Microsoft Grants Windows XP Yet Another Reprieve

October 7th, 2008

Microsoft has extended the availability of Windows XP on new PCs by six months, the company confirmed Friday.

Computer makers that “downgrade” machines from Windows Vista Business or Vista Ultimate to Windows XP Professional will be able to obtain media for the latter through the end of July 2009, a Microsoft spokeswoman said Friday.

The new date is a change in policy. Previously, Microsoft had planned to halt XP Professional media shipments to major computer makers after Jan. 31. 2009.

“As more customers make the move to Windows Vista, we want to make sure that they are making that transition with confidence and that it is as smooth as possible. Providing downgrade media for a few more months is part of that commitment,” the spokeswoman said in an e-mail.

The Jan. 31, 2009 date is also the last day when smaller companies, dubbed “system builders,” will be allowed to purchase Windows XP licenses to install on the machines they assemble. The system builder deadline has not changed, the spokeswoman added; It remains next Jan. 31.

To confuse matters, some PC makers have long claimed that they would provide XP downgrades on new computers past the Jan. 31 deadline. Last June, for example, Hewlett-Packard Co. talked of a July 2009 cut-off. “HP…will continue to offer this option on its business systems through at least July 30, 2009,” a company spokesman said almost four months ago.

The Microsoft spokeswoman clarified the situation. “The [downgrade] rights don’t go away,” she said via instant messaging in response to follow-up questions. “It’s all about having the media on hand. It’s always been okay to use what you’ve got.”

Microsoft sent Windows XP into semi-retirement last June when it stopped selling the aged operating system at retail, withdrew Windows XP Home from use on new PCs and allowed XP Professional to be installed as a Vista downgrade.

The latter tactic takes advantage of Vista’s end-user licensing agreement (EULA), which allows users — and in their stead, computer makers — to install Windows XP Professional while also providing media for Vista for a possible upgrade later. More than a third of all new PCs are being downgraded to Windows XP, according to data from a Florida company that operates a community-based performance testing network.

It’s also possible that XP will be widely available long after July 31, 2009. “Downgrade rights do not expire,” Microsoft’s spokeswoman said Friday.

The longer availability puts Microsoft in an unusual position; the new timeline will make it possible for users to purchase XP-powered PCs through next July, just months before Microsoft plans to roll out Windows 7, the successor to Vista.

Google Earth to license new satellite imagery

August 30th, 2008

geoeye.jpgGoogle has agreed to license imagery for their mapping products from a satellite due to launch on September 4th. This new satellite can take detailed imagery for an area the size of Delaware in one day. What does that mean? Well, you could get high resolution pan-sharpened imagery for the entire country in around 30 days. Impressive.

The level of detail will be approximately 50cm per pixel — that’s just under 20 inches. If you want to see what that looks like, take a look at this. Imagine having a Google Maps/Earth content that is this detailed, 100% complete and updated once a month — that’s powerful stuff.

“The GeoEye-1 satellite has the highest ground resolution color imagery available in the commercial marketplace and will produce high-quality imagery with a very accurate geolocation. It is our goal to display high-resolution imagery for as much of the world as possible, and GeoEye-1 will help further that goal.” — Kate Hurowitz (Google)

And for bragging rights, Google’s even got their logo on the side of the rocket as pictured above.

Datacore - nothing but storage

August 28th, 2008

Angie Gonzalez, of Datacore, and I had a conversation about how virtual storage complements any type of virtual processing solution. Nearly all virtual server-based solutions gain a great deal of benefit when a supporting virtual storage strategy is also deployed. Why is that?

  • Virtual storage solutions iron out incompatibilities among storage subsystems making it possible for a workload to move from one place to anotfher without also requiring IT administrators to reconfigure storage systems on the fly.
  • Virtual storage solutions can make it more easily possible to select the storage subsystem based upon the performance requirements of the application, overall polices and operational events.

Until fairly recently, only the largest of organizations could afford sophisticated virtual storage systems. Datacore has been doing its best to bring this type of technology to the midmarket for nearly 10 years.

What is your organization doing to complement its virtual processing solutions with virtual storage solutions?

Dell’s second quarter: Another milepost in the turnaround tale

August 28th, 2008

Dell reports its fiscal second quarter results on Thursday after market close and analysts are turning optimistic about the company’s turnaround prospect amid better consumer notebook designs, emerging market revenue and solid server sales growth.

