New Zealand To Bring Ultrafast Internet To 85 Percent Of Population (stuff.co.nz) 147
Ultrafast broadband is coming to more than another 200,000 homes, but doubts are already being expressed that the expansion of the network isn't quite ambitious enough. From a report: Another 423,000 people will be able get ultrafast broadband (UFB) by the end of 2024 as a result of a long-awaited decision to expand the network. Prime Minister Bill English said UFB would be extended to more than 151 additional towns, on top of the 33 cities that are already getting the service. The expansion will mean UFB will be available to "up to 85 per cent" of the population, up from the 75 per cent coverage that is planned to be delivered by 2020.
With an small download cap! (Score:3)
With an small download cap!
Re:With an small download cap! (Score:4, Insightful)
With an small download cap!
In USA, we much rather charge more for less than build out infrastructure.
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With an small download cap!
In USA, we much rather charge more for less than build out infrastructure.
Anything else would be a disservice to the stockholders - where do your loyalties lie, exactly?
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Currently I live in Tampa where we have excellent internet service where you can get it. Unfortunately HOAs, apartment complexes, and some counties have implemented deals that give only 1 service provide access to customers. In those places you can get service that is so so for way to high of a price..
Luckily I live in none of those places. On a lark just called up
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That would go against the name they picked for the project. It's Ultra fast. Beyond the very concept of high speed.
Huh! I won't sign up for that until they provide ludicrous-speed broadband. I want my router to go plaid.
Re:With an small download cap! (Score:5, Informative)
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Nope.
NZ$75 (US$54) gets you unlimited 100/30 with no traffic shaping , no port blocking, no data caps, just Naked Broadband, net neutrality service.
ALL ISPs(over 20 last time I looked) are accessible as they pay a per customer wholesale rate set by the government and they differentiate themselves by having "additions", e.g. discount if you have cellular service with them, a local customer support office, lightbox (netflix competitor).
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I have UFB at home, its a 1000/500 connection with no data cap. Data caps aren't really a thing anymore in New Zealand, most ISPs moved away from that model a while back.
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And how much speed to you get to a USA or Europe based server? NZ is "far" from most of the Internet. They can sell you a gigabit connection but saturate the oceanic cable. What matters is what speed do you get out of your island?
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I have hired movies on youtube in HD, but they always have multiple pauses while waiting for data.
I don't know where youtube movies are streamed from for NZ tho.
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The Fibre links to the rest of the world are actually not too bad, and there is possibly going to be another fibre put in within a couple of years, however there is still spare capacity on exiting cables.
Doing file transfers (Diptrace 3D models for OSX a 1.9GB file) I hit 5MB/s and averaged over 3MB/s while the missus was watching netflix, all on VDSL
I get Fibre June next year apparently.
An
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It enables the creation of content, this has been covered many times before. With high speed broadband, content can be readily shuffled back and forth between people, as they work on it. This allows cheaper content creation from home, many people, in many homes, working together without office costs, a huge fiscal burden. They can meet online, organise online and share creation on line, does not even need to be full time, can all be done part time, hugely reducing the need for early capital investment.
Of c
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Are you saying NZ has a very large (and fast) LAN but its actual connection to the Internet (the outside world) is slow?
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And how much speed to you get to a USA or Europe based server? NZ is "far" from most of the Internet. They can sell you a gigabit connection but saturate the oceanic cable. What matters is what speed do you get out of your island?
Do you think that a country with a reasonably advanced policy toward the internet haven't heard of CDNs?
Also, the internet has moved on from the US-centric network of the 90's. Most people these days use the Internet to access local services and content.
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Err, I haven't had a download cap here in NZ for many years, I don't know of anyone who doesn't choose an unlimited plan.
Glowing strands of fiber in my living room (everyone gets two strands of fiber in fact for future proofing!), can't beat that! Everyone who has access to fiber can get Gigabit Internet now.
New overseas pipes also going live shortly.
Also, we have one of the fastest 4G networks in the world, that's because we DO have caps on mobile data usage.
