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United Kingdom Network Networking The Internet IT

BT Unveils 1000Mbps Capable G.fast Broadband Rollout For the United Kingdom 132

Mark.JUK writes The national telecoms operator for the United Kingdom, BT, has today announced that it will begin a country-wide deployment of the next generation hybrid-fibre G.fast (ITU G.9701) broadband technology from 2016/17, with most homes being told to expect speeds of up to 500Mbps (Megabits per second) and a premium service offering 1000Mbps will also be available.

At present BT already covers most of the UK with hybrid Fibre-to-the-Cabinet (FTTC) technology, which delivers download speeds of up to 80Mbps by running a fibre optic cable to a local street cabinet and then using VDSL2 over the remaining copper line from the cabinet to homes. G.fast follows a similar principal, but it brings the fibre optic cable even closer to homes (often by installing smaller remote nodes on telegraph poles) and uses more radio spectrum (17-106MHz) over a shorter remaining run of copper cable (ideally less than 250 metres). The reliance upon copper cable means that the real-world speeds for some, such as those living furthest away from the remote nodes, will probably struggle to match up to BT's claims. Nevertheless many telecoms operators see this as being a more cost effective approach to broadband than deploying a pure fibre optic / Fibre-to-the-Home (FTTH) network.
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BT Unveils 1000Mbps Capable G.fast Broadband Rollout For the United Kingdom

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  • by Grench ( 833454 ) on Saturday January 31, 2015 @05:54AM (#48945711) Homepage Journal

    My local telephone exchange has been enabled for fibre-to-the-cabinet (FTTC) for a year and a half

    The street cabinet my line connects to has not been upgraded. I can't even physically find the damn thing, no idea where they've hidden it. Maybe BT doesn't either. Nobody can tell me when or if it will be enabled.

    I can get 4G LTE on my phone and get 30 Mbit/sec up or down. But ADSL2 is as fast as I can get - with the distance from my exchange to my house, I get no more than 9 Mbit/sec down (but more often than not closer to 6 Mbit/sec) and no more than 1 Mbit/sec up.

    I'm all in favour of gigabit broadband rollouts - but I want them to finish the FTTC programme first.

    Also - I live in the middle of a city of 230,000 people, and the area I'm in is entirely residential. They'd get more fibre subscribers if they enabled more cabinets.

    • by johnw ( 3725 )

      My local telephone exchange has been enabled for fibre-to-the-cabinet (FTTC) for a year and a half

      The street cabinet my line connects to has not been upgraded.

      This seems to be a common problem. It was nearly three years from when they upgraded our exchange to when they did the cabinets. For the interim period you're in the weird position where querying the rollout information tells you that your exchange is in a state of "AO" (Accepting Orders), but if you try to order it you're told you can't have it. You can't get any projected date when it will be available, because if you go to the "When will FTTC be available?" pages you're told your exchange is already e

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        BT has more precise data, but history tells us that idiots ruin it for everyone.

        If you say "Your cabinet will probably be completed in May 2014" the idiots think that means "BT 100% guarantees that you personally will have service in May 2014, no matter what" and if there's a problem they immediately say BT are lying and should be punished. So you can imagine this definitely makes the people who figure out the estimates really feel valued, like a weather forecaster getting yelled at for the one day in six w

        • by johnw ( 3725 )

          BT has more precise data, but history tells us that idiots ruin it for everyone.

          [snip rant]

          You're using an argument technique known as "putting up a straw man". We're discussing the tendency of BT to upgrade exchanges long before they do the corresponding cabinets (which they do), so you raise an imagined case of one person behaving unreasonably because, although his local cabinets have been upgraded, he can't get service.

          No wonder you posted as an AC.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I can't even physically find the damn thing, no idea where they've hidden it. Maybe BT doesn't either.

      Sadly this is a distinct possibility.
      A friend of mine used to work for the german telecom and mentioned the increasing outsourcing of work to contractors on the cheap does indeed lead to a loss of local insider knowledge, like where the hell was that cabinet hidden?

      He once lost precious time looking all over for one specific cabinet in a high street. Turned out he had to ask a front desk person of a bank for a key to open a hidden compartment in the banks marble facade lining to access it.

      I'm sure BT with p

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Yep, this is all part of the great FTTC rollout scam.

      All claims to date about hitting x% of the UK have been misleadingly based on number of exchanges upgraded. There are still thousands of cabinets that haven't been upgraded, and even where they have there are hundreds without sufficient capacity to all users.

