London Could Soon Get Free Wi-Fi Everywhere 190
fangmcgee writes "London could soon be covered with a free public WiFi network as Virgin Media moves to challenge BT's Openzone network. Virgin Media's network would be freely available to anyone at 0.5Mbps, and to subscribers to its home broadband at speeds up to a blistering 10Mbps. The proposals would see WiFi routers installed in each of the company's street-side cabinets, which distribute its cable network to homes and businesses."
3 Cheers for Entrepreneurs with Testicles. (Score:3)
What happened to the USA that WE don't seem to have many people like this anymore? Where are they? Why don't they step up?
Burt Rutan was one. He's retired now. A well-deserved retirement. And I don't think it's a coincidence that he and Branson found each other.
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What happened to the USA that WE don't seem to have many people like this anymore?
We [muniwireless.com] do. [blogspot.com]
True, it's not giving away wifi to a major metro area like New York, but the Google guys don't count as entrepreneurs that kick the establishment's ass and, er, have testicles? Because while Virgin is giving away free internet, and that's nice, Google is giving me free maps and free* e-mail that's much better than the e-mail service I had before.
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You install AdBlock Plus in the web browser that Google designed, and those ads disappear. Unless you want to wear tinfoil hats...
Seriously.
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Ok. I keep hearing about them, but never see any examples. Could you please give a few examples of these actions they've taken that make their "Do No Evil" slogan invalid? Customizing ads based on email content? Facebook starts giving you ads for wedding rings if you've been in a relationship for over a year. Truth to tell, I'd rather have relevant ads, because then I might actually find them useful. The censorship in China? If I remember correctly, Google fought against it long and hard. Eventually they ag
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Eventually they agreed, rather than being booted out of China
That is enough for many people. They were eventually willing to compromise on what was seen as a moral stance, for commercial gain.
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Entrepreneurs usually want to make money, and don't want to lose it. So here's some basic questions that you should ask before praising Branson and bemoaning the lack of free WiFi in your home town:
1) Does the density justify it. Too few people per square mile means that you'll never recover the cost of infrastructure.
2) Are enough people willing to pay. Note the tiered system, that's because someone has to pay for it. Maybe Londoners are more willing to pay than Americans (or even people in other parts
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London is largest metropolitan area by population in the EU
And :
NYC 8,175,133
London 7,825,200
So yes it is worth it ...
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London is largest metropolitan area by population in the EU
And :
NYC 8,175,133
London 7,825,200
So yes it is worth it ...
Not just that, Eurostat reckons that London's over 11 million people in size (it's bigger than its official boundaries) and even that is probably an underestimation. (OTOH, NYC is probably bigger than the official 8-and-a-bit million above too.)
Measuring the size of cities is surprisingly difficult.
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That's no guarantee, of course. But the man has some smarts.
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I'm sure that Branson has done his research and there's a good chance that it would work in London or New York. But the original post just said USA.
American cities are notoriously low density. There are maybe three cities with over 500,000 people and a population density greater than London. Cities like New York and London are also relatively rich, so there's a good chance of recovering costs. Most parts of the USA aren't so rich (and I'm guessing the same goes for the UK).
So I'm not questioning what Br
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Please, not the same tired old population density excuse used in the mobile phone industry to defend why the US has such crappy service and coverage compared to, like, anywhere else.
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You realise that Branson hasn't had anything to do with Virgin Media for quite a few years? He licenses them the trademark and has nothing more to do with the company (he even sold his shares a long time ago).
The logic behind this is that Virgin has a cable network that basically sits idle during the day. Providing free WiFi is cheap for them, and will provide a lot of advertising. It will cost them about £2m to deploy (their numbers), which is a lot less than a big advertising campaign. If they'
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According to this article [which.co.uk], O2 mobile broadband customers already get access to WiFi hotspots run by "The Cloud" (I see these quite often, usually in pubs), and T-Mobile customers to T-Mobile's hotspots. This helps them reduce demand for 3G spectrum in busy places (stations, airports etc).
It seems Virgin rolling out a similar service, and as a Virgin customer I may well find it useful. However, my 3G signal is usually excellent and unmetered.
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Virgin Media isn't actually part of the Virgin group, they just acquired the rights to the name after NTL and Telewest merged a few years ago.
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They're all tied up for the next 30 years in court fighting the zillions of meritless lawsuits from the incumbents whose only "innovators" are in the legal or lobbying departments.
The rest never made it that far and are either in the soup lines after trying or they're busy in their cubicles filling out expense reports and timesheets (in 5 minute intervals) hoping one day they can get the funds together to put their ideas in practice. The venture capitol they need is busy chasing people with empty heads, exp
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They're all tied up for the next 30 years in court fighting the zillions of meritless lawsuits from the incumbents whose only "innovators" are in the legal or lobbying departments.
It's not quite that bad in the UK, yet...