NZ Internet has come a LONG way in the past few
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I'm getting 38 mbps on VDSL, which I'm reasonably happy with, but we do have fibre in our street, so I will look into that.
The problem is having a shared driveway, I have to get all the neighbors to agree to letting the installers have access which might be hard.
The other point I wanted on make is the standard of exper
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Do you have overhead powerlines/phone down your shared driveway to your house? If so, they'll just string up another wire. That's what they did for us down our shared driveway with three houses between us and the road. Install was done extremely quickly and competently. I believe they did that on the inspection/planning date when they saw what was involved, rather than waiting for the installation date a week later.
However at my office when I got Fiber installed there (4 offices in block), was the opposite
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Also redefines Ultra-Fast... (Score:2)
Re:Also redefines Ultra-Fast... (Score:5, Informative)
- CFH, NZ [crownfibre.govt.nz].
(Since neither the summary nor the linked article could be bothered to say...)
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100 Mbps may sound cool, but remember we're talking about upside-down bandwidth here...
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"Ultra Fast" is such a relative term. I remember when at T1 was "ultra fast", when everyone was on dialup. To me, "Ultra Fast" is meaningless marketing drivel.
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When you can stream 4K video to every screen in the house, is it fast enough yet?
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When you can stream 4K video to every screen in the house, is it fast enough yet?
4K is a number. 1MB is a number. High speed and ultra fast are useless just as is calling something a "medium sized softdrink". What's wrong with using something like 1M/s or 100M/s or 1K/s? I would even be ok with it being a multiple of something arbitrary or a power of something arbitrary. Cdrom drives used multiples of the first speed so a quad speed was 4 times faster. Horsepower is an approximation of a horse. At least if you created a standard that made sense then everyone could communicate easi
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Numbers can be factually proven wrong, resulting in the need to invoke alternate facts as the basis of the author's infalliability.
Statements like "Ultra Premium Super High Speed Deluxe" can never be proven wrong, and thus fly right through technical, legal and marketing approval reviews.
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He should consider leaving his mom's basement too...
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That's true. If you're not careful all the bits fall out and you have to go a sweep them up.
Ha, you should use Linux. Thats why it has sticky bits.
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I always wonder about the use of the term "Ultra"
You aren't leaving yourself any room for expansion in the future.... what is the next speed increase going to be marketed as? super ultra? ultimate ultra?
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Ludicrous speed!
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Plaid
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I always wonder about the use of the term "Ultra"
You aren't leaving yourself any room for expansion in the future.... what is the next speed increase going to be marketed as? super ultra? ultimate ultra?
Plus Ultra.
Then Double Plus Ultra
Or maybe Good Ultra, then Plus Good Ultra...Double Plus Good Ultra...
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The speeds offered are 30 down/20 up or 100 down/50 up (in Mbps). So it is about like cable internet in the US.
Except the % of US population with 100/50 availability is much closer to 8.5% than 85%.
Re:Just out of curiosity (Score:4, Interesting)
Have you seen how big the US is compared to even ... Europe? Seattle to Miami is about the same distance as London is from Tel Aviv.
AND we have large chunks of land that have "Ultra Low" populations (Wyoming, Dakotas, Montana, Nebraska ...) where feasibility outside a few population centers is nearly impossible.
But this is what happens when you have a bunch of elitists planning the lives of everyone else, but who never leave big cities.
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Have you seen how big the US is compared to even ... Europe? Seattle to Miami is about the same distance as London is from Tel Aviv.
AND we have large chunks of land that have "Ultra Low" populations (Wyoming, Dakotas, Montana, Nebraska ...) where feasibility outside a few population centers is nearly impossible.
Ho hum.
The population density of New Zealand is 17½ per sq.km. The population density of the US is 35 per sq.km (about double New Zealand's), and even higher if Alaska is removed from the calculation. So you fail on the first measure.
The large chunks of land with ultra low populations makes the population density even higher in those areas which have populations. Again, you fail.
