British Broadband (Finally) Jumps 146
seldo writes: "The BBC is reporting that BT's previously-announced cuts in broadband prices are having a rapid effect, and demand for broadband in the UK is suddenly taking off. Finally!"
A committee takes root and grows, it flowers, wilts and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom. -- Parkinson
The real reason .. (Score:1, Funny)
Re:The real reason .. (Score:1, Funny)
Wow! Oh no... (Score:1, Funny)
Of course, it would mean getting rid of this Telewest Cable Modem which I've had for a year and a half, and only pay £25 a month for. Still, if BT says it, it must be so!
Re:Wow! Oh no... (Score:2, Informative)
It's just a shame they don't offer more upstream bandwidth at a higher price, as I (and quite a few other people I know) would be willing to pay an extra £10-15/month for 512kbps upstream.
Re:Wow! Oh no... (Score:2)
From tomorrow (coincidentally enough) 256kbps upstream will be available. I think it's 50 GBP per month though.
Re:Wow! Oh no... (Score:1)
Re:Wow! Oh no... (Score:2)
You can hear the sound of the flush, it's only bcos NTHell are such a big turd that they're putting up resistance.
Grab.
Re:Wow! Oh no... (Score:1)
Re:Wow! Oh no... (Score:1)
Jouster
Belgian version (Score:5, Informative)
I have 2 DSL connections from different providers, and both of them are worsening rapidly as theyr user base is growing : I used to have Q3 ping times around 40 to most uk and nl servers, but this has dropped to 130 in the past few months. After some HW upgrades, things are back to 75, which is still a shame for a 38EUR/month subscription.
Cable modem is a whole other story, with some clusters experiencing insane drops ( ping times over 300, ftp speeds below 25KB/sec) for months and months. Depending on the block and city one lives in, speeds range from the above mentioned 25KB/sec to a whopping 750KB/sec (KB yes indeeed !!) but with outages varying from monthly to daily and peaks of hourly !
The customers are ready for it now that the price is dropping, but are the telcos ? Belgacom (the belgian telco) is definitely not : their servers are cracking every day (last month the user webserver, the month before the SMTP server...) and telenet (biggest cable provider) has administration issues (my neigbour didn't pay the first 6 months because they forgot him. Then he received an invoice for 2 years)
Both have customer tech support that I wouldn't even let my dog piss at.
Re:Belgian version (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Belgian version (Score:3, Informative)
Belgian national Telco is one of the biggest fuckups in the country. I really really hope they go pucky-up like sabena, the national airline.
We were all hoping that, with the liberalisation of the european telco market, other companies would invest in belgium and create some competition, but that happened only on the level of big corporations: those can get pretty good deals by playing the telcos against each other. For jan modaal (joe average as u dudes call him wrongly
Re:Belgian version (Score:1)
but with outages varying from monthly to daily and peaks of hourly !
even though i agree with the rest of your statement, I only had 2 outages in the 2 years ive used telenet internet.
I live in a neighbourhood were the connection is good though. In the morning 500 - 650 KB/sec is rather rule then exception, could be that in other places the connections are worse
Re:Belgian version (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Belgian WAFFLES WITH BLUEBERRYS version (Score:2)
Same thing with brussels sprouts
The Register article... (Score:5, Informative)
BT to launch cheaper 'no frills' ADSL service [theregister.co.uk] followed by BT goes for broadband broke [theregister.co.uk]
Being handled by huge monopolies doesn't help...
the real map of broadband (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.btopenworld.com/broadband/ava61/ [btopenworld.com]
really BT need to sort their exchanges out before they offer video on demand via ADSL
(which is their plan after all)
regards
john jones
Re:the real map of broadband (Score:1)
Re:the real map of broadband (Score:1)
Check it out here: http://www.homechoice.co.uk/fi/support/script.htm
Hmmm... this if a *lot* more than one would expect from some isp in AD 2002...
