NTA
    replied to RoninWC on last edited by
    #46

    @RoninWC said in TV Purchase help:

    Just my $0.02 worth on the topic of Aussie internet which I think on the whole is generally bloody aweful and I'm grateful I do not live in a rural/remote area which is being almost compeletely ignored by the Government and ISPs.

    Which is why they're flipping the bird and starting their own:

    Oct 7, 2016

    Wi-Fi from the top of a grain silo: Rural Australians trying to end data drought

    Wi-Fi from the top of a grain silo: Rural Australians trying to end data drought

    Small telcos in regional Australia are finding a way around the data drought, by setting up fixed wireless networks that broadcast a signal to paying customers in town from high elevation points like grain silos, bucket elevators and buildings.

    Was at a mate's place at Molong over the weekend, and he has fixed wifi. Speed is not half bad but I reckon it'd be shit in a storm.

    RoninWCR 1 Reply Last reply
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  • RoninWCR Offline
    RoninWCR Offline
    RoninWC
    replied to NTA on last edited by
    #47

    @NTA
    A good article and shows how inventive people can be when given a shit sandwhich.
    Cheers

    dKD 1 Reply Last reply
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  • dKD Offline
    dKD Offline
    dK
    replied to RoninWC on last edited by
    #48

    @RoninWC I've registered with My Republic, so when NBN finally arrives on the Northern Beaches, scheduled for March, I will move from Optus ADSL Unlimited at $95pm to Myrepublic Max available speed, Unlimited for $69pm

    https://myrepublic.net/au/

    antipodeanA 1 Reply Last reply
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  • antipodeanA Offline
    antipodeanA Offline
    antipodean
    replied to dK on last edited by
    #49

    @dK said in TV Purchase help:

    @RoninWC I've registered with My Republic, so when NBN finally arrives on the Northern Beaches, scheduled for March, I will move from Optus ADSL Unlimited at $95pm to Myrepublic Max available speed, Unlimited for $69pm

    https://myrepublic.net/au/

    The question is; will they invest to actually provide you a decent service? @RoninWC 's experience with TPG is typical of smaller ISPs. Their only selling point was cheaper rates or unlimited data, which they could only provide by not investing in their infrastructure. TPG knew they could offer unlimited data because the throughput was so crap you couldn't make a dent anyway.

    The same is now true of residences connected to the NBN. People getting poorer service than they expected, or sometimes even worse than what they had are complaining about the NBN. It's not the NBN, it's their ISP.

    The funny part is the capital cities are awash with fibre. The overcapacity before they started building the NBN was huge. Then right next door you could be relying on decades-old copper with an exchange Telstra weren't going to invest in because Labor was replacing every kilometre with glass. When the NBN finally got around to building the network, they targeted Labor strongholds (as you do when you're a political party). Just as that certainty was available to the marketplace, Labor lost and the Liberals tried their best to fuck it completely.

    My parents live in an area with shit ADSL (not ADLS2) and their suburb is completely surrounded by NBN, but they aren't even scheduled. It's a black hole.

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  • BonesB Offline
    BonesB Offline
    Bones
    wrote on last edited by
    #50

    Fucken bump!

    Right time for a new telly. 4k circa 49 inch around the £500 to £600 ($1k to 1.2 I think) price range. Needs to be good for the rugga.

    Thinking of this:
    https://www.currys.co.uk/gbuk/tv-and-home-entertainment/televisions/televisions/sony-bravia-kd49x7052pbu-49-smart-4k-ultra-hd-hdr-led-tv-10205085-pdt.html

    Smart isn't necessary if it can be got cheaper without, but doesn't seem to be an option these days.

    Go!

    MajorRageM 1 Reply Last reply
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  • KiwiwombleK Online
    KiwiwombleK Online
    Kiwiwomble
    wrote on last edited by
    #51

    both our TV's a Samsung and are great

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • V Offline
    V Offline
    Virgil
    wrote on last edited by
    #52

    I’m good at buying new TVs

    BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
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  • BonesB Offline
    BonesB Offline
    Bones
    replied to Virgil on last edited by
    #53

    @Virgil said in TV Purchase help:

    I’m good at buying new TVs

    This is exactly the kind of advice I'm after.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRage
    replied to Bones on last edited by
    #54

    @Bones said in TV Purchase help:

    Fucken bump!

    Right time for a new telly. 4k circa 49 inch around the £500 to £600 ($1k to 1.2 I think) price range. Needs to be good for the rugga.

    Thinking of this:
    https://www.currys.co.uk/gbuk/tv-and-home-entertainment/televisions/televisions/sony-bravia-kd49x7052pbu-49-smart-4k-ultra-hd-hdr-led-tv-10205085-pdt.html

    Smart isn't necessary if it can be got cheaper without, but doesn't seem to be an option these days.

    Go!

    Read up as much as you want, ask TSF, look at prices, do it all.

    Then go to a store and completely change your mind when you see the screens. Research is futile, as all screens have differences in the way they present. Go to a John Lewis and ask them to put on the TV / Sports and take it off the sample screens. Changes everything.

    BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
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  • BonesB Offline
    BonesB Offline
    Bones
    replied to MajorRage on last edited by
    #55

    @MajorRage John Lewis? Posh git.

    Yeah nah thanks. Might have to hire a tux though.

    MajorRageM 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRage
    replied to Bones on last edited by
    #56

    @Bones said in TV Purchase help:

    @MajorRage John Lewis? Posh git.

    Yeah nah thanks. Might have to hire a tux though.

    Up to you. Try and do the same at Curry's. You'll get a sort of a stare of confusion followed by 3/5ths of sod all, then the assistant going to get your manager and never returning.

    We bought ours from the JL at Kingston. They price match too.

    BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • BonesB Offline
    BonesB Offline
    Bones
    replied to MajorRage on last edited by
    #57

    @MajorRage sorry didn't mean to sound ungrateful - actually did mean thanks.

    MajorRageM 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRage
    replied to Bones on last edited by
    #58

    @Bones said in TV Purchase help:

    @MajorRage sorry didn't mean to sound ungrateful - actually did mean thanks.

    It's ok. I already thought you were a fluffybunny, so nothings changed.

    BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • BonesB Offline
    BonesB Offline
    Bones
    replied to MajorRage on last edited by
    #59

    @MajorRage said in TV Purchase help:

    @Bones said in TV Purchase help:

    @MajorRage sorry didn't mean to sound ungrateful - actually did mean thanks.

    It's ok. I already thought you were a fluffybunny, so nothings changed.

    *nothing's

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • voodooV Away
    voodooV Away
    voodoo
    wrote on last edited by
    #60

    In addition to @MajorRage advice, I'd just spend a couple of hours on CNET, techradar and pcmag. They spend enough hours on this stuff, and if you find something that fits your bill and is endorsed by these guys, you can't go too far wrong.

    1 Reply Last reply
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