      There's no doubt that BT have broadened the rollout and UK broadband has therefore on average improved drastically, but there's been gross mismanagement of funds in that BDUK funding intended to subsi

    • At least your exchange has FTTC. My exchange is one of the 1% that won't get FTTC until well after 2020, if at all, even though I live only a mile outside the edge of Bristol. At the moment, I only get 1 Mbit/sec on a good day and this won't increase until FTTC arrives.

  • We are going to need to upgrade all of our servers and network routers!

    I wonder what the latency will be ? (OK: to somewhere close in the UK)

    • by ledow ( 319597 )

      If you're not on Gigabit already, I'll be surprised.

      Even basic cheap laptop wireless, smartphone wireless and wireless routers are in the, what? 300Mbps or so range? Two or three of those and you can flood a Gigabit connection.

      You would need a new router with BT anyway, because it's a new protocol. And then you'd need to throw away the BT router and buy a real one after the first week when you read how crap and insecure they are.

      But there are £200 routers on the market that have triple WAN fa

      • I was not talking about routers & servers at home - but the Internet backbones and the servers that people will be downloading stuff from and wanting to do so at higher speeds.

        • by ledow ( 319597 )

          And if Gigabit is already commodity hardware at home, and bog-standard small business switches are built with 48 ports of Gigabit plus whatever backbone for a few hundred quid for the last ten years, what do you think serious ISPs and datacentres have been using all that time for, say, leased line and stuff.

          Of course it requires upgrades but they would need to have been a generation ahead since the start and kept replacing or they would not be able to handle anything.

          BT are a telecoms company. They handle

        • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
          The internet backbone has no issues other than peering disputes. 100Gb ports on the cheap, 400Gb ports getting popular and 1Tb ports around the corner and multiplexing tech that accepts any combination of 10gb/100Gb/400Gb ports and shoves 30Tb/s down a single fiber. A single fiber can handle 3,000 10Gb ports, 300 100Gb ports, 75 400Gb ports or any combination of the above with 1,300Km ranges. New multiplexing tech is in the works.
      • Are the BT routers used now combined router/modem or do they still need the separate fibre box?
      • Even basic cheap laptop wireless, smartphone wireless and wireless routers are in the, what? 300Mbps or so range? Two or three of those and you can flood a Gigabit connection.

        Sadly, not even close. While the manufacturers may claim 300Mbps or 600Mbps on the box, the likelihood of actually achieving that speed over wireless is pretty close to zero, and most smartphones and cheap laptops seem to be fitted with 802.11n "lite" (the 150mbit/s version) or the first iteration (the 300mbit/s version).

        My rule of thumb for 802.11n (what most people have) is to divide by 5 and that is the throughput you're likely to receive. 802.11ac is a different story but still not anywhere close to the

  • by nicholas22 ( 1945330 ) on Saturday January 31, 2015 @05:58AM (#48945723)
    What good is all this speed when they keep blocking interesting sites? This kind of bandwidth is only good to seed / share large things and we get blanket bans here in the UK on all kinds of torrent and other sites. I'd rather be with a smaller ISP which doesn't block things and has a lesser bandwidth allowance than with these guys, who make it harder and harder to have freedom on the net.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      If that's what you want, check out Andrews & Arnold: http://aa.net.uk/
      Not the cheapest around, but an *excellent* service run by very knowledgable techies, and they refuse to implement any sort of filtering (and regularly campaign and speak out against doing so).

  • Yeah right (Score:5, Informative)

    by Pop69 ( 700500 ) <billy@bCURIEenarty.co.uk minus physicist> on Saturday January 31, 2015 @06:01AM (#48945733) Homepage
    "At present BT already covers most of the UK with hybrid Fibre-to-the-Cabinet (FTTC) technology"

    That's bullshit for a start, the rest likely is too
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Dunno about the FTTC coverage claims, but the article is BS in its reference to telegraph poles since almost the entirety of telephone wiring has been underground in the UK for many decades.

      It is true that some poles are still around, but it's certainly not common in cities, towns, nor in suburbia.

      • by ledow ( 319597 )

        Er... crap.

        I have a street strewn with telegraph poles. My parents live in a streeet strewn with telegraph poles. So does almost everyone I know. Most of those people live in London, for a start, and it's not limited to just there.

        Fuck knows where you live but if you don't have pole at the end of your street with cables going to each house, I'm guessing it's a new build estate (which are in the minority compared to, say, 30's/40's/50's/60's houses).