Re:the real map of broadband (Score:2)
Surprise, surprise. (Score:2, Insightful)
And BT is to release a 'no-frills' service as well: BT to release basic serices [theregister.co.uk]
Now all I have to worry about is DSL being rolled out in Ireland - I live 300m from an exchange on a fiber backbone, but the telco will not be rolling dsl out for another 2 years :-/
Re:Surprise, surprise. (Score:1)
'Broadband Britain' is somewhat a sham. (Score:5, Interesting)
Why? Because BT, Cable & Wireless, NTL, and all of the other British telcos have spewed bullsh*t like this in the past without actually delivering.
It's nice that BT is dropping the wholesale price of DSL, but that doesn't actually mean their installations will get any quicker, that the DSL will remain reliable, or even that large swathes of the country will ever get DSL.
In the mid 90's, we were told that cable modems were a 'year away'. Funnily, we were told this in 96, 97, 98, and 99, when the trials started to roll out. A similar thing occured with DSL.
But let's face it, BT is a lumbering giant, and not particularly interested in 'broadband for all'. Unlike Canada, our government won't fork in some $$ to help them out, so we're stuck with their patethetic inefficiency. The UK is a tiny country, but even places like Finland, Sweden, and Canada have better coverage than us.
Wi-Fi = Non Existant
To compound these problems, WiFi is not taking off in the UK at all. I know of a few trials around London, and they want to hook some stuff up in Wales, but as a whole, it's not available. Unlike in the US, we don't have any small local WiFi providers.. why not? Because in remote areas that would benefit from WiFi.. the ISP can't get the affordable bandwidth to hook all of the customers onto the Internet anyway!!
So, Broadband Britain is a sham, and I fear it will remain that way for some time. Move on from this story. Nothing to see here.
Re:'Broadband Britain' is somewhat a sham. (Score:1)
Odd, I'm sure I've been using this cable modem for a year. OK, so it was late compared to other countries, but it's here. (I know what you're saying though, I remember cable modem trials in 1996ish, nothing came of them though). Broadband still isn't available to everyone, but isn't that the case everywhere? The price reductions are a big step, and seem to have had success - apparently Pipex have had a large increase in orders recently (and also this [bbc.co.uk]). It also means that ISPs can offer useful services (multiple static IPs and the like) for a reasonable price now, whereas before you'd be lucky to get it for less than 50 or 60 quid a month. *Big* improvement as far as I can see.
Re:'Broadband Britain' is somewhat a sham. (Score:3, Interesting)
...In the mid 90's, we were told that cable modems were a 'year away'...
I'm posting this from a computer sitting behind a BT ADSL connection. My friends across town have one too, and my friends in the next town over have a cable modem from NTL instead (much better than BT, and only £25 a month, but not available here).
I wholeheartedly agree that Britain lags behind in broadband, and I also agree that the fault lies mainly with BT for maintaining an effective monopoly on the last mile, amongst other things. But the same was true of dial-up access in the first place, and it is now almost ubiquitous. Britain will get its act together -- a few years after the rest of the world, as usual.
Re:'Broadband Britain' is somewhat a sham. (Score:1)
the way i see it, bt will split up seperate bits all sold off, the dsl side will split up further and NTL/Telewest will take up more ground (i believe ntl/telewest are targetting area's without dsl where they are present)
still, this will probably take another 5/6 years
Re:'Broadband Britain' is somewhat a sham. (Score:1)
NTL, Telewest and Marconi have no money and could go bankrupt [guardian.co.uk] so they cannot invest in purchasing ADSL equipment. Thus there *IS* something to see here, this is big news. BT is either very clever and striking gold now by stealing NTL & Telewest's customers (revenue stream) at the time they are most vulnerable to bankruptcy, or BT is very stupid. After 3G BT is under pressure to make ruthless decisions. Don't forget MCI gives bad service as well but they are a multi-billion dollar company. Plus remember Bill Gates is stupid, he dropped out of his education.
Re:'Broadband Britain' is somewhat a sham. (Score:3, Informative)
The reason there is WiFi in the UK is that it is illegal sell access to 802.11b networks here. This law however is up for review and BT have just announced that they want to roll out 400 hotspots in the next 6 months.
Also i've just installed the Wires only ADSL at my new flat and it works fine. No problems from BT whatsoever. This is in sharp contrast to my last ADSL install a year ago which _was_ a nightmare.