Dell is expected to report fiscal second quarter earnings of 36 cents a share on revenue of $15.95 billion, according to Thomson Reuters. Dell doesn’t provide financial guidance, but Wall Street is expecting earnings of 41 cents a share on revenue of $16.7 billion for the third quarter.

Analysts have been turning increasingly upbeat about Dell’s prospects and IDC’s server statistics on Wednesday only reinforced that general idea that the company is on the right path.

Here’s the crib sheet ahead of the earnings report:

Server sales expected to be better than expected. Cowen & Co. Louis Miscioscia said in a research note that Dell’s server revenue should be about $1.7 billion, but could hit $1.87 billion with revenue growth of 15 percent. That incremental revenue could add as much as a penny a share to earnings. HP also reported strong server gains and Dell has been gaining on its larger rival.

SMB and emerging market gains. Small business and emerging markets are the growth engines for Dell. In fact, if Dell beats estimates it will most likely because of those two markets. Miscioscia is among the more bullish on Wall Street and projecting revenue of $16.2 billion, well ahead of the consensus outlook. Dell recently unveiled four SMB focused Vostro PCs for emerging markets with limited configurations. Dell also launched a new Latitude lineup focused on business users.

Cost cutting progress. Analysts across the board are closely Dell’s progress in cutting operating expenses and expect more layoffs from the company. However, cost cutting is likely to be offset by aggressive pricing in the quarter. Toss in marketing for new products and Dell may be cutting operating expenses only to hold the gross margin fort at best. “Our estimates reflect an 18.1% gross margin, down 187 bps year over year, due to aggressive pricing, commodity pricing returning to normalized levels and increased sales through retail channels,” said Cross Research in its earnings preview.

Retail channel shelf space. Dell in recent quarters has stormed the channel, but it’s not clear that it is gaining shelf space. UBS analyst Maynard Um notes:

Our recent retail channel checks indicate no shift in PC shelf space across major retailers, with HP dominating and Dell still having fairly limited SKUs in many major US retailers. While recognizing our retail checks are not representative of the global market, we feel these checks provide a decent idea of regional channel presence. Given recent product introductions and its strategy, we believe Dell’s presence in the US retail channel could increase in the coming quarters.

In addition, Dell is likely to talk up its consumer sales and its penchant for design. Dell has made a lot of progress toward its goal of generating product lust.
Some color on Dell’s software plans. Dell has quietly building up its software business especially for software as a service. It is also developing on Salesforce.com’s force.com platform and tweaking Vista to make it more palatable. Although the focus will obviously be on hardware any incremental color on Dell’s software plans could be notable.

Analysts generally expect Dell to tout its retail gains ahead of its peak consumer selling season and a positive tone from CEO Michael Dell, who recently bought a big chunk of stock. Dell is still a work in progress, but appears to be headed in the right direction.

IPhone Enterprise Apps: What’s the Holdup?

August 26th, 2008

When Apple launched its new App Store earlier this summer, the assumption was that scads of businesses would develop applications for their iPhone-toting customers. Although there are more than 60 apps in the App Store’s Business category, virtually no big-name companies have bothered to cough up one of their own. Since Apple plans to make at least 40 million iPhones in the next year, many of which will no doubt end up being used in the workplace, what’s the holdup?

Nick Halsey, vice president of marketing at business intelligence (BI) vendor Jaspersoft, says it’s simply not worth the bother. “Our business users are using Safari to deliver JasperReports to them on their iPhone. While the effort to write the 100 lines of Java code to build an iPhone app is minimal, it’s just not needed.”

Halsey says Jaspersoft would be willing to create an iPhone app in response to customer demand, but there hasn’t actually been any yet. However, he says it’s likely that someone from within the user community will choose to make and submit an app on his own “as a fun project.”

Chuck Dietrich, VP of Salesforce Mobile, says his company, Salesforce.com, has a different take on the usefulness of iPhone apps. Realizing that mobile professionals won’t want to take the time to haul out a laptop and boot it up simply to look up a customer’s order history, Salesforce Mobile provides the same information-and more-with less hassle.

Before launching its app, the company prioritized feedback and ideas from the user community to develop one that includes more than 60 percent of the features customers want most. While users can still access client information via the iPhone’s native browser, Salesforce Mobile is a targeted app designed specifically for the mobile professional. “[It] allows iPhone users to access Salesforce CRM applications and more than 70,000 Force.com custom applications right from their iPhone,” says Dietrich.

