Broadband Advisor
Find out all about the iPhone at our iPhone Centre. News, reviews, how-tos and video - all in one location.- +
Researcher warns of unpatched iPhone bugs 24/07/2008 08:25:23
Flaws in Mail and Safari could be used by phishers and spammers, browser expert saysSecurity vulnerabilities in the iPhone's e-mail application and Safari Web browser can be used by phishers to dupe users into visiting malicious sites or by spammers to flood the phone's inbox with junk mail, a researcher warned Wednesday. - +
Is the iPhone dev deal fair? 24/07/2008 10:42:39
Apple apparently chose the best possible template for its iPhone developer programs: its own Apple Developer Connection for OS X. Why it then made the iPhone SDK confidential even for those who download it for free poses a puzzling contradiction in the company's seemingly open approach to development. - +
5 ways the iPhone 3G still lags in enterprise 24/07/2008 09:45:34
The iPhone 3G may have a lock on the Sexiest Gadget Alive title for 2008, but in the frumpy and boring world of things that matter to enterprise IT managers, it's no pinup.
Newsletter Subscription
The federal government has terminated the funding for the OPEL broadband network.
OPEL, a joint venture between Optus and Elders, was to have been allocated $958 million for the construction of a rural and regional broadband network under a deal by the Howard government.
However, the Minister for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy, Senator Stephen Conroy, said OPEL failed to meet the terms of the contract.
Senator Conroy said the Rudd government would honour the contract with OPEL on the proviso it provided coverage "reasonably equivalent to 90 percent of under-served premises identified by the then Department of Communications, Information Technology and the Arts as being within its coverage area".
"DBCDE performed an analysis of the detailed testing and mapping undertaken by OPEL, and determined that the OPEL network would cover only 72 percent of identified under-served premises," Conroy said.
Conroy's comments come after Optus parent, Singapore Telecommunications Limited issued a release to the ASX this morning.
"Optus and Elders maintain that all conditions precedent to the funding agreement have been satisfied. The OPEL network was capable of meeting the objectives of the government's Broadband Connect Infrastructure Program and delivering improved services to 889,322 unreserved premises in rural and regional Australia within 2 years at metro-comparable prices," read the SingTel statement.
Since the government's announcement last June, Optus claims to have spent $15 million in operating expenses and capital expenditure on the project.
With the OPEL plan dead, Labor will now focus its attentions on its $4.7 billion National Broadband Network. The NBN, a partnership with the private sector, plans to deliver broadband to 98 percent of Australians within five years.
Good Gear Guide Member Login

HP ProCurve Helps Gamers Compete at World Cyber Games 2008-07-23 19:50:00+10
Kroll Ontrack Announces Free Single File Recovery Trial of its Do-It-Yourself Data Recovery Product 2008-07-23 10:35:00+10
Loop Mobile Appoints new CEO 2008-07-22 16:05:00+10
FileMaker announces limited-time savings on upgrades to FileMaker Pro 9 2008-07-22 08:05:00+10
Loop Mobile Signs Agreement with USA’S Advanced 3G Mobile Network, Helio 2008-07-21 14:55:00+10







