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United Kingdom Communications The Internet

Government Spells Out Plans For UK-Wide Full Fibre By 2033 (bbc.co.uk) 143

The UK government has set out a plan to roll out full fibre networks across all of the UK within 15 years by introducing laws to speed up the installation of fibre and subsidizing investment in very rural areas. From a report: The proposal comes as part of a new national telecoms strategy drawn up by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS). Under its targets, all of the UK will have full-fibre broadband coverage by 2033, replacing the copper wire network that currently delivers the service. It proposes legislation to encourage more private infrastructure investment. Earlier this month, research was published indicating that the UK has slipped from 31st to 35th place in the global broadband league tables, behind 25 other European countries. The data was collected by M-Lab, a partnership between Google Open Source Research and Princeton University's PlantLab, and the results compiled by UK broadband comparison site Cable.
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Government Spells Out Plans For UK-Wide Full Fibre By 2033

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  • There's no reason the US shouldn't have this, too. Or at least your local state, if you prefer things at the state level.
    • by zifn4b ( 1040588 )
      This is why: http://www.usdebtclock.org/ [usdebtclock.org]. A lot of states are broke too. Mine certainly is.
      • They aren't broke until the creditors stop giving them money. I say "giving" because they aren't getting it back. California is broke but they spend plenty of money. And why not?
        • by zifn4b ( 1040588 )

          They aren't broke until the creditors stop giving them money

          Wow, you do know who the "creditors" are in this case right? I'll give you a clue, they have publicly stated that they want to be the dominant economic super power of the world by 2025. They are not members of the United Nations. They really don't like the United States very much. They especially don't like us because we started a trade war with them.

          I love how you use the term "creditors" as if there are these magical creditor fairies that have an infinite amount of money to lend out. If that's what y

    • by Anonymous Coward

      We gave the ISPs the money to do this once before, they didn't

    • by Ranbot ( 2648297 )

      There's no reason the US shouldn't have this, too. Or at least your local state, if you prefer things at the state level.

      Maybe 10-15 years ago, but I'm not convinced nationwide fiber is a smart investment now. Next generation mobile networks (e.g. "5G") and low-orbit satellites could provide the nationwide broadband coverage more efficiently than laying and maintaining* physical wires along every rural public road. Those technologies are being tested right now and could use a boost of investment.

      * - I don't think most people realize how expensive it is to maintain fiber cables. If a fiber cable is damaged by a storm or an ine

      • How do you think your 5G cell towers connect to the net?

        Smoke signals?

        Cell towers are connected to the net by fiber.

        • I'm currently developing an entirely new communication system that will revolutionize life as we know it. It consists of an intricate web of wires and pulleys, and most important of all, smoke and hidden mirrors. It will be free to all. The only thing necessary will be the continual working of the bellows and operation of the treadmill. For an extra fee, if you are fortunate enough to dwell close to running water, my company will install a water wheel. State taxes may apply.

          Pat. Pending

          You were close, but I

        • by Ranbot ( 2648297 )

          How do you think your 5G cell towers connect to the net?

          Smoke signals?

          Cell towers are connected to the net by fiber.

          You answered your own question.... Connect one fat fiber to a tower that covers many square miles instead running fiber down every little rural podunk road to every cabin or farmer's doorstep. I didn't mean to say no fiber at all in rural areas, just that it's not cost-effective to run fiber to every doorstep, when wireless technology can bridge that gap.

          FWIW, I grew up in a very rural area on gravel road where my parents still live. They had dial-up until about 2006, when a regional Wi-Fi ISP opened, whic

          • Electricity, water, waste water, phone lines, how difficult would it be to bury glass fiber alongside those?

            But it's not done. The ethernet standard for fiber optic cable is intentionally incompatible with all previous standards. Routers and network cards for it are incredibly expensive.

            But glass fiber is literally made from sand. The cable itself is cheaper than copper wires, and connectors are much more robust. You don't have to worry about RF interference either.