Dietrich sees iPhone apps as part of the natural evolution of mobile devices in the workplace. “From a historic standpoint, the mobile revolution began in the’90s with the mass adoption of mobile phones as a primary means of communication. Soon, mobile e-mail became a way of life in the enterprise. As consumers and professionals became more familiar with mobile devices, and as mobile devices became more like mobile laptops, end users increasingly desired and expected to be able to do everything from the mobile devices that they could do from their desks.”

BI firm Oracle also couldn’t pass up an opportunity to design an app specifically for the iPhone. Oracle Business Indicators lets users access their company’s business performance information and manipulate the data based on what’s most convenient for them.

Lenley Hensarling, general vice president of application development at Oracle, says, “It’s not meant to replace a dashboard and analytical apps that have a whole bunch of drilldowns, but rather to give you handy access to core sets of metrics. We wanted to make usage and availability ubiquitous, and let users tailor the information to exactly what they want to see.”

Indicators also makes use of the iPhone’s native tools. “Since we support [the iPhone's] alerting mechanisms, you don’t have to go hunting for information. You’ll get alerted when data crosses a threshold that you or someone else has set.”

Although Apple is famously picky about who gets access to the iPhone Software Developer Kit (SDK), Hensarling says developing an iPhone app was easy as pie. “The cool thing is that you’re actually developing in Cocoa and the Mac OS environment, so in terms of the development environment, it’s very mature and complete.” He says they also never felt constrained during the development process because rather than try to shoehorn an app made for the desktop onto the iPhone, the team instead built Oracle Business Indicators from the ground up.

Salesforce’s Dietrich agrees that building an iPhone app is a smooth process. “Thanks to the iPhone’s robust development environment, we were able to develop, test and deliver Salesforce Mobile for the iPhone, all in less than three months,” he notes. In fact, the process was so painless, the company plans to develop additional apps in the coming months. ” Salesforce.com and Apple will continue to work closely to iterate and expand the breadth of functionality of Salesforce Mobile for the iPhone to expand the ways that enterprises can use Salesforce CRM and Force.com applications to improve the way they work.”

Still, Jaspersoft’s Halsey remains unconvinced. He says there is a greater demand for Web apps that can be accessed anywhere, regardless of device or browser. He points to the growing trend toward cloud computing as evidence. “What’s more interesting to us in the enterprise, and where we see customer demand, is for Web 2.0 tools for reporting and analysis as well as for collaborating on making BI tools better,” says Halsey.

MSI Eclipse - First X58 motherboard for Intel Core i7

August 26th, 2008

MSI has unveiled details of its new Eclipse motherboard - the company’s first X58 motherboard for Intel Core i7.

MSI Eclipse gallery.

So, what’s special about the Eclipse? Well …

  • Socket B (LGA1366).
  • It features six DIMM slots to take advantage of Nehalem’s triple-channel DDR3 memory controller and can utilize up to 24GB of DDR3-1333+ RAM.
  • A cool looking turbo button, which I assume has something to do with the Core i7’s turbo mode.
  • A set of switches marked CPU_CLK which look like a blast from the past.
  • 3x PCI-E 2.0 x16 slots, 2xPCI-E 2.0 x1 slots, 2x standard PCI slots.

  

 

The MSI Eclipse features ten DrMOS High-C capacitors (six for the CPU, two for the northbridge and two for the QuickPath memory controller) which are designed for reliability and efficiency.

Note: Notice that there are no heatsinks on that board. This is because MSI is keeping the cooling system under wraps until later.

This isn’t the first X58 motherboard to be announced (the other day ASUS showed off the P6T) but so far it is the most interesting.

No pricing has been announced.

 

Microsoft, eat your own dog food

August 26th, 2008

“Eating your own dog food” is a concept that may not be so familiar outside the development community, and is not intended as a reflection of the quality (or lack thereof) of a particular software product. In essence, it means that if you create an API or product within a company, it behooves you to ensure that your own developers also use that product, turning them into in-house field testing personnel with the added advantage that they have access to the code and can find, if not fix themselves, truly annoying deficiencies.

