Westnet

Westnet is a Perth-based Australian telecommunications company providing broadband ADSL, broadband ADSL2+, satellite broadband, dialup Internet, telephony and web-hosting services to homes and businesses across Australia.

Westnet Pty Ltd
Subsidiary
IndustryTelecommunications
FoundedGeraldton, Western Australia (1994)
HeadquartersPerth, Western Australia
ProductsBroadband
Satellite Broadband
Dial-up
Telephony
Web Hosting
Number of employees
450 (2013)
ParentTPG
Websitewww.westnet.com.au

History

Founded in the West Australian city of Geraldton in 1994 by Chris and Rhonda Thomas, Westnet began in a spare bedroom. In 1996 it was purchased by local company Mitchell and Brown Communications and experienced rapid growth over the years as a local internet service provider to the Geraldton region. With this expansion came the necessity of larger premises, which saw Westnet relocate to St Martins Tower in Perth in 1999.

Westnet completed the move to new premises in Central Park Tower, Perth. The move was in response to continued growth, and requirements for expanded office space for staff and resources.

In 2004, Westnet began offering a telephone service in addition to its internet products. At this time, the company began referring to itself as a telecommunications service provider, rather than only an internet service provider.

Acquisition by iiNet

On 8 May 2008 Western Australian based internet service provider iiNet acquired Westnet for $81 million.[1] The two companies continue to trade separately, but share many functions.

In March 2015 iiNet was bought by TPG in a $1.4 billion deal, effectively making TPG the parent company of Westnet.[2] Westnet continues to operate as a separate brand with only a handful of products that differ at all from other iiNet or Internode offerings.

Bandwidth management

P2P deprioritisation

In June 2007, Westnet stated that it had been "trialling" traffic prioritisation for a year, deprioritising peer-to-peer traffic, and would be continuing to do so in future. The announcement was made on the Westnet Blog[3] and on Whirlpool.net.au, to mixed reactions. Some praised Westnet for openly declaring its use of prioritisation, while others (including a Whirlpool News editorial[4]) criticised the company for using it silently for a year, or for doing so at all. Whirlpool News's article also suggested that the admission followed assertions by competing ISP Exetel that it was not the only ISP restricting peer-to-peer traffic.[4]

Awards

Westnet has won the following awards:

  • 2008 Customer Service Institute of Australia - National Medium Business of the Year
  • 2008 Customer Service Institute of Australia - Excellence in a Contact Centre (WA)
  • 16th and 17th ACNielsen Consult Australian Online Survey[5]
  • Best ISP – PC Authority Reliability and Service Awards 2007, 2008[6]
gollark: Some package manager features I think are important:- working update, without overwriting edited config files or something- customizable repos- semantic versioning for dependencies
gollark: I like how it does somewhat more than an entirely faithful emulation does.
gollark: It's also a bit crashy on potatOS for some reason.
gollark: I see.
gollark: Honestly, I feel like the technical characteristics of how your package manager manages packages is more important than the GUI you stick on it.

See also

References

  1. "Westnet Joins Forces with iiNet". Westnet. 8 May 2008. Archived from the original on 9 May 2008. Retrieved 8 May 2008.
  2. Mason, David Ramli, Max (13 March 2015). "TPG Telecom to buy iiNet for $1.4b to become No. 2 in internet service delivery". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  3. Ryan Bunter (25 June 2007). "Westnet Traffic Prioritisation". Westnet. Retrieved 24 February 2008.
  4. Phil Sweeney (26 June 2007). "Westnet admits P2P prioritisation". Whirlpool. Retrieved 4 December 2007.
  5. 31 August 2004, "Customers vote WestNet top ISP: survey". The Age Online, Retrieved on 9 October 2013
  6. Joseph Sapienza, 4 December 2008. "Westnet voted "Best ISP" in Australia and NZ". Fairfax Digital, Retrieved on 17 August 2009.
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