        However, what you might mean is that those poles will fe

        • I have a house on a street lined with telegraph poles in the UK too. The poles run wires to everyone's house. The same was true of the place I lived before moving there. In both cases, the wire fell off my house while I was living there. It hadn't been connected to anything inside the house for a very long time - telephone service came in on the other side of the house, underground. They just never got around to removing the poles and the above-ground wires that didn't have a signal going through them.
      • by johnw ( 3725 )

        Complete nonsense!

        Try this - go to Google Maps, pick a residential location at random and then drop in to Streetview. Unless you've picked a very recent housing estate, you will find you can see lots and lots of telegraph poles.

        It might be true to say that new developments don't now have telegraph poles, but the vast majority of the UK still does.

        • As I said above, just because the poles are there doesn't mean that they're carrying anything. When they run the underground cabling, they generally don't bother properly disposing of the telegraph poles: they just let them fall down.
          • by johnw ( 3725 )

            Imagine the work which would have been involved if what you are saying was true. They'd have had to dig underground ducting in to everybody's garden. How did they do it without us noticing?

            You are right in saying that the bulk wiring - the connections which feed the telegraph poles - are now pretty much all underground. There aren't the masses of overhead wires which there were when I was a boy. The final connection to the houses though for the most part remain unchanged. Yes, new builds are all done u

            • They'd have had to dig underground ducting in to everybody's garden. How did they do it without us noticing?

              Presumably people did notice. The telephone connection to both of my last two houses comes in at the front, but there was a telegraph pole in the back of both with a wire going into the back (and then terminating). In both houses, the wire eventually fell off the back. I presume that the previous owners did notice when they re-did their telephone wiring...

    • by Anonymous Coward

      "At present BT already covers most of the UK with hybrid Fibre-to-the-Cabinet (FTTC) technology"

      That's bullshit for a start, the rest likely is too

      TechDirt [techdirt.com] refers to these announcements as "Fiber to the Press" technology.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Now five people in the centre of London will get the theoretical maximums when accessing a peered server until their neighbours subscribe.

    Is this just part of the stupid, inefficient dream to be able to stream video on demand(+) 24/7 to(*) every family member? The one where there is a bottomless barrel of low quality media poured over your eyeballs and into your ears?

    (+) Not containing female ejaculation, since the present Party Cherishing Freedom has outlawed that (male is fine, but women must NOT be seen

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Saturday January 31, 2015 @06:22AM (#48945783)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Well, I've got 300mbps down and 30mbps up with FTTH on BT and no caps and I can always reach full speed if the remote server supports it

      • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
        A lot of people say "if the remote server supports it". Huge numbers of remote servers support it, assuming they're something other than a small company or don't purposefully traffic shape. I've done quite a few trace routes on different ISPs during file transfers, and in my experience over half of the time that I got below line rate transfers was because a trace route showed latency and jitter on a peering link with the ISP, not an issue with the remote server.

        My biggest issue tends to be server related
    • how many people does have to be online simultaneously before everyone gets throttled to 512kbps?

      Based on current deployments, probably 3 in posh areas, and 2 for everyone else.

    • How low will they set the datacaps? What good will 1000mbps be if you hit the ceiling immediately? And how many people does have to be online simultaneously before everyone gets throttled to 512kbps?

      I have BT infinity option 2 (Fibre to Cabinet):
      - Unlimited bandwidth
      - No throttling
      - 80mbit download / 40mbit up, 24/7

      The only "throttling" you get is at peak times due to network congestion, but even then i'am still unable to see any service impact or major delay.

      As always with BT, it depends where you live.
      If your lucky enough to be on a cabinet with only 20 connections and your exchange is running at less than 50% capacity, and, you live less than 100m away from the cabinet that doesnt rely on vintage 19

      • by Xest ( 935314 )

        Yeah, but this is how it was with ADSL too.

        Back when ADSL rolled out, and people only got 512kbps, there were no limits. You could literally download constantly at maximum speed for the entire month.

        Then along came ADSL Max and people got bumped to 1 - 2mbps. Suddenly caps started getting introduced, so low that your speed had gone up but the amount you could download had literally declined by several orders of magnitude.

        So whilst with the advent of basic FTTC unlimited has once again become the norm, don't

        • by Pax681 ( 1002592 )

          Yeah, but this is how it was with ADSL too.

          Back when ADSL rolled out, and people only got 512kbps, there were no limits. You could literally download constantly at maximum speed for the entire month.

          Then along came ADSL Max and people got bumped to 1 - 2mbps. Suddenly caps started getting introduced, so low that your speed had gone up but the amount you could download had literally declined by several orders of magnitude.