I think it’s pretty clear that where Microsoft has truly eaten its own dog food, it has made products that manage to control a large percentage of the market. Consider something simple and fundamental which historically has been as closely associated with the Microsoft platform as WIN32: COM. COM was Microsoft’s standard technology for binary interoperability. Built around a simple C-style binary layout that maps directly to the way C++ implements virtual methods (the VTABLE, which is basically a stack of function pointers), it became the de facto interoperability standard atop the Windows platform. A heavy percentage of my C++ development work in the past was devoted to the creation of reusable COM components. COM was an extremely important technology pre-.NET, and for that reason, Microsoft made sure that COM interoperabilty was incredibly simple to achieve from .NET environments. You can generate .NET wrappers around COM objects very easily, allowing you to manage legacy COM objects in your .NET applications as easily as you do local .NET objects.

COM, however, conquered the Windows world because Microsoft was so aggressive about using the technology in its own products. A true competitive differentiator, at least from a “browser as reusable toolkit” standpoint, was the fact that Microsoft built Internet Explorer as a set of reusable COM components. All functionality in Microsoft’s Office product suite were exposed via COM Automation, making the functionality accessible to both developers using traditional programming languages and scripting languages alike. Microsoft made Visual Basic an important development technology based in no small part on how the tool made it easy to create and consume COM objects.

Microsoft, in other words, ate its own dog food when it came to COM. This incentivized third parties to use the COM infrastructure in their own products, making COM the standard technology for binary reusability in Windows.

Low-level technologies, however, aren’t the only beneficiaries of the “dog food” concept. Higher level products also frequently benefit from extensive internal usage by Microsoft.

I don’t find many opponents of Microsoft technology who have bad things to say about Visual Studio. It is generally considered a great product, and the fact that many of its concepts are copied in competing development tools is a testament to its status as a setter of trends in development technology. People may complain about its price, but they don’t often claim that it is a bad product.

Visual Studio is also the tool that Microsoft uses to build all of its own products. That’s a huge competitive advantage for a company like Microsoft, which is chock full of highly skilled developers and creates software used by billions. Those experiences inform directions in a product they use to build their own software, and since software developers who write to Windows are likley to have many of the same requirements as Microsoft’s developers, that improves Visual Studio’s suitability to the needs of Windows developers.

Few companies are as driven by email as Microsoft. I received stacks of the stuff while a Microsoft employee, and combined with the integrated calendar in Outlook, it served as the primary means by which Microsoft coordinated things across a large and diverse company. That internal experience has helped to inform the design of both Exchange and Outlook. Microsoft is in a unique position to know what kinds of issues large distributed organizations face from a communications standpoint because it is such an organization itself, and that knowledge has been poured into the design of Exchange and Outlook. That, I think, has played an important role in making the pairing dominant in the enterprise.

The “eat your own dog food” model has its limitations. Everyone at Microsoft uses Microsoft operating systems, too. That has worked well in the server space, where the server operating system division has moved from strength to strength, and has a growing market share to show for it. Having the geeks at Microsoft using a consumer-oriented operating system, however, is less effective at working out issues that affect non-technical users, as geeks are a more knowledgeable user group than the non-geeks that constitute the majority of users of desktop Windows. This has created an opening for consumer-centric Apple, who has created a team of people plugged into the needs of non-technical users. That’s an important issue that Microsoft needs to resolve, and a lesson to be drawn from their experience of Vista, as well as their competition with a newly-resurgent Cupertino-based competitor.

Limitations aside, the “dog food” approach to software development is still highly effective for Microsoft, particularly as they are a company who tends to make the tools that others use to build higher-level solutions. More rigorous enforcement of that principle, I think, would help Microsoft considerably, which is the nice way to say that I think Microsoft has failed to “dog food” some critical technologies, which is weakening their attempts to popularize them in the marketplace.

I can think of certain products that aren’t used extensively within the company, and should be. But more important to me as a developer who prefers the .NET approach to software development, however, are the technologies released as part of the .NET 3.0 package, and in particular, Windows Presentation Framework (WPF).

WPF was designed as a modern replacement to the legacy WIN32 user interface technologies. Unfortunately, as Peter Bright in a long response to a previous article noted, there is a dearth of WPF-oriented applications made by Microsoft. This leads to justifiable questions as to whether Microsoft truly considers WPF the future of user interface development atop the Windows platform.

Microsoft would go a long way towareds making WPF the de facto standard development technology for Windows if they started churning out large numbers of applications that use the technology. If they aren’t willing to do that themselves, why should Microsoft expect the wider world to embrace WPF with any more enthusiasm?