About 5% (let's be generous, and say 10%) of the US population has access to more than 100Mbps down and 50Mbps up. New Zealan
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50 Alaska 1.3
49 Wyoming 6.0
48 Montana 7.0
47 North Dakota 10.5
46 South Dakota 11.1
45 New Mexico 17.2
USA has six states with population density that is less than New Zealand.
Closest in size is Wyoming at 97,818 mi/sq, Compared to New Zealand at 103,483 mi/sq. You can make all the comparisons you want and try to minimize the huge discrepancy in size, population density and all you do is prove my point. America isn't like most other countries in the world. My point remains
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Maybe, but we can't even get decent speeds to areas with a much higher population density.
Explain to me why 10 miles outside Colorado Springs all we can get is 10/1 DSL or most of Wisconsin outside the cities is in the same boat? FYI the area I live in outside Colorado Springs had a old style rural telephone company that was laying fiber and upgrading the infrastructure until CenturyLink bought them and stopped all infrastructure upgrades and went to charging us for $60 a month and 10/1 advertised that del
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is that an excuse to offer crappy slow Internet in populated coastal areas?
See: Australia (Score:3)
Population density of NZ is nearly half that of the US (17 vs 32 heads/km2), with similar urbanisation (85 vs 80%). Sure there's more to cover in the US, but many more customers to pay for it, and the US has had a pretty big head start. Even Australia started building a similar plan some years back - and we're almost as big as the US but with a population density of only 3 heads/km2.
Australia knows all about ultra-low population areas, yet is still targeting 93% coverage, using wireless and satellite where
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Sadly true, our local conservatives downgraded the plan significantly when they got into power. Although our fibre rollout is mostly stalled at 39%, we're still on track to get minimum 25 Mbps to every premise [communications.gov.au], with 90% of wired premises at minimum 50 Mbps.
By contrast, 39% of the rural US still can't get 25 Mbps [fcc.gov]. Cities are a lot better, with the large majority having access to 100 Mbps, but nearly all of those are available only from a single ISP. Australia's NBN has a single, government-owned wholesaler w
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... with all participating ISPs competing ...
By not paying NBNco enough of their CVC charge. IMHO the CVC charge should be abolished. NBNco are building a fiber network that should be able to cope with future speed requirements. But they are price gouging everyone, and treating that bandwidth as a scarce resource.
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If you're going for a certain percent coverage, the states without much population don't count much. However, since they get disproportionate amounts of Federal support, they can get such disproportionate support for Internet connectivity if we elitists decide (and we're much more likely to, being used to propping up rural economies).
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Have you seen how big the US is compared to even ... Europe? Seattle to Miami is about the same distance as London is from Tel Aviv.
AND we have large chunks of land that have "Ultra Low" populations (Wyoming, Dakotas, Montana, Nebraska ...) where feasibility outside a few population centers is nearly impossible.
But this is what happens when you have a bunch of elitists planning the lives of everyone else, but who never leave big cities.
Australia is not much smaller than the US geographically, with 1/15th the population, and we're rolling out a similar service (expected 95% coverage).
Enough excuses, the US has a few great things, but for the most part it is like a third world country. And now you have a 3rd world tin pot dictator to match. Good luck with that.
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What is the speed and feed for ultrafast broadband?
What do you mean? European or African ultrafast broadband?
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Everyone who can get fiber in NZ can get Gigabit speeds now.
NZ population (Score:4, Funny)
The expansion will mean UFB will be available to "up to 85 per cent" of the population
So basically Auckland.
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It doesn't matter. If the govt keeps handing out citizenship to billionaires so they can buy up large parts of the country for their private estates without having to seek permission, no New Zealander will be allowed outside of Auckland in a few more years.
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Really? ADSL was available in pretty much any "town". Satellite or fixed wireless if you were rural. I remember tripping around the South Island in 2008 and 2009 without any issues getting internet in the campgrounds I stayed in.
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No, New Zealand exists outside of Auckland.
Only as far as the Bombay Hills. After that it's... I dunno, hobbits? wetas? moas? I suppose there must be something out there, not sure what though.
