Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer
×

Did you know you can cook bread with steam?

Yatırımsız Deneme Bonusu

Yatırımsız deneme bonusunun ne olduğunu, nasıl alındığını ve faydalanma yöntemlerini öğrenin. Risk almadan bonus avantajlarından yararlanın!Online bahis ve casino dünyası giderek genişlerken, kullanıcılarına sunduğu avantajlar da artmaya devam ediyor. Yatırım yapmadan kazanç elde etme şansı sunan yatırımsız deneme bonusu, bu avantajlar arasında en cazip olanlardan biri olarak öne çıkıyor. "Yatırımsız Deneme Bonusu" adını verdiğimiz bu…

Read more

MSI’s Upcoming Slate Has Laptops For Gamers, Digital Creators And Astronauts

World-leading laptop manufacturer MSI has unveiled an impressive lineup of laptops for 2020 that appeal to a wide range of users. Leading the way are its flagship laptops, the GE66 Raider and GS66 Stealth, representing quite different takes on the gamer aesthetic. The GE66 Raider Aurora Edition is “the fusion of sci-fi and resplendency,” according to MSI.…

Read more

LG Gram Pre-Packed With Windows 11

Not only are all LG Gram laptops set to be shipped with Windows 11 already onboard to make life easier for customers, the company say previous LG Gram models can be upgraded to it by visiting the Microsoft website. “Shipping LG gram laptops with Windows 11 immediately after the OS launch is an example of our…

Read more

© 2026 Appliancenews. All Rights Reserved.

NBN Technology & Financials Panned By OECD

Communication Minister Stephen Conroy and the Gillard Government, who are the architects of the $43 Million dollar National Broadband Network (NBN), have been given a blunt warning by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) to slow down the project which faces been overtaken by “superior technological alternatives”.


According to the Australian newspaper the OECD has warned that the project is installing a public monopoly that could choke off the development of better internet technologies.

The OECD has reiterated what Opposition Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull has been saying for months. 

The OECD said that Stephen Conroy and the Federal government had adopted a “picking-the-winner strategy” on the NBN that could hinder the development of “as yet unknown, superior technological alternatives”. The report also found “substantial financial uncertainties” with the massive project – which is expected to have $26bn worth of equity funding from the government – and cautioned that it may not be the most cost-effective strategy.

Malcolm Turnbull said the OECD had confirmed “that this is being undertaken without any proper examination of the alternatives to achieve the policy objective of universal affordable broadband”.

The NBN will be an optic fibre-based network connected to 93 per cent of the nation’s homes and business premises.


Leave a comment

0.0/5