Pushing WPF more strongly among their own products would certainly help to popularize Silverlight, built as it is on a subset of WPF and thus serving as a point of consistency between desktop development and Rich Internet Application (RIA) development. On that note, If Microsoft doesn’t aim to make Silverlight spread from desktops to TV Set-Top Boxes and portable devices - all properties in which Microsoft has a strong showing - then Microsoft is fighting RIA-dominant Adobe (with its Flash product) with both hands tied behind its back. “Dogfooding,” in other words, should apply to more than just desktop-oriented products.

Microsoft needs to be the canary in the mine for its own technologies, which sounds less dramatic when you consider that that canary owns the mine, is super-smart and has the ability to rapidly put together air filtration systems to clean up any dodgy air it might find. Pressure to achieve this goal can only come down from the center, I believe, which is why I think there needs to be a strong voice at Microsoft that creates a coherent voice for the platform as a whole, and guides the technology directions taken by individual divisions. If there is no strong centrally-managed technology vision, then you can’t complain when people fail to adhere to it.

I remember broaching this concept to friends and colleagues at Microsoft before I left, and though the response from most was positive, some stated that they liked the Microsoft hands-off approach to development. I am not, however, so sure that the current hands-off approach is the way Microsoft has always operated. In a response from Bill Gates to a Thinkweek piece I wrote (the nature of which I am not at liberty to share), I came away with the strong impression that there was once a time that there was strong pressure on new divisions to leverage and promote technology created by other divisions, and that this had become a problem over time. This was why XBOX had been freed to chart its own path, in hopes that the demands from other divisions wouldn’t strangle Microsoft’s attempts to pose a credible competitor in the gaming space.

It’s one thing to prevent MSN content properties from trying to get space on the XBOX blades for their own products. Its another thing, however, for XBOX to be allowed to disconnect in any appreciable way from the wider Microsoft product ecosystem.

Microsoft, again, is a platform company. It works best when everything they build is an extension of that platform, not just because that makes the platform as a whole valuable, but because it leverages the unique investment in software platform expertise that the company has built over the years.

Security Researcher Warns of Vista Vulnerabilities

August 26th, 2008

A New Zealand security researcher is exploring several scenarios in which Windows Vista could be attacked and warns more protection is needed for users.

Ben Hawkes presented his findings at the Black Hat conference, held in Las Vegas this month, and will also present them at the Kiwicon conference, to be held in Wellington in the end of September.

Hawkes’ research has uncovered hacking techniques for attacking the Vista heap, which is a dynamic memory management component, used by every single application, from Microsoft Word to web applications, he says.

There is a type of bug in these applications called the memory corruption bug, he says. Historically, these bugs have been a fairly severe security problem because people could turn them into arbitrary code execution — allowing attackers to run code, for example a back door or keylogger, says Hawkes.

Microsoft is trying to prevent malicious hackers from targeting memory corruption. When it introduced Windows Vista, it also introduced several security enhancements to the operating system, Hawkes says. But more protection is needed.

Hawkes was in touch with Microsoft two weeks before Black Hat, sending the company a copy of his slides and presentation called “Attacking the Vista heap.”

“They were quite interested in my research and passed it around internally to a few select people,” he says.

Hawkes got a little bit of feedback from the software giant, generally positive.

“I had a fairly good experience,” he says.

He is not sure what Microsoft’s next steps will be to deal with this issue.

“They may end up introducing some of the protection mechanisms I have suggested in my research,” he says.

Hawkes says the kind of research he is performing does not pose an immediate threat; it does not present a vulnerability, he says. Rather, an attacker could use his research as a tool to leverage a vulnerability. It is more likely that his findings will become an issue six months down the track when researchers, and attackers, may find vulnerabilities where they can use the attack techniques, he says.

“Microsoft has this time to step back, use their threat models and work out the best way to deal with this problem,” he says.

In his Black Hat presentation, Hawkes suggested that Microsoft should add technical measures to prevent potential use of the techniques he has demonstrated. This could be, for example, adding guard pages and guarded mappings, he says. These suggestions are fairly simple and cheap to implement, he says.

Hawkes’ findings do not change procedures for IT managers and system administrators, he says, as long as they keep patching and mitigating attacks. It is more of interest to the technical crowd, who are creating the attacks and doing the vulnerability research that results in patches, he says.

There are very few people in the world doing cutting edge research in that particular area, he says. Hawkes and another New Zealander, Brett Moore, are among those researchers. Moore has done similar research on Windows Server 2003, Hawkes says.