What is UFB (Score:2)
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"Ultra Fast" is a comparative term, and apart from being relativistic is meaningless. That way, you can always disparage those that have faster / slower internet than this. The "One Percenter" is obviously abusing his wealth, and the poor guy on less than "Ultra" is somehow wronged by those with faster internet.
Once you realize that terms like this are designed to cause strife and envy, it makes it very clear what the goal is. We NEED government to fix the obvious injustice of internet speeds!
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No. We need free markets.
Discriminates against Balrogs and Orcs (Score:2)
But not to underground cities. Clearly, this policy discriminates against Balrogs and Orcs on a racial basis.
Ultra Fast is relative (Score:5, Insightful)
Unfortunately for New Zealand, Ultrafast is relative. They're at the end of the cable. New Zealand connects to Australia which connects to Asia which connects to Europe and North America.
Since many websites are hosted on severs on "the other end of the cable" they have to bounce around many servers and potential bottlenecks before they get to the server they seek. Sites based in the US and Europe may still take a long time to load for the kiwis.
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Sites based in the US and Europe may still take a long time to load for the kiwis.
I didn't know sites were based anywhere anymore. The most popular content and also the largest and slowest loading content seems to be on CDNs spread all over the globe. The amount of data that actually crosses the cables is a tiny fraction of the data being delivered to end users these days.
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They couldn't possibly create their own content. Not everything comes out of the US and revolves around them.
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# of IT workers in the US: 6.5million.
Population of New Zealand: 4.5 million.
Of course New Zealand, can and does create their own content, as does Australia; however a decent amount of the websites they visit will have a round trip to a server in Europe or North America. It's a numbers game. Even if New Zealand was fully devoted to IT development they're going to have a lot of content from overseas. With any luck though they can stream "Meet the Feebles" from a local source.
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There are direct cables to the US from NZ.
a new "Tasman Global Access" cable will be in operation March 2017 (to Oz) and another direct cable to the US (Hawaiki Cable) active June 2018.
A further cable to the US is apparently being planned for 2019 as well, concentrating on less lag.
I have a feeling NZ is setting itself up to be the next Ireland, IT is now NZ's third biggest export.
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All good news for New Zealand then! I know my friends there complain about everything lagging and IT people there talk about being at "the far end of the internet" looks like New Zealand is proactively making steps to rectify that- good for them.
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I came back to NZ in 2011. Internet was total rubbish back then.
Now, it's becoming world leading, amazing transformation, in the past couple of years alone.
I RDC in to desktops in the US and UK everyday. Both are perfectly usable latency wise, biggest issues are at the UK and US ends where the offices aren't on fiber!
If I RDC in to my local office from home, it's so good I can happily play video over RDC.
Really looking forward to those new overseas pipes going in though, just to improve overseas transfer sp
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Unfortunately for New Zealand, Ultrafast is relative. They're at the end of the cable. New Zealand connects to Australia which connects to Asia which connects to Europe and North America.
Since many websites are hosted on severs on "the other end of the cable" they have to bounce around many servers and potential bottlenecks before they get to the server they seek. Sites based in the US and Europe may still take a long time to load for the kiwis.
Never heard of CDNs huh?
Re: Ultra Fast is relative (Score:1)
Incorrect.
I pay $NZ 150/month for a 1Gb up 500Mb down unlimited connection in Auckland.
This is available in 32 other NZ towns and cities, so pretty much everywhere with a population above 10,000.
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I don't think people appreciate just how good NZ Internet has gotten in just the past couple of years. Most of the comments I'm reading here are based on well out of date information.
Unlimited Gigabit fiber speeds and new overseas pipes, some of the fastest 4G in the world as well.
Numbers missing from the article (Score:1)
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In eight years, what we call "Ultra Fast" today, will be "ultra slow". So it is not only unambitious, it is ultimately meaningless. As a Politician success is pretty much guaranteed, "We brought Ultra High Speed Internet to the masses during my administration", when they did absolutely nothing, except get bribes and kickbacks from Internet Providers. Genius!