            You have a point: Radio can cover a wider

            • by Ranbot ( 2648297 )

              You have a point: Radio can cover a wider area without having to bury anything, which is an advantage in rural areas where little to no infrastructure is built anymore, or where no infrastructure other than roads have been built yet.

              Thank you. Exactly my point.

              Electricity, water, waste water, phone lines, how difficult would it be to bury glass fiber alongside those?

              This is an example of how urban/suburban folk don't fully understand rural infrastructure challenges (that's not meant as an insult, so please don't take it that way). In rural areas [and even some lower density suburban developments] water and sewer is typically onsite wells and septic tanks, respectively. Electric, phone, and cable lines are typically above ground on poles.* Now, you could run fiber on poles, but it will be damaged more often in storms, so long-term maintenance

              • Phone and cable could be replaced with fiber.

                I have no doubt that it will be done eventually, but if not even the phone lines are buried, then the temporary solution of bridging the gap with radio seems to be more permanent than I would have expected.

                Thank you for the insight.

      • by Shinobi ( 19308 )

        What wireless telecom is paying you to post that drivel, Ranbot?

  • I live in central London. The best I can get in my building? ADSL, 15Mbps up / 1Mbps down. No cable, no fiber.
    • Uh, 15Mbps DOWN / 1Mbps UP is what I meant of course...
      • I was wondering about that. But, that is terrible. How much do you pay for that? I've got 50 down and 25?up for $50 per mo and it is good enough for my purposes. But it is crazy how much prices and speeds vary depending on region, ISP etc.
    • I live in central London. The best I can get in my building? ADSL, 15Mbps up / 1Mbps down. No cable, no fiber.

      Sounds legit. I was on 4mbit until about a year ago when they finally got round to instaling fiber. Also a London dweller (Zone 2).

      • Deep Sussex countryside. Copper pair across the fields on tarred poles untouched for 25+ years, then under the road for a mile to the nearest village cabinet (allegedly with fibre). BUT I get 40Mbps down, consistently. Do I need 'educating' (says Govt proposal) to pay for that infrastructure to be updated?
    • by ls671 ( 1122017 )

      You almost got me there!

      Of course, I now assume that you meant London, Ontario, Canada.

  • After all, the government has been so competent at negotiating Brexit with the EU that a nationwide fibre broadband network will be a simple walk in the park.

  • Bandwidth Joneses (Score:4, Interesting)

    by mentil ( 1748130 ) on Monday July 23, 2018 @06:35AM (#56993542)

    Earlier this month, research was published indicating that the UK has slipped from 31st to 35th place in the global broadband league tables, behind 25 other European countries.

    Spending money to surpass others is pointless if there's no benefit to doing so. Eventually rural consumers will have 100Mbps or higher. Sure, faster downloads and peak usage throughput are great, but the benefits for consumers fall off pretty quick. Can 'accessing online educational resources' justify more bandwidth than this? Even assuming hi-def video chat with tutors/business associates, with modern codecs (AV1) do you really need much more than that? Sure, VR video will use even more bandwidth, but does that really open any qualitatively different educational experiences, or businesses even? I have a feeling that today's video companies will be primarily responsible for VR videos in the future, so it won't necessarily enable many new jobs that weren't already being done with 2d cameras. Businesses already have access to fiber, in the places they want to put data centers, so do consumers really need faster speeds at home once they have ~100Mbps? Sure, a few power-users who download VM containers/linux beta ISOs daily would make use of it, but does that justify $billions in government subsidies?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      but the benefits for consumers fall off pretty quick. Can 'accessing online educational resources' justify more bandwidth than this? Even assuming hi-def video chat with tutors/business associates, with modern codecs (AV1) do you really need much more than that?

      Applying today's thinking for a project 15 years in the future, what a visionary you are.