WiFi is illegal? (Score:2)
Um... If access to 802.11b is illegal here, how come so many places in the City do it? Then again, given the pathetic levels of security they seem to have in place, perhaps it should be illegal there, if only so the big banks don't wind up losing all our money to crackers...
Re:WiFi is illegal? (Score:1)
Re:WiFi is illegal? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:'Broadband Britain' is somewhat a sham. (Score:1)
Re:'Broadband Britain' is somewhat a sham. (Score:1)
Re:'Broadband Britain' is somewhat a sham. (Score:2)
Re:'Broadband Britain' is somewhat a sham. (Score:1)
Still late, Still expensive, Still poor coverage.. (Score:5, Informative)
Even compared to European prices from other ex-state owned Telcos the price is up to 40% more.
http://www.broadband4britain.com [broadband4britain.com] and the ever useful 'reg [theregister.co.uk] give the full story.
For a real usable service (I have 2Mb with static IP) you are looking at over $300 per month..
My own experience is that you are encouraged to move to the most appropriate access method - I was urged that a move to a full leased line (at $30k per year!) was ideal for me...
Looks like the BBC [bbc.co.uk] is re-posting the BT [bt.com] press releases.. :)
Re:Still late, Still expensive, Still poor coverag (Score:1)
I live 5 miles (8km) due south of Cambridge city centre, supposedly the area with the highest number of geeks per square meter in all the UK.
My exchange is still not DSL-enabled and BT flatly refuse to suggest when it might be upgraded.
Stories of price cuts don't do much for those who can't get the service at any price.
Paul
Re:Still late, Still expensive, Still poor coverag (Score:1)
I have ADSL from BoStream, and I get >2Mbps (actual measured throughput) and a single static IP, for about $30 a month. Though I expect the throughput do drop as this ISP becomes more popular.
BT != BTOpenworld (Score:4, Informative)
You can get your DSL from any number of UK ISPs, letting you choose who provides your upstream.
Please remain calm... (Score:1)
Re:Please remain calm... (Score:1)
cutting edge reporting (Score:1)
Duh! (Score:2, Informative)
They lower the price and more people take it up - genius.
Re:Duh! (Score:2)
Well, this is the "broadband model" that DIDN'T work elsewhere; users just want the high-speed access, and companies that tried sell tis access at little - or not at all - profit, and expected to make profit from "extras", lost big-time.
It seems that BT doesn't want to learn from others' mistakes - they want to reenact them.
Re:Duh! (Score:1)
Has anyone else read the Mobility Strategy Statement [ft.com] which came out on Wednesday?
BT to create UK's first Public Access Wireless LAN network, it says here. Apparently they are expecting the UK Radio Agency to allow reselling of 802.11b Real Soon Now, and are going to build something with Cisco and Motorola.
Zack
Great, Next Comes australia (Score:2, Informative)
With stuff like this in england, hopefully our goverment will open its eyes and realise how stiffling a monopoly for a telco can really be, its about damn time we started to open up this vital service structure a little more, let some competition in.
Nerv
Re:Great, Next Comes australia (Score:2)
Besides, as 51% majority owner of Telstra, and having sold the other 49% to shareholders, what incentive does the government have to rein in that monopolistic bastard? Yes, that's right, SFA. If they let the Telstra share price drop, then they'll find themselves out of power.
Speed the freaking day, I say.
Wait a second... (Score:2)
Availability is another thing (Score:4, Interesting)
BT's competitors buy access to the network through BT, so when BT cuts their prices they price their charges so that the minnows can only compete on wafer thin margins.
BT has competition from the cable co's for sure, Telewest and NTL mainly but they are both heavily in debt and have not spent the resources upgrading their networks for broadband access.
For example, I've got a cable phone line and for I live in Parkstone on the Poole/Bournmeouth border and for over 5 years NTL have been promising broadband is coming soon.
I could go to BT but that would mean changing my phone line, and paying BT's higher prices, as for cheap broadband NTL offer a basic 128k service for £15 a month, which would be good if they actually provided across the country (yeah I know 1 meg would be better, but try getting the wife to agree !)
NTL took over the old C&W franchise and have dragged their feet over introducing broadband to all us C&W customers.
The only competition in the sector is really from the small indepedents biting at BT's ankles.