          So whilst with the advent of basic FTTC unlimited has once again become the norm, don't count on currently unlimited bandwidth meaning perpetually unlimited bandwidth. It wouldn't be the first time in the UK that increases in speed have seemingly paradoxically meant decreases in the amount of data you're actually allowed to download. That's exactly what happened last time.

          ummmmmm... nah , speeds went up to 1024 down ... ADSL MAX went up to 8mb down .
          I have NEVER had anything other than unlimited with DSL.. EVER.. there have always been options for unmetered bandwidth.
          so it's not what happened "last time" at all

          • by Xest ( 935314 )

            What ISPs have you been with over the last 15 years?

            • by Pax681 ( 1002592 )
              Pipex 512 down 256 up ... unmetered vanilla dsl
              Pipex 1014 down 256 up unmetered vanilla dsl
              Pipex 2048 down 256 up unmetered vanilla dsl
              Bulldog 8mb down 1mb up unmetered ADSL MAX
              Bethere 24mb down and 2.5 up unmetered ADSL2+ with Annex M
              BT 76mb down and 20up unmetered FTTC
              AND when I move soon to my new place FTTH available at 330 down and 30 up unmetered
              so i correct myself .. vanilla adsl speeds went up to 2048 down not 1024 but ADSL MAX went up to 8MB.
              NEVER EVER have i had a metered connection with a
              • by Xest ( 935314 )

                Pipex most definitely did cap, so I'm guessing the real issue is that you never hit them, or never used the protocols that got throttled down to modem speeds when you hit them. A quick internet search will confirm this as there are a number of posts on the topic from about 10 years ago.

      • by amorsen ( 7485 )

        The only "throttling" you get is at peak times due to network congestion, but even then i'am still unable to see any service impact or major delay.

        There is no excuse for having congestion in your network on a daily or weekly. It can happen once in a blue moon when a line becomes unexpectedly busy, but it should never be the normal mode of operations.

        At least not in a pretend-first-world-country where it is easy to lay backbone fiber.

        • But that would hurt their scandalous profit margin! ADSL is, as you know, mostly BT and resold by others. Some ISPs have their own equipment in the local exchanges (LLU), while others have their own cable network (Virgin Media, TAFKA NTL). I don't *think* anyone is running new cable ATM and BT are plodding along at their usual pace. The real problem is that the ASA has allowed all this "up to x speed" bollocks to continue, thereby allowing all UK ISPs to vastly oversubscribe their capacity. Virgin Media
          • by Pax681 ( 1002592 )

            Some ISPs have their own equipment in the local exchanges (LLU)

            In reality they lease equipment from BT and it's maintained by BT Openreach engineers

      • by johnw ( 3725 )

        I have BT infinity option 2 (Fibre to Cabinet):
        - Unlimited bandwidth
        - No throttling
        - 80mbit download / 40mbit up, 24/7

        Even BT at their most optimistic don't pretend to offer that. BT Infinity 2 offers up to 76 Mb/s downstream and up to 20 Mb/s upstream. I think you're confusing your upload speed with the download speed of BT Infinity 1.

  • That's what I call a leapfrog technology, going straight from the telegraph to G.fast and not bothering with that silly 100 year telephone era inbetween.
  • Does the G stand for Go? Or Google?
  • Sigh (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ledow ( 319597 ) on Saturday January 31, 2015 @08:05AM (#48945973) Homepage

    Slashdot are posting what The Register posted two days ago, so I'll post the same comment I posted there two days ago:

    I work for a UK school.

    BT took nearly TWO YEARS to get a leased line to us. They were blocked from completion after we cancelled the contract because they said there was a 20th delay because "there's not enough room in the duct" followed by "there's not enough room at the exchange". You'd have thought someone might notice in two years that you had no room, eh?

    We cancelled because, despite wonderful promises, prices and speeds, we never actually managed to get the line into the building.

    In the meantime, I'm running a school for 400 kids on a VDSL line with ADSL backup which BT promise me can get "45Mbps" and "20Mbps" at best, respectively. Funny. Because my Smoothwall says we've never pushed more than 10Mbps for a fraction of a second and the average over the working day - with 500 users and 600 devices - is somewhere around 4MBps down and 1MBps up..

    BT can make all the "maximum" speed promises they want. If you can't get it installed, or the actual download is so much less than the maximum, it's pointless. Absolutely pointless.

    Ironically, I get 32Mbps download on 4G when sitting in the IT Office. If only 4G didn't have such pathetic data allowances.