    • by zifn4b ( 1040588 ) on Monday July 23, 2018 @07:05AM (#56993620)
      There are a couple of use cases you forgot:
      1. - Downloading games via Steam/PS Store/XBOX store/etc. Many AAA titles are 40-60gb
      2. - Downloading movies via Netflix and other services for mobile devices

      Sorry, but the "few power users" thing doesn't cut it anymore when it comes to downloading. That was 15 years ago before the industry actually caught up with legitimate download sources.

      • by mentil ( 1748130 )

        Mobile devices mostly stream video, rather than download. Aside from offline viewing, downloading doesn't need to be faster than streaming speed. Downloading videos faster for offline viewing and downloading games faster are great, but don't enable new businesses or experiences that wouldn't exist with slower download speeds. I.e. what new things does the upgrade enable, that wouldn't exist with 100Mbps internet? Internet video existed long before Netflix streaming, so it should be predictable today, what t

        • by zifn4b ( 1040588 )
          I'd need to see statistics on streaming but you can't ignore the growing use cases for downloading video. Netflix recently added this feature, there are several services that come with movies that allow you to download them to devices. These services are expanding and not going away. At best, you're putting forth a straw man but the reality is, the "few power users" theory is out of date today. The way people consume digital media has radically changed over the past 10-15 years and not just in regard to
        • by Malc ( 1751 )

          How about multiple people watching 4K60 video on multiple devices concurrently? Meanwhile somebody starts uploading hundreds of MB or even GBs of photos and videos and because most ISPs are cheap on upload bandwidth, everybody else's video stream stalls or drops to a lower bandwidth rendition. Families sitting around one TV are a dying breed.

          • by zifn4b ( 1040588 )

            Families sitting around one TV are a dying breed.

            Dying? It's dead Jim. The people age 20-30 have radically different ideas about adulthood than you and I grew up with. A lot of people aren't even planning to get married or have kids. Society is transforming into something else and very quickly. There is nothing that can be done to stop it. The only question for each person is: will you adapt or not? Not adapting has consequences.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Multiple users. If you have the UK average speed (16mbps) then downloading some patches will probably make Netflix drop to 240p and buffer like crazy. Video calls will lag and stutter.

        It's not just about raw download speed, it's about having enough bandwidth to keep interactive and streaming services working properly.

    • It's not the bandwidth.. it's the low latency.

      Communities without fiber connectivity are not long-term viable. Slowly people are realizing this.

      • by mentil ( 1748130 )

        Fiber has higher latency than copper cable, over short distances at least. Factoring in repeaters for cable, it may end up slower. 'Full fiber' means last-mile, right?

    • by Shinobi ( 19308 )

      Gigabit available in rural areas allow for running a greater amount of business from home, it allows for multiple household members to run bandwidth intensive tasks without affecting latency.

      In Sweden, rural broadband has helped slow down or even reverse rural depopulation. And before you start yapping in a simpleton way about "oh, so small" etc, keep in mind that Sweden is larger than California, and we have municipalities larger than Connecticut, and larger than New Jersey if you only look at land area.

      As

  • Just give our cash to BT so they can distribute it among shareholders, like last time.

    ....cynical....

  • It is at times like these that I am reminded of the dark fiber that has been laying dormant in east Berlin since the mid 1980s.

  • Strange how so called first world countries are so slow in initiating programmes that could be implemented really quickly if the powers that be actually thought them important. But no, corporate profit and military spending above all. Forget about affordable housing, a decent minimum wage, health insurance etc. I know we're talking about the y(U)c(K) here, but isn't it pretty much the same story the world over?
  • I'm not familiar with UK government efficiency. How likely is it for this goal to be achieved in the given timeframe?
    1) 100% achievable
    2) overall achievable but some area will not be connected in that timeframe
    3) it's going to be late by 1-5 years
    4) it's going to be late but it will eventually get there
    5) next Ice Age
    6) Jesus coming back

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