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- Early investors drop Facebook
- Victoria kills HealthSMART IT project
- Woz not great - mUmBRELLA
- Santos' thin client starts big-data plans
- Nokia Lumia 800 revs up at Bridgestone
- Telstra privacy breach was 'one little oops'
- 'Battleground of the future' the focus of new agreement with US
- The rise of the vendor management office
- NSW Government signs mega data centre deal
- NBN FUD: will Abbott ever learn?
Sponsored Posts - Written by Renai LeMay on Friday, May 6, 2011 12:08 - 1 Comment
How long could you go without Internet?
[sponsored post]
This article is a sponsored post from our partner Integ. Please check out several earlier sponsored posts by Integ (here, here, here and here) to find out more about the company and how it brings innovation into its work.
How long could you go without access to the Internet, telephone and television? Not long, according to remote workers at mine sites in Western Australia (check out the video above) — although some could go for a month! That’s why communications integrator Integ provides telecommunications and entertainment solutions to such locations. It’s a key factor for companies working in those areas in supporting their staff.
Related posts:
- Salvation Army deploys IP telephony as a service [Sponsored Post]
- Contact centres: What’s the biggest challenge?[Sponsored post]
- The next era of IP communications [sponsored post]
- Sponsored post: Who is the PM’s
managed telephony provider? - Prime Minister’s Dept talks managed services [Sponsored Post]
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Enterprise IT, News - May 21, 2012 13:32 - 15 Comments
The ABC didn’t sack Bitcoin miner
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News, Telecommunications - May 21, 2012 10:48 - 3 Comments
iiNet ramps up Internode digestion
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Gadgets, News - May 21, 2012 12:32 - 4 Comments
Galaxy S III listed for Telstra, Optus and Vodafone
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Reviews - May 7, 2012 18:16 - 2 Comments
Telstra Mobile Wi-Fi 4G: Review
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sponsored post ING Direct recently implemented a private cloud solution to virtualise its entire banking platform, allowing it to provision a new copy of itself -- a so-called 'bank in a box' -- within minutes. 
This is a question we ask – and answer – ourselves every year in the cyclone areas of Australia. So far this year it has been:
Power: Three weeks and six days in one stretch (Cyclone Yasi). Countless single day outages.
TV: See above. We have no TV without power.
Phones: Our Telstra landline was dead for over two weeks. Plus if you don’t have an old school manual phone as back up, see above re power. Mobile was up and down and limited by battery life (not the mobile battery but the ones in the Telstra rural exchanges). Usually had to drive a long way from home to get a signal for mobiles and netbook.
Internet: Got by with a netbook and Telstra 3G stick (see above re Telstra exchanges). Had to scrounge recharges from people with generators plus over $300 in excess Telstra charges.
Of course these are a minor inconvenience compared to having no roof, losing your home or your life, major highways being closed for weeks, empty food shops, businesses closing forever and a mains water supply that is predicted to still be a pale shade of brown for the next two years due to forest debris in the waterways.
We bushies pride ourselves on being largely self-sufficient and we can cope with this kind of thing when it happens. One thing we can’t do is build our own working phone/net systems. Battery powered radios and ABC local radio stations kept us going with one way communications and information but Telstra really must rethink their policy of removing generators from rural exchanges in disaster prone regions. Communication should be a two way process.