Office phones. Shop by brand Apple iPhones Samsung mobiles Microsoft. Business-grade fibre. Mobile broadband Data plans Devices Explore mobile broadband. Telstra Air. Support homepages Personal Business Enterprise. Sales Call 13 Sales. Accounts and billing Call 13 Accounts and billing. Concierge tech support Call 13 Concierge tech support. Enterprise Home. Security Secure your business Safeguard your clouds Protect your team Security. Professional Services Telstra Purple. Government Federal State Local Government.
Policies Financial Hardship Policy. Events Telstra Vantage Remixed Events. Self-service Telstra Connect Order Express. Contact us Request a callback Expert Finder Contact us. Contact us. SMS this link. Enter a phone number and we'll SMS a link to this page. Mobile number:.
Please enter a valid Australian mobile number. The link has been sent. About Telstra Air. Check our coverage map to find out more.
Mobile device coverage depends on where you are, the device you are using and whether it has an external antenna attached. The 5G symbol appearing on the device represents that 5G is available on the network in the vicinity of the device.
Speed and performance, and whether a 5G device uses the available 5G depends on prevailing radio conditions at your location and whether the device is actively downloading or uploading data. Outside of 5G coverage, 5G devices will continue to use our fastest available 4G, or 3G where 4G is unavailable. The Telstra mobile coverage checks have been created using tools that predict the likely areas of outdoor coverage.
We have not individually tested every particular location within the identified outdoor coverage areas for coverage. This means that while the footprint of outdoor coverage for a particular location is generally accurate, there may be some areas described as being within the outdoor coverage area proximate to locations searched where your device will not work.
This is a common characteristic of wireless systems. For example, actual outdoor coverage could be degraded or not existent in specific locations due to certain geographic features or as a result of the device used.
Geographic features that may reduce or block outdoor coverage could include formations, such as hills and mountains or even trees. The Telstra mobile coverage checks also provide an indication of the availability of indoor coverage at locations searched, where this is predicted. This is as accurate as we can make it based on what we know. Indoor coverage is highly variable and there may be locations where indoor coverage is indicated, but your device will not work due to local building density, physical structures and building materials.
For example, the following things may reduce or block indoor coverage: basements, lifts, underground car parks, concrete buildings, tunnels and road cuttings, steel framing and metallic window film.
Devices such as the Telstra Mobile Smart Antenna may assist to improve indoor coverage where it would otherwise not occur. Factors beyond Telstra's control such as the weather, tides, sea conditions and your antenna installation type and height of antenna above sea level can significantly influence the actual user experience of coverage, data speed and performance in offshore locations. Public mobile networks must not be relied upon as a primary method of emergency communication at sea.
Everything you need to know about how 5G works, including the ways it will power-up your work, play and everyday life.
Introducing the show where Simon Taylor breaks down all the tech talk so we can all understand it. Technically speaking, cloud gaming is where instead of having a computer or console running the game, the bulk of the processing happens remotely on a server and is streamed from the cloud straight to the players smartphone or TV, kind of like how you stream Netflix or YouTube. What makes a difference here is capacity, speed and latency, which is where 5G could really take this to the next level.
Put it this way. Cloud gaming is like having your favourite meal, made at your favourite restaurant, delivered to you almost instantly. Thanks 5G. But what does it all mean? It means convenience. You won't need to cart around a console or use a super fancy gaming computer that looks like a nightclub for tiny people.
It also means we'll see super crisp video streams with richer graphics as well as reduced ping rates and speedy response times. This is because the network will have more capacity and the potential for lower lag.
So the data that is being sent and received from the user to the server happens [click] real quick. See it takes 13 milliseconds for the brain to process images. Any lag time over that can be jarring and make you feel pretty sick [distorted]. This headset is what you traditionally need for a VR experience, but because all the processing can now be done in the cloud, with 5G, it means we'll see much smaller, sleeker devices, similar to the evolution of mobiles it'll be going from this to this.
Let's get into console to mobile gaming. This is when you can play games from your console over the net on your tablet or mobile phone, not the App Store version. It means you can keep playing your Xbox when you leave the room. If you're sneaky enough, you'll be able to play console games while you're at work. Champion cyclist, Anna Meares demonstrates how 5G connectivity and smart technology combine to help take bike rider safety up a gear.
Get ready to meet the incredible 5G helmet prototype that could help save lives. Sadly, with that influx of people, we're seeing accidents double. The biggest dangers are the vehicles on the road. When a human body comes up against a one tonne piece of metal, it's very clear which one's going to come off worse. Technology has been making cars safer for years. Why not cycling? All the road users are sharing the information in real time with each other, we're able to then put that into the cloud and make intelligent decisions and then send down alerts as appropriate.
A few milliseconds makes a huge difference. With 5G, the high speed and low delay that it brings is essential. I was really surprised by how quick the information came to me. I was really quite taken by the engagement of it. I wanted to keep riding past obstacles so I could hear it some more. And just I think that sort of penny dropping of understanding of how this technology will really help people to change not only the future of cycling, I think it will change the future of transport, overall.
Connected cars, connected trucks, connected cyclists, vehicles, starting to talk to traffic lights, really all of them working in cooperation. And 5G is being able to show that. Part of the trial involves converting some of Telstra's payphones into WiFi hotspots that will temporarily allow all users to access the internet using smartphones and tablets free of charge. Telstra said the maximum range of the hotspots will be between 30 and 50 metres, so customers will need to stay relatively close to get the Wi-Fi signal.
The company will build of its own hotspots while partnering with retail stores and local governments to get 2 million hotspots around the country over five years. After the trial period, the Wi-Fi hotspots will only be free for Telstra fixed-line internet customers with others paying a fee to use it.
Telstra retail group executive Gordon Ballantyne said the program would encourage customers at rival telcos to switch providers. Mr Ballantyne said Telstra stores, exchanges and payphones would be upgraded to carry WiFi signals.
0コメント