You can thank Telstra for that. f.cking people over on resold CDMA by
forcing them to move to Telstra if they need similar coverage and
usually making them pay more.
Just another example of Telstra using monopolistic tactics to maximise
profit and market share. Just goes to show they couldn't compete on a
level playing field, even if they wanted to.
> You can thank Telstra for that. f.cking people over on resold CDMA by
> forcing them to move to Telstra if they need similar coverage and
> usually making them pay more.
No, you can thank Optus for that. Optus was free to build its own
replacement for the CDMA network, but chose not to.
> Just another example of Telstra using monopolistic tactics to maximise
> profit and market share. Just goes to show they couldn't compete on a
> level playing field, even if they wanted to.
How does it show that? If anything, it shows that Optus can't compete on
a level playing field (and is aware of it, or would have built its own
CDMA-replacement network to compete against Telstra's).
Polly the Parrot - 24 Apr 2008 21:21 GMT
> > You can thank Telstra for that. f.cking people over on resold CDMA
> > by forcing them to move to Telstra if they need similar coverage
> > and usually making them pay more.
>
> No, you can thank Optus for that. Optus was free to build its own
> replacement for the CDMA network, but chose not to.
Interesting that Horry can reply lucidly; Parky the Paki Bot can only
quote propaganda, and when confronted with more than a cut and paste
situation, disappears real fast.
Obviously Parky the Paki Bot has no mind of his own between 9.00 am
and 5.00 pm Monday to Friday (excluding Public Holidays).
Rod Speed - 24 Apr 2008 22:42 GMT
> Brendon wrote
>> You can thank Telstra for that. f.cking people over on
>> resold CDMA by forcing them to move to Telstra if they
>> need similar coverage and usually making them pay more.
> No, you can thank Optus for that. Optus was free to build
> its own replacement for the CDMA network, but chose not to.
It chose to do that, actually.
>> Just another example of Telstra using monopolistic tactics to
>> maximise profit and market share. Just goes to show they
> couldn't compete on a level playing field, even if they wanted to.
> How does it show that? If anything, it shows that Optus can't compete
> on a level playing field (and is aware of it, or would have built its own
> CDMA-replacement network to compete against Telstra's).
It chose to do that, actually.