Better stop before I go into rant mode!
Re:Availability is another thing (Score:1)
"Broadband Britain" is a sick joke, and Oftel should be forced to watch streaming media over dialup for 10 years (with the occasional flash demo of "always-on" internet performance for variety).
Re:Great news! er, um, right. (Score:1, Flamebait)
At the end of the day the government won't put its money where it's mouth is and actually fund the roll out of DLS. BT is so markedroid driven that they are too busy spending money on new logos and names to actually get anything useful done. They are still at heart an old school monopoly and they are intent on maintaining that position rather than actually competing through offering better products at lower prices. Last, their investment model is very western: they require quick returns to make a project viable. Telco projects simply don't generate quick returns which is why they are sitting on a mountain of debt.
Re:Great news! er, um, right. (Score:1)
For the last 3 years BT has been telling me that my local exchange would be set up for DSL 'by september this year' So you can imagine my surprise when I contacted them a couple months ago to find that the part of the city I live in (Bradford, BTW) is classed as a 'rural area' (yes I can see fields from here but they're a good few miles away - and I'm only 10 minutes away from the city centre) I'm in the suburbs for gods sake! Yet if I lived on the opposite side of the city to where I am now, broadband is available almost right the way out to the bloody farms!
Anywho my option extend slightly further but they're still a f*cking joke
- "Wireless Broadband" (broadband my arse!) by Tele2 [tele2.co.uk] which is only slightly faster than a dial up modem and needs line of sight to one of their base stations. Then they have the balls to charge £40 per month - plus the connection doesn't give you an IP address, they run the whole thing using NAT
- Cable Modem, courtesy of TeleWest or NTL - but here's the big joke; Yes I can have a cable modem, but only if I pay for them to come and dig up the road outside my house and put a connection in to our nearest cable exchange box (it's about 60 feet from where I'm sitting). Last time I contacted the bastards they quoted £1700 for installation. And why do it cost so much? Why? because the street I live on (it's more of a cart track really) isn't owned by the local council, if it was owned by the council they'd install a cable modem for about £40 - f*cking ridiculous!
"Broadband Britian"? What a fucking joke. I'll second that!
Re:Great news! er, um, right. (Score:1)
Don't know why you mention NAT, they give you a real (static!) IP, not to mention a decent Ethernet connection. None of this faffing about with USB.
Re:Great news! er, um, right. (Score:1)
BTW I got this from one of their engineers (not one of their sales people whose IQ are low enough to make McDonalds staff seem like geniuses)
Re:Great news! er, um, right. (Score:1)
Will
Re:Great news! er, um, right. (Score:1)
Re:Great news! er, um, right. (Score:1)
Re:Great news! er, um, right. (Score:1)
It costs 60UKP+VAT a month plus surftime costs.
There are no cut offs, no complaints about being connected 24x7 and you get an IP allocation.
Its a bit expensive for home use, but its excellent for a small business/company.
Jason
Why didn't it get cheaper faster? (Score:1)
I have a similar problem when trying to dig behind the true cost of prescription glasses. Despite a so-called opening of the market place to competition average prices are triple what they were ten years ago. This is typically hidden behind a guise of "designer glasses" or "exotic materials" such as tungsten being used in their manufacture.
Even though the new management at BT have taken the right steps by raising the importance of customer service and value for money, I won't believe it until I see long and sustained delivery.
In an age of deregulation and opening of markets the amount of quality information a customer has to make a purchasing decision, and effect change within existing suppliers, is lower and lower. Companies seem to be getting their business models and customer service policies from the same select set of business gurus. The two factors in combination act as an effective means of controlling the customer and company revenue streams.
Is consumerism the new big brother?
Why doesn't it get cheaper faster?
Re:Why didn't it get cheaper faster? (Score:1)
When Telewest decided to charge dial up customers fifty pence a minute for technical support should this have been ignored? The management response was that technical support were so pressured by calls that the standard of service was slipping. The reality is that the standard of technical support was never any good to begin with. If the infrastructure was reliable the support calls wouldn't be required. The overall service was so bad that the service status page was a joke. Even if a major fault was present there was no guarantee that the status page would show it.
