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Crown Fibre
 

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Welcome to the latest newsletter from Crown Fibre Holdings, compiled from our fortnightly blogs in the areas of business, health, education, kaupapa Maori, Government and councils. We hope you find it of interest. If you don’t want to receive this newsletter you can unsubscribe below.


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Connected:

Whangarei customer finds UFB costs less, not more

With UFB, surgeons at Whangarei’s Kensington Hospital can access key patient information from the operating theatre

When fast fibre came to Whangarei, the decision to sign up wasn’t hard for local business Kensington Hospital Ltd . Staff at the private hospital and medical centre were frustrated with a sometimes unreliable broadband connection. And with large files (x-rays, medical photos, scans etc) needing to move back and forward from the local district health board, fast speeds were becoming essential. Finance Manager Karen Duncan says since the move to Ultra-Fast Broadband, surgeons have been able to look at a patient’s x-rays from the operating theatre, test results come through quickly, and a GP can, within a normal consultancy timeframe, call up a specialist website to show a patient pictures of their condition.
Just as important for the company’s main bean counter, there have been significant cost savings in moving the company’s whole telecommunications package (phones included) to Whangarei-based ISP Ultracom
“We are really pleased. We have gone with a new and exciting technology and a local business willing to go the extra mile. We are delighted.”
Ultracom General Manager Jock Harris says the company had been offering fast broadband packages in the town for two years via Northpower’s connections, and so was well-placed to take on Ultra-Fast Broadband when it came to town. Business packages start at $99 a month for one phone line and fast broadband, and an extra $10 a month will give customers either another line or an extra 10Mbit/s in upload or download speed.
Jock says Ultracom now has 300 customers taking UFB, with a mixture of business and residential. Uptake has been good from SMEs, he says, whether it be a builder or architect wanting to be able to download plans, a shop or panel beater needing a fast reliable connection to order stock online and do the banking, or a graphics company sending large files. He says one customer, who used to regularly take two or three days out of her business to travel to Wellington where she was on a government standards committee, now attends the meetings mostly by video conference – a huge time saving.
Jock says one of the biggest challenges has been working out solutions to individual connection problems – whether it be fitting in with a building’s alarm set-up, or unravelling a company’s phone configuration to get fast fibre linked up – but he reckons that teething phase is now behind them.
Ultracom’s next target is to get to 1000 connections.
At Northpower Fibre, Chief Executive Darren Mason says the company’s next priority is Whangarei’s central business district. BY the end of June the company will take fibre past another 630 premises, taking the total “doors passed” to around 7,500. That figure will almost double by mid-2013 and the Whangarei network will be complete by June 2014.
Darren says UFB will be transformational for Whangarei.
“Once people are on fibre they realise the benefits of it,” he says. Fibre means improved efficiencies and productivity, and puts people in contact with the rest of the world. “Put simply, fibre allows you to work, live and play from virtually anywhere, anytime.”

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Telehealth Waikato, Thursday 28th June 5pm:

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Opportunity Hamilton, in association with the NZ Telehealth Forum, are hosting Waikato Telehealth After Five on Thursday 28th June at Wintec, Hamilton. A series of local and nearby examples of telehealth in use will be presented, followed by an establishment process for a working group to promote telehealth across the Waikato region. For more information visit: http://is.gd/UsMePt .

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NetHui adds health stream, technology conference:

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InternetNZ’s NetHui conference (11-13 July in Auckland) will bring together everyone involved with Internet issues in New Zealand. A new stream has just been added on health which will explore telehealth opportunities, health information access etc . A complementary Internet Technical Architecture Conference (InTAC) will also be held on 10 July to focus on technical architecture and technical policy issues. For more information visit http://nethui.org.nz/

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Whanganui hosts Technology Expo:

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One of the first locations to see UFB deployed is also building awareness of how we can take advantage of it. From 20 to 22 July TechEx Whanganui will help raise awareness of UFB and what it will offer to all sectors of the community. The Expo will offer a hands-on and interactive experience for visitors. For more information visit http://www.techex.co.nz/

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First stage of Taitokerau Networks live:

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Taitokerau Networks has launched services on its new high-speed internet backbone running between Auckland and Whangarei. The company, owned by iwi partners Whaingaroa, Ngati Whatua and Te Rarawa, together with Datalight and FX Networks, proposed to take high-speed internet from Auckland to the Far North. Taitokerau iwi spokesman Haami Piripi says the project is the first iwi-owned intercity network in the country.

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