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Appearances can be deceptive. Branson doesn't actually run a lot of the Virgin companies. The Virgin brand name is licensed out. In the case of Virgin Media, Branson owns 10% in return for the brand name. He's not the one calling the shots there. And if he was, it would be tarnishing his reputation, as Virgin Media has a pretty bad name in the UK.
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If a company in the USA put WiFi routers all over a US city in "street side cabinets", they would probably be sued by anyone who goes near the cabinets then later gets any type of cancer (or slight cough probably).
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If it's anything like their ISP service in homes if you so much as dare to read an email during the day they will throttle you for a week.
I'm exaggerating of course but sadly not by much.
Thats not true, you can get an unlimited service (at extra cost) and the most basic package has a 200mb limit [virginmedia.com], after which you will be throttled for 12 hours.
If I were to complain about anything it would be the actual unthrottled speed, about 20% of the rated maximum seems typical except early in the morning.
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Are you on ADSL?
The article suggests they will be piping through the cable network which tends to be far better at delivering closer to advertised speed. ymmv.
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Are you on ADSL?
The article suggests they will be piping through the cable network which tends to be far better at delivering closer to advertised speed. ymmv.
No I'm on cable. I think there must be too high Contention Ratio [wikipedia.org] because I get bursts of full speed and a lot of time its below. Long downloads average out at about 50% of the speed, but often a short speed test only gets 20%.
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different experience for me. - 50 meg package (can't get 100 yet!) and I get mostly full speed (giganews, speedtest.net)
I found I would get slowdowns due to my local network at times (net gear + mac issue) but these always went away when testing straight from the pipe.
I assume you've ruled out any local issues? and that the speedtest site you use can handle your bandwidth (I know some aren't up to dealing with top end virgin cable packages!). sorry if these are obvious questions - no disrespect intended!
Wifi "allergies" (Score:2)
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.....who is thinking of the children!
This is, unfortunately, why i think this is going to be free as in beer, but not as in speech. The risk of someone using it for child porn will likely outweigh any other concerns, and "for all" will be limited to "for all who will register and identify themselves before being accepted as a user", not including those unwilling to sign up, transient people who don't have time to sign up (tourists and people in London for a day), and, of course, unregistered immigrants or children.
As for "blazing 10 Mbps", w
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I would consider 10 Mbps to be 'blazing', but that is because I am a Virgin Media customer.
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As for "blazing 10 Mbps", where does the author live that he calls that blazing? Malawi [netindex.com]?
Well, your link says that the average for the UK is 10.65Mbps. For free WiFi, the competition is mobile, and the fastest I've seen advertised for mobile Internet is 7.2Mb/s (which probably means a maximum of 2-3Mb/s in real world use) with small caps, so 10Mb/s with no cap is indeed good. My home Internet is 10Mb/s. I can get up to 50Mb/s (100Mb/s being rolled out soon), but there isn't much point at the moment. My last mile is rarely a bottleneck.
Oh, and the plans I read were for 2Mb/s for everyone,
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As for "blazing 10 Mbps", where does the author live that he calls that blazing? Malawi [netindex.com]?
Or, according to your own link, any of the other 100 countries (~58% of the list) whose average download speed is less than half of that speed? Only around 19% of the countries on that list have average download speeds of 10Mbps or greater. But yes you're right, 10Mbps in London is probably on the low end of the spectrum. On the other hand, I suspect 10Mbps, to many people living in rural England, or even those in the commuter belt, might be considered "blazingly fast".
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It's evolution in action. Anyone so high-strung that they have to invent illnesses will die early of stress.
Public? (Score:2)
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Re:Public? (Score:5, Insightful)
TFA subhead says "public", but it is actually a privately owned service.
Like public houses and public schools, you mean?
Re:Public? (Score:5, Funny)
TFA subhead says "public", but it is actually a privately owned service.
Like public houses and public schools, you mean?
And I've been called a "public nuisance" but nobody owns me.
Don't believe it 'till you see it. (Score:2)
"Free wifi all over town" was all the rage here in California for a few years. Google promised they'd blanket Mountain View in free wifi, San Francisco had a similar deal.
But in the end, the economics didn't work out so well. Google set up hotspots here and there but it was hardly "all over."
It's hard to complain about getting something for free, but don't believe the hype.
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The summary is wrong. Virgin aren't offering the WiFi free. You either have to be a customer of Virgin Media (cable at home) or Virgin Mobile (cellular) to get the WiFi free. Others will need to subscribe or pay-as-you-go for the WiFI, just as they do for BT OpenZone already.
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and London Heathrow? (Score:2)
What are the chances that Boingo (and Heathrow, which surely gets revenue from Boingo) is not going to fight this, after spending the money they have adding wifi to London Heathrow? Anyone know the terms of their agreement (surely it isn't forever)?
