It's pretty similar to the analogue tv signal shutdown in 2010. The difference though was you could buy a digital tuner and plug it into your tv and keep using it.
3G is taking up a lot of spectrum space and they need to free it up for future data technology. It is also used by a very small (and shrinking) percentage of people, while costing too much to maintain.
It has to die. Telcos gave more than a year's warning. Then an extended grace period. I don't really know how they could have done this without annoying some people.
While I move in a bubble of nerds who tend to have decent gear, I don't actually know anyone affected by this shutdown first-hand.
They gave minimal warning about the emergency calling issue, and only a few weeks warning on the fact that "non-compliant" devices would be outright blocked (and each network has their own method on deciding on what is or isn't compliant).
And even the requirement for VoLTE support wasn't communicated early on.
Nevertheless, I agree that 3g needs to go just that it's been characterised by poor communication and heavy handedness.
there's a few people I know that's been affected btw
i get that there's a need for 3g to be shut down but there's no need to ban phones with 4g data capability that can't call without 3g (lacking voip implementation), the telcos could've just provided an app to do it because voip is just a protocol over ip
it's pretty fucking obvious that the telcos bribed the government into forcing them to block these devices because they get more money that way, they don't have to pay for the ewaste they artificially create and they don't look bad because they can just say that they're 'forced by legislation' to do so
But that Spectrum being used for 3G is beneficial. Not just for support of older devices but also increased, redundant coverage.
This purely Corporate Welfare legislation, which is going to backfire on the corporations when they realise they have to build more infrastructure to provide the same coverage.
It is going to be detrimental to product consumers because they wonβt have the same amount of coverage. Also, the higher bandwidth of 5G is going to increase backhaul requirements which mean that the person calling 000 using VoLTE will need to compete with the person steaming 4K Netflix while playing CoD.
The only winners in the long-term will be the advertisers and data miners, who somehow manage to bloat a 4kB website to 40mB.
a giant "fuck off" sign to international tourists.
Thatβs what Iβm wondering about. Will data only tourist sim/esim work as usual, or will βincompatibleβ 4G devices be blocked in this situation, too?
One would think that tourist sims would work because they are data only, but who knows?!
All if the examples of blocking appear to be from Optus in the article. And anecdotally they seem to have been the most heavy handed with this. So while there might be further blocking over time on the other networks, I'd start by switching to the Vodafone or Telstra networks if you end up blocked by Optus.
iirc it's all because of legislation that all 3 telcos have to adhere to so they'll all do the same shit, also Telstra uses a shitty proprietary voip implementation so things like lineageos might not work
This is true, but the way the telcos have been implementing it is different (even if the specifics of that remain unclear).
I expect some blacklisted devices will become whitelisted in the future on the various networks (and vice-versa). The whole thing has been poorly communicated and rather opaque.
The end result is that basically if you want to get a handset you know will work, the average consumer's only real choice is to buy from the network. At their prices. Funny how things work out.