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Revealed: The World's Fastest Broadband

This topic is about Revealed: The World's Fastest Broadband, the author, richmimi, wrote about: If broadband is an animal, we've got a donkey. In the UK, the average connection doesn't even deliver 8Mbps, which means we're so far beh ... To read more just scroll down

 
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> Revealed: The World's Fastest Broadband
richmimi
post Nov 7 2008, 04:44 PM
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If broadband is an animal, we've got a donkey.

In the UK, the average connection doesn't even deliver 8Mbps, which means we're so far behind other countries even Lithuania is laughing at us.

So who's got the best broadband, and why isn't it us?

To find out, TechRadar spoke to the broadband experts at Point Topic and immediately became depressed.

In parts of Asia, the average broadband connection is five times faster than ours, and in Japan – the king of high-speed broadband – the average connection speed is a whopping 91Mbps.

South Korea comes a close second with an average connection speed of 42Mbps, while Russia and Lithuania average 24Mbps.

Fibre means fast

The reason is fibre. Where the UK phone network is largely made of old twigs and bits of string, countries such as Japan and South Korea have invested heavily in fibre-optic connections. In Japan, fibre accounts for 44% of the broadband market, while in South Korea it's a respectable 38.5%.

There are a number of advantages to fibre. First of all, it's capable of much higher speeds than the copper cabling that delivers DSL; secondly, it doesn't suffer from the same dramatic attenuation – that is, the loss of signal quality – that makes DSL speeds drop the further you are from the phone exchange.

So does our slowcoach status matter? Point Topic's Oliver Johnson says it does. "Getting fibre broadband out into the market is vital," he told us.

"Without it, consumers and businesses will be in the second class carriage on the internet. Access to cutting-edge applications like total telepresence, meaningful telemedicine applications, multiple high definition IPTV channels as well as unhindered access to the coming cloud of applications and processing resources are core to the continuing competitiveness and growth of the UK."

He continues: "The UK is already behind. It takes time to roll out fibre infrastructure. Japan and Korea are well ahead, but even compared to many European markets the UK is slow out of the blocks."

Paying for faster broadband

That's because in addition to time, fibre upgrades are expensive. According to the Broadband Stakeholder Group, which advises the government, running 100Mbps fibre-optic cabling to our homes would cost £28.8 billion.

The next best solution, upgrading the cabinets in our streets to deliver up to 40Mbps, would cost £5.1 billion. The prospect of Gordon Brown stumping up nearly £29 billion for broadband was always pretty remote, and now that he's bailed out the banks the coffers are empty.

So if the government won't pay for it, who will?

The answer appears to be: nobody. UK consumers are generally more interested in price than speed, and no sensible operator is going to invest millions in fibre connections they can't sell.

That means we're left with two options: we can hope we'll be covered by BT's upgrade plan (10 million homes by 2012, with some getting 100Mbps and most getting 40Mbps) or Virgin's upgrade plan (200Mbps via cable by 2012), or we could all move to Japan.

Now, where did we put our passports?

Source.
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m4x
post Nov 8 2008, 05:58 PM
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I've got shaw Nitro cable @ 25Mb ( I usually get 18-20 ) for $100CAD per month or €65/₤54; which is great IMO.

What do you guys pay for 8Mb?
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eazbak
post Nov 8 2008, 09:05 PM
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"Up to 8mbit" depends how far you are away from the telephone exchange, I tend to get about 6.5-7mbit but I am quite close to the exchange and the cables are relatively new, a friend lives closer to the exchange but the copper cables for his house are bad and he only gets 4-5mbit. Pricing varies a great deal, Sky will provide you with an "up to 8mbit" connection for £5 if you have a Sky TV satellite package, others will provide reduced rate if you have your phone with them. I pay thru the nose for my BT connection but having spent years with cut price providers who have shite service and heavy usage policies I'm more than happy.
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m4x
post Nov 8 2008, 09:42 PM
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QUOTE
having spent years with cut price providers who have shite service and heavy usage policies I'm more than happy.


Good point
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