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Left behind in broadband race

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Published Date: 08 November 2009
IF LABOUR leader Iain Gray really does want "broadband access for all" (News, 1 November) I strongly suggest he does some research first and defines what he means by broadband.
I live and work less than 20 miles from Glasgow and, after years of local campaigning, BT gave our village broadband access about five years ago. I live less than a mile from the exchange and, at best, I can get a connection of around 7Mbps. However,
at peak use times, such as from around 4pm to 7pm when kids are getting home from school and going online, my computer might as well be connected to the exchange by a length of string.

Trying to send or download large files can take ages. If it wasn't for the fact that one of my clients is an animal rights group, I'd buy some carrier pigeons.

Political pressure is required to force BT and other telecoms companies to get rid of the old copper-wire phone network and use their vast profits to replace it with a high-capacity glass, fibre-optical system.

We should be aiming for minimum internet connection speeds of between 20Mbps and 100Mbps, not the 2Mbps to 10Mbps we have to put up with now.

Scotland is being left far behind in the introduction of modern broadband and the economy of the whole country is suffering.

John F Robins, Cardross, Dumbarton





Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 07 November 2009 8:11 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
 
1

Mikey,

Carstairs Junction 08/11/2009 07:57:56
Agreed! I'm exactly the same here. The download rate is awful and the upload rate the same!

YouTube? Forget it! Any other streaming source also. I'm tied in to a BT contract until next June but I'll be out of it as soon as I can. I know the lines will still be copper but I'm seriously thinking of buying my own concentrator!
2

nabodican,

Newton Stewart 08/11/2009 08:40:15
Where I live I can only dream about 7 Mbps, 300k is more like the norm with an absolute maximum of 500k.
3

Upbeat,

08/11/2009 10:26:42
In the Netherlands almost every home has access now to a network that can operate at up to 50 Mbps and will soon be enabled to 100 Mbps.

5 - 10 Mbps was the ideal standard they had a decade ago. People laugh when they refer to it.

Only BT can be held responsible for spending billions on patching a failing system,instead of investing sufficiently for the future.
4

Colin Wilson,

Aberdeen 08/11/2009 13:40:35
I've a suspicion that most of these performance problems are actually caused by general network congestion. Either that, or the remote servers aren't up to the load that's being placed on them. A connection speed of 100 Mbs is no better than one of 1 Mbs, if you're downloading from a server that can only deliver half the latter figure due to the load on it.

 

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