Australia’s broadband services held up for business services during lock-down

Internet services was a concern for Aussie CIOs during pandemic.

The Australian Competition and Consumer Competition said its Critical Services Report showed broadband speeds and connectivity held up well during May 2020 despite a big increase in the use of video conferencing and streaming services due to COVID-19.

According to the ACCC’s Critical Services Report, Australian Government-owned NBN’s fixed-line broadband connections was able to support video-conferencing through Google Meet, Microsoft Teams, Skype, Webex, Zoom and GoToMeeting.

Rod Sims chair at NBN said the report details how Australians were increasingly dependent on video-calling for work, education and connecting with family and friends because of the pandemic.

Video conferencing applications hosted in Australia connected more quickly than those hosted overseas, the report showed.

Google Meet, Microsoft Teams, and Skype used Australian-based servers, and performed better due to lower latency, while GoToMeeting, Webex and Zoom recorded latency ten-times higher, or worse, due to their servers being located in Singapore, the Netherlands and United States, respectively.

Latency refers to the delay in receiving and responding to data and is dependent on the distance to servers where applications are hosted. Longer delays, or higher latency, are likely to lead to disjointed conversations during a video call.

Consumers in Western Australia enjoyed the lowest latency using Skype due to Skype being hosted on local servers, while slower test results for Google Meet and Microsoft Teams in WA are consistent with those servers being hosted on the East Coast.

The report also finds that streaming services such as Netflix and YouTube were typically downloading faster in May 2020 than during February 2020.

“NBN Co’s decision at the outset of COVID-19 restrictions in March to offer retail service providers 40 per cent extra network capacity for no extra cost was a major factor in preserving the quality of broadband services for consumers,” Sims said.

Service providers put in place various mitigations to alleviate pressure and congestion on broadband networks. That included Retail Service Providers (RSPs) provisioning more network capacity, and streaming providers, such as Youtube and Netflix, reducing their picture quality.

“The faster broadband speeds in the report show the NBN could have delivered more streamed content in May 2020, which is good news for consumers as streaming providers move to restore their usual picture quality,” said Sims.

“The report also shows that the video conference platforms work equally well across both NBN 50 and NBN 100 plan speeds.”

Results from seven of the eight RSPs tested were used for the video streaming analysis. MyRepublic was excluded from the aggregate analysis as its results varied significantly from the other RSPs due to its different network topology. All collected data concerns test communications that were initiated by the Measuring Broadband Australia (MBA) testing device, which does not involve monitoring or logging user activity.

The ACCC will release further Critical Service Reports, as well as the regular in-depth quarterly MBA report, later in 2020.

Broadband service was a big concern for CIOs during the pandemic. According to an Adobe survey of CIOs in Australia surveyed said Internet infrastructure was a large concern for them during the transition to remote working.

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