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If you read carefully this is a FTTH deployment. As such the hard part is putting the fibre in. Once the fibre is in then changing the optics at each end to go faster is relatively quick and cheap. Looks to be a G-PON deployment, which allows for an easy and seamless upgrade to 10G-PON and 100G-PON is in the works and can coexist with G-PN and 10G-PON. Very very few home users will require anything beyond 100G-PON anytime soon. There is also a NG-PON2 as well that fits in between 10G-PON and 100G-PON in ter
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Politician promises vague outcomes over long timelines to group of people likely get something of the outcome anyway, film at 11.
Slashdot editing (Score:5, Insightful)
Yet again, up to the readers to do the job of the editors for them. How fast exactly is Ultra-Fast? Here is an extract from the New Zealand UFB page [ufb.org.nz] which also makes it clear that it is a replacement of existing ADSL with FTTH.
In particular UFB upload speeds are typically at between 10-50 times faster than ADSL’s average 1MB/s upload.
The most popular offerings (utilising GPON technology) are currently:
– 30Mb/s download, 10Mb/s upload
– 100Mb/s download, 50Mb/s upload
Businesses and other organisations are able to purchase P2P (Point-to-Point) UFB fibre connections of up to 1Gigabit/s (1000Mb/s).
Editors - get a clue.When you take news articles from all sorts of publications and present them to a largely homogenous readership, you can put in a little bit of additional effort to account for any assumptions the original sources may have made about their readers. Do not teach the slashdot crowd what JavaScript is. Do not assume everybody reading this story on Slashdot is from New Zealand and knows details of what UFB is.
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FYI everyone who has access to fiber has access to unlimited Gigabit Internet in NZ now.
Just what the rest of the world doesn't want... (Score:2)
New Zealand has couple of big fat pipes (Score:1)
I think a combined 1000gbit/sec dedicated connectivity to West coast us. So for 4.5million population makes huge sense to make best use of it.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Cross_Cable
Amazing how much lit and unlit capacity is being strung around world. Once it was cheaper for us to do back haul between continents and back than worry about cross country xfer.
For apps with not big requirements for low Latency changes where you stick the edge nodes. Imagine one factor behind Netflix and amazon lau
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It's 5400 gbit/sec but that cable also serves Australia. But let say it was only for NZ, that's still only 1.2 Mbps / person.
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FYI a new "Tasman Global Access" cable will be in operation March 2017 (to Oz) and another direct cable to the US (Hawaiki Cable) active June 2018.
A further cable to the US is apparently being planned for 2019 as well, concentrating on less lag.
Some clarification (Score:2)
More roll out is good news, I know a couple of people who are a few meters short of the current service areas. Yes, like me, they are in Auckland but I know fibre is already available in smaller centers like Levin, where my family is. For farmers it would be great news as DSL service
85% are sheep (Score:2)
I don't think they care about a baaaad connection
Gigabit and no caps (Score:1)
New Zealand has extremely bad Internet coverage (Score:1)
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NZ has the worst Internet coverage of any country I have ever visited (and that includes many so-called developing countries such as Indonesia). It is possible to drive the main highway for almost 400 km from Wanaka to Franz Joseph without any cell phone coverage.
I'm not sure if this is a joke or not.
Wanaka to Franz Josef is probably one of these most isolated roads on the planet. It is a national park and world heritage site, and one of these reason this area gets used for filming Lord of the Rings is precisely because there is no-one there (outside ignorant tourists).
In the towns and cities, the Internet is pretty much the same as any developed country, good in some spots, not as good in some others. At least the govt has the vision to address this.
Re: Poor farmers (Score:2)
A) Because sheep can hear a zipper from a mile away...
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Yet to explain why Koalas have STDs
And they sing some song about tying a Kangaroo down mate
Mind you, it was (is?) a prison colony, so it probably started when some poor Aussie creature sniffed a bar of soap
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Yeah but at least after we have finished with the sheep we export them to Australia.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]