Keeping MacBooks Snug at Security

August 26th, 2008

Apple’s laptops have had some interesting encounters at airport security checkpoints. The wafer-thin design of the MacBook Air befuddled one security officer earlier this year in the U.S., who asked to give some “special attention” to the “fine piece of machinery,” according to Bob, who blogs for the U.S. Transportation Security Administration (TSA). After inspection, the laptop was returned to the owner.

Users don’t have to remove their MacBooks from their bags anymore, thanks to new “checkpoint-friendly” laptop bags. It’s a hassle to remove laptops and place them in bins, so these bags allow X-ray machines to screen laptops from inside bags. The bags are designed using guidelines provided by the TSA, which wants a clear view of the laptop through the bag.

The TSA does not officially certify bags, but it has set some basic rules that can be viewed on its Web site.

The TSA expects a majority of these bags to be available in mid-August, and voila, some products are here. Checkpoint-friendly bags and sleeves for Apple’s MacBooks are available from Incipio, Tom Bihn and other vendors.

A MacBook Air checkpoint-friendly bag

The tiny MacBook Air has unique dimensions, so it won’t be compatible with bags for average-sized laptops. Incipio’s QuickCheck carrying case is designed specially for the dimensions of the MacBook Air. Made of nylon with a protective lining, and with two pouches to store accessories, it looks more like a sleeve than like a full-blown protective case. The US$44.99 laptop comes with a shoulder strap and is available in black and “cool silver” colors. It is available on the company’s Web site.

Checkpoint Flyer Briefcase

Tom Bihn’s Checkpoint Flyer Briefcase is a sturdy laptop bag designed for travel. It has more than 10 pockets, including a “quick-access” pocket where a boarding pass and maps can be stored. At $220, it may be a tad expensive, but it is made of protective material and has a compartment designed to save laptops from impact. The bag can be ordered for various MacBook models and screen sizes at Tom Bihn’s Web site. It supports the MacBook Air, the 13-inch MacBook and MacBook Pros with 15-inch and 17-inch screens.

Sleeves for PowerBooks and iBooks

If you need just a sleeve and not a sturdy laptop case, look at SleeveCase from Waterfield’s Web site. Sleeves provide a great cushion for the laptop to be stored in other bags, but Waterfield claims they can also act as a standalone bag. The sleeve is made of neoprene and is wrapped in a solid nylon shell. MacBooks do not need to be removed from the sleeve when being run through an X-ray machine during security check.

Depending on screen size and laptop model, the sleeves are priced between $38 and $42. There are sleeves for most MacBook models and even for old-school PowerBooks and iBooks. They are available on Waterfield’s Web site.

A pilot’s tale of aero bags

Calling themselves a bunch of “engineers and pilots, not fashion designers,” Aerovation gave its Checkpoint Friendly Laptop Bag a no-frills design. The bag, padded with foam and nylon, has a zipper that splits the bag into two different parts. It also offers a number of pockets to store travel documents and computer accessories. The bag costs $129.95 and is currently out of stock on Aerovation’s Web site, but the company hopes to resume shipping it again by the end of this month.

Internode extends ADSL2+ range

August 26th, 2008

The company flagged the launch of the NakedExtreme service a month ago, saying it would lease the unbundled local loop service from Telstra and use its own equipment to provide naked DSL, because using the alternative line sharing service restricted the distance from the exchange at which broadband could be offered to around 4km.

“Any further and our customer connection attempt is rejected with the declaration ‘transmission loss too high’,” Internode managing director Simon Hackett said in a statement.

“That message occurs if the line produces a signal attenuation over its length exceeding the allowable limit for a traditional analog voice service. Since NakedExtreme uses an unbundled local loop service, it doesn’t need to co-exist with analog telephony, which means we can deliver broadband much further from the exchange,” Hackett continued.

According to Internode, this meant that the coverage area for a telephone exchange was tripled from 52 square kilometres to more than 176 square kilometres, and the distance from the exchange at which naked DSL could be provided increased to 7.5km or more.

Previously the company had been offering naked DSL using Optus’ network.

Internode launched NakedExtreme nationally, except in Tasmania, where the company stopped offering high-speed services because it said there was a lack of competitive backhaul services in that state.

Internode has set the price of NakedExtreme at $10 above the cost of the equivalent Internode Extreme ADSL2+ service.

According to iiNet, however, when Internode first flagged the service, it already offered naked DSL on its own equipment, achieving similar distances. “We’ve had some customers working at six to seven kilometres. Some of them get a fantastic service,” iiNet CTO Greg Bader said at the time.