When faced with management failure of this kind it should be the shareholders who pay for management incompetance. This cost should not be passed onto the customer. By having a business environment that allows this sort of practice to go on any sort of management failing can be shrugged off and the people responsible never having to pay.
When customer service departments exist for the sole purpose of isolating and defusing the customer without taking responsibility for company mistakes where is the pressure for change?
Re:Why didn't it get cheaper faster? (Score:1)
price drops, yay (Score:2)
sometime around the middle of January, it stopped sucked, lets hope it doesn't slip back to it's previous state
Except... (Score:1)
The state of things (Score:5, Informative)
1. ADSL. The "last mile" is monopolised by BT, but there are several ISPs which repackage BT's service. This is the most widely-available option, but I believe only about 50% of the country can get it. BT's exchange upgrades have been very slow in many areas.
BT's wholesale price drop by £10/month (which this article is really about) has only really had a significant effect on the bog standard 512/256Kbps ADSL service, which people have been signing up to in droves. Anything faster is still ludicrously expensive.
2. NTL/Telewest cable. Priced fairly reasonably, but very limited availability. NTL only offer broadband in some of their cabled areas, and in most of these areas they force you to take their awful phone and digital TV package as well.
3. ISDN, which is hugely overpriced and slow compared with other options.
4. Leased lines, which are far outside the price range of most home users.
5. Tele2 wireless. Also quite limited coverage, but they aim to cover areas without other broadband options. Good service, and can offer asymmetric connections (which cable/ADSL can't) up to 2Mbps. But, like all the options, a rip-off compared with what's available in other countries.
I can only hope that the increased uptake will make all the providers drop their prices further. At the moment the UK is a laughing stock in the broadband world.
Re:The state of things (Score:1)
Whoops, I meant symmetric of course.
Re:The state of things (Score:1)
Was really pleased when I first got it - was downloading ISO's at 400kb/s! That soon dropped back to 50 or 60 though
One other thing I should mention is that, although they don't advertise it, all tele2 connections have a static ip address. Useful!
Re:The state of things (Score:1)
I also had an incredible connection at first, the engineer told me that they don't bother capping the speed for the first day or two.
I was surprised as anyone when I found out the IP was static, they definitely advertise it as dynamic. Maybe they'd get more signups if they told the truth!
Re:The state of things (Score:2, Funny)
Yes, but does the BT price include a license for using hyper-text links? It's quite a deal if it does, since no one else is allowed to use them.
Year Contract... (Score:1)
My Yearly Contract with Pipex is inplace until October!!! Admitedly I get 2MB downloads, But also have to PAY for it!
Must remember to renegotiate that contract...
Three tier broadband (Score:1)
Re:Three tier broadband (Score:1)
Yay... (Score:1)
____________________________
Home networks rock (Score:1)
Speaking from the front line. (Score:2)
The numbers speak for themselves, two of my mates signed up to Pipex within a couple of weeks.
Re:Speaking from the front line. (Score:1)
I've had NTL broadband (600 DOWN
:-)
Self Install a great idea (Score:1)
What really peeved me though was that I had to really work hard to get the Optus guy to not install their custom browser and other software. He had to call head office and argue with them for several minutes before he finally got permission. Even then I had to sign off that I agreed that I didn't want their software and that I would take responsiblity for the results.
I know that
Re:Self Install a great idea (Score:1)
On the saturday when the guy came, it turned out that because I knew more about networking than much of the city, Rogers felt tat I would require the services of a supertech (their top end technician).
It was actually quite funny... I talked him into giving me 2 nics (i needed 1 for my laptop and the other they just threw in for free). But whats worse, I had my masq/NAT box all set up... and had to fight with the tech because he wanted to do the install on my windows box... but I wouldn't let him touch it... It was, IMHO, a very bad move on Roger's part... sending a supertech when I asked for DIY.
Checkout the UK ADSL Guide (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Checkout the UK ADSL Guide (Score:1)
Was it just me? (Score:1)
Broadband in the UK is somewhat sucky yes. (Score:3, Informative)
Polls, (Score:1)
How much does a 2mbit DSL connection cost where you live
1 Free
2 less than 50$
3 less than 100$
4 Less than 200$
5 over 200$
6 Can't get it
or
That speeds of DSL are available in your area(country?)