  • by Leo Sasquatch ( 977162 ) on Saturday January 31, 2015 @08:24AM (#48946017)
    can I have a unicorn, please? Local exchange has been 'enabled' since June 2013, but I don't know anyone who can actually get Infinity in my town. I live a mile from the exchange, and 100 yards from the cabinet, and am still on standard broadband.

    The story keeps changing, too, whenever I talk to BT. First it was that the cabinet hadn't been upgraded, then that it couldn't be upgraded, and now it's because fuck you, that's why. Their website says they cover two-thirds of the UK (which is a weird definition of 'most', but I suppose it is greater than 50%), but it also says (in paraphrase) that if you live more than 300 feet from an exchange, forget it. Lots of the UK, and especially Scotland, is still pretty rural, so I don't expect to see anything better than broadband any time this decade.

    So while I'd welcome the service they claim to be offering, the fact that they haven't managed to deliver the original service to about 40% of the UK yet, does make me wonder if it'll ever actually materialise.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • I remember the BT from the 70s and 80s where every phone call seemed to be on a party line. Noisy, lots of crosstalk and now 1Gbps Internet? My how they've grown up.

  • I've already been lucky enough to get FTTC, and my connection varies between 50/5 and 20/2, I'd say. Other than some improvement in my upload speeds, I'm pretty much happy with the bandwidth. Why would I need more? I have an uncapped connection, but if I had 500Mbps I rather doubt my ISP would be willing to offer THAT uncapped... if I could even find anything that big (legally) to download on a regular basis.

    This just seems like a big PR thing BT are doing so they can tell simpletons like David Cameron t

  • AT&Ts U-Verse runs fiber to a corner box in the neighborhood and then dual-DSL over existing copper lines to homes. It's been a dismal failure. When they initially rolled it out they thought they could situate the corner boxes relatively far away from the homes but the copper had so much noise and cross talk it just didn't work, so they've had to move the boxes closer. And even then they barely get 20 MBits downlink and a really horrid uplink. Comcast is twice as fast at a minimum.

    Sounds like BT hit

  • I don't get it. They are running fibre to "ideally less than 250m" from every home knowing full well that one day, at some point, they are going to have to cover that last 250m with fibre. Just do it already. Get the governement on-board and do it. Upgrade the whole damn country and never have to worry about the state of the copper lines ever again.

    Maintenance costs plummet and yes, the rollout will cost you an arm and a leg but you know what? You then become a first work country

    • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
      I wonder just how many fibers they ran to the pole in the first place. With the tech they're using, you only need one fiber or fiber pair to the node, then the node uplinks to the fiber. With modern fiber networks, each customer gets their own separate strand of fiber. They may need to re-run the fiber or use a sub-optimal fiber design of having a fiber node. Modern fiber networks have no nodes. Fiber strait back to the trunk.
  • Up to 1000 Mbps - yeah, perhaps if you have built your house right on top of the cabinet. In fact, not even then.

    I was on their FTTC product for a couple of years, the one that's "up to" 80 Mbps. I got 18 down and 0.75 up. I tried reporting the speed to them on several occasions, especially the upstream speed which was very limiting, only to be told they didn't consider that to be a problem - it's within the range of speeds considered acceptable for that product.

    • Change ISP. Seriously.

      The "big 6" will shag you about. If you move to AAISP or Zen or phone.coop (there are a lot more), they have a vested interested in keeping you happy and will keep tickets open until openbletch fix it.

       

  • TFA says it "uses more radio spectrum". I am confused. Does that means they use some radio network like WiFi or WiMax?
    • DSL services use a series of narrow bandwidth carriers across the spectrum. VDSL2 ranges from 100kHz 33MHz down the wire. G.fast adds more high frequencies.

      The reality is that higher frequencies are more susceptable to crosstalk, have higher attentuation and are extremely touchy about bridge taps, bad joints, etc.

      Whilst it's entirely _possible_ to run G.Fast on existing copper the question is whether it's _practical_ and the smart money is on it being a failure in service.

      Then again, having announced it, BT

      • But everything is sent on the wire, right? There is no radio involved here?
        • Radio frequencies, sent down the wire.

          Just like tv signals sent down coax, except in this case the feeder is loosely twisted pair with variable transmission characteristics and losses.

  • G.Fast only works at high speed for 100 metres or less.

    It's highly likely that it will be around 50 metres once crosstalk and other interference is taken into account (VDSL2 operational distances are shown to be suffering badly as more VDSL is rolled out, especially along the rotting distribution infrastructure that BT operates (there has been insufficient infrastructure reinvestment to maintain services since the mid 1980s)

    The only way to provide this kind of coverage to more than the 5-10% of dwellings wi

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