1) less than 256kbit
2) 512kbit
3) 1Mbit
4) 2mbit
6) None.
Or just maybe one that asks about the speed of which people are connected to the internet in their home. Even if one such poll has been made before the difference between a earlier could be interesting.
I rememeber we had one poll Bandwidth to Home Via... [slashdot.org]
Re:Polls, (Score:1)
Re:Polls, (Score:1)
USA falling behind (Score:2)
Re:USA falling behind (Score:2)
Re:USA falling behind (Score:2)
Re:USA falling behind (Score:1)
few more points about UK BB takeup (Score:2, Insightful)
Better than dial-up, but not really fast (Score:1)
So yes, it's better than a modem, but you're still not going to be watching films over it.
Cable seems to be fairly similar (a bit cheaper, perhaps), and has, of course, been available quite a bit longer.
Worse in Ireland (Score:1)
I'm now living in Edinburgh in the UK rather than my home city of Dublin, largely because of the inavailability of broadband in Ireland. I wanted set up my own Internet-related business from home and using a dial-up connection literally wasn't an option.
For all the bullshit about the Celtic Tiger, greed and idiocy on the part of the Irish Government messed things up for an entire generation of would-be Irish entrepaneurs. The bungled privatisation of the national phone company, Eircom, followed by it's filleting, ensured that even the prospect of broadband was delayed for years.
Now the remnants of Eircom, in a battle of wills with the telecoms ombudsman, are refusing to launch any service until the government allows them to set ridiculous service fees including a per MB charge. It's 2002 and the Irish, both potential online business professionals and the public in general, have yet to start developing the online sensibility that only an exposure to high-speed Internet can offer.
I'm using Telewest's service. You can get their cable internet on it's own but their TV and phone packages are pretty good too. I pay £49 (80 Euros) a month for broadband 'net, a phone line and 70+ channels (no premium channels). The national phone charges are pretty good and if I made more calls I'd probably pay the extra £15 a month for unlimited calls within the UK. Their international charges are, like BT's, extortionate so I use OneTel for that (good online billing, monthly direct debit).
I forget the math at this stage but I remember, before I signed up, working out that an equivalent Sky TV / BT DSL combo would only have worked out better per month if I was going for the premium film channels too. Also, the installation charges just to get a phone line installed were outrageous.
Maybe these new reductions change that but, to be honest, I don't trust BT, not after they were caught deliberately restricting bandwidth to certain customers. To Hell with them!
I also gather that Telewest will soon (?) be introducing a premium 1Gig service; the guy who installed my broadband 'net connection a couple of months ago told me that he actually has a test version of that service installed at home. Lucky bastard.
I guess it's a good thing, because (Score:2)
Honestly, I think they have some other problems to deal with before broadband internet is the top story, really...
I would have figured this would be ovious by now.. (Score:1)
SSSCA (Score:1)
But why would anyone want to use BT? they are greedy pigs (and my lines are crappy quality) i think consume.net is a better option (when i get those wireless cards...)
I was offered broadband today... (Score:1)
Of course, this means that they no longer have to install ADSL here.
Broadband for businesses? Fine. Broadband access from home? Never going to happen while BT are still a monopoly. Bastards.
Forget DSL outside major cities (Score:2)
BT has no plans to upgrade your exchange in the near term.
BT is working on partnerships with local and national government bodies to evaluate the possibilities of bringing broadband to your area in a cost effective way.
We are also investigating alternative technologies, such as, Satellite Services. We will be providing you with more information on this site at the end of June.
Alternatively you may be receiving service from another telecomms supplier.
It's clear to me that they have no plans to offer DSL in the small town where I live. Ever. They will just cherry-pick the big cities. Small surprise really, as they are in pretty bad shape financially. [itworld.com] Good thing that national highways and railroads weren't built like this...
There might be an excuse for this sort of dribbling geographic coverage in the US or Canada, where the distance between cities is enormous. There is little excuse for it here in the UK.
Re:Stop Frits! (Score:1)
Re:Pricing (Score:1)
And they are wondering why sales are disappointing...