Marc
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By "London" I assume they mean central London, and given they'll be installing the equipment in their cable junction boxes I doubt places like Heathrow would be covered anyway.
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No,it's definitely a long tube ride away, in that the Piccadilly line can take you all the way from central London to Heathrow. Takes forever through, hence the motivation for the Heathrow Express train service.
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I daresay Heathrow is even further than that. It's a good 30 miles if I recall correctly, without looking at google maps.
It's 15 miles from Central London, not 30. Maybe you are thinking of London Gatwick, which is 23 miles out, London Luton at 32 miles out or London Stansted at 40 miles out. Or maybe you caught the tube instead of the mainline rail service, in which case it feels like 30.
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London's best airport, Schiphol Amsterdam, is a short 355 km (220 mi) away
Just a short flight -- oh, wait...
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Last time I was due to fly from Schipol they told me there was no point in waiting, they couldn't get me to my destination, and put me on a train. They had the advantage that my destination was in continental Europe. The time before that the flight was overbooked and was the last flight of the day. There are many reasons for going to or via Schipol, but avoiding delays isn't one of them.
And yes, you could go via train or car, but if you go by train you've got to lug your baggage between trains at London Pa
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Heathrow is a long tube ride away from "London"
It depends what you mean by London. Heathrow is in London, being in the London Borough of Hillingdon. But I suspect Virgin Media are not planning to put the free WiFi all over London, just all over Central London, in which case you're right. I hope they do mean all of London, though, because it would be handy for me here in the London Borough of Bromley, also on the edge of London.
Speed (Score:5, Informative)
freely available to anyone at 0.5Mbps
So the same speed as what paying customers receive right now :P
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Except that caps are not possible anymore. Which, considering the way most ISPs go, is awesome.
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Actually credit where credit is due their broadband service has been pretty good for me, I regularly hit 1.5+ meg/sec on my 20mbit line.
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1.5 plus meg/sec in real world usage, most things aren't that fast from the source but a good torrent will give between 1.5 and 2 meg/sec, and I'm assuming that a 20 mbps line will never give you 2.5 meg/sec data rate once control bits are taken into account.
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I'm on their cheapest 10Mb/s package, and I can easily get 1.1MB/s, which is about 8.8Mb/s. Not quite the advertised speed, but pretty close, especially when you include protocol overhead. Their customer support is horrible, but their network is pretty good.
Assuming cable modems have the same overhead as POTS modems (which they should, since they use basically the same encoding schemes), you should figure that each byte takes approximately 9 bits to transfer due to framing and error coding. Then there's also the (much smaller) overhead of IP and TCP. So I'd say that 1.1MB/s is pretty much exactly 10 Mb/s -- and maybe a little more.
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That was my first thought too. I have an "up to" 10 meg "unlimited" connection. In the evenings YouTube and iPlayer stutter and freeze all the time, but if I switch over to Vodafone 3G they are fine. My "unlimited" connection also has a download limit of 1.5GB, after which you are sentenced to 5 hours of throttling to less than 20% the speed you pay for.
I would switch but my phone line doesn't work with ADSL and BT don't give a shit so I am basically trapped with Virgin.
The Philadelphia Story (Score:2)
I think Philadelphia was the first major city that attempted to do this, following almost exactly the same model Branson is proposing - a free lower-cost tier, and the option to pay for higher-speed service. This was something like four or five years ago. The city contracted with Earthlink, who got started but quickly realized there was no way this wasn't going to cost them a lot of money.
The linked story doesn't provide any detail at all, other than the fact Virgin plans/hopes to do this - so I'm curious t
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First, this has nothing at all to do with Branson. Virgin Media licenses a trademark from him, and that's the extent of his involvement with the company.
They're able to provide this because they have a large consumer last-mile network that is mostly idle during the day. This means that the only cost for them is deploying the access points. The rest of the infrastructure is there already. The free network then serves as an advert for Virgin. If you aren't one of their customers, you get 0.5Mb/s everywh
Tourists (Score:3)
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That's the thing that bugs me about the iPod Touch: It always assumes you have an internet connection.
You could've made things work by hopping from wifi to wifi if it bothered caching things a little bit. Like, the maps app caching a half-mile radius of its max detail around you, so that the wifi finder app would have a place to paint its cached store. Or the restaurant finder apps caching a few megabytes worth of restaurant info. (which my guess, would cover well over a half-mile...)
Even the smallest iP
Cool just like San Francisco a few years ago! (Score:2)
How did that go?
It was years ago so all you people in SF must just be taking your free WiFi for granted now right?
Actually this time it might just work because it's not being implemented by a completely useless bastard that uses the threat of jail time to solve minor employee management problems.
Low expectations (Score:2)
I am (unforuntately) a subscriber in North London to Virgin Medias Cable service (over fibre).
Considering there inabilty to deliver anywhere near my expectations of 20mb i pay through the roof for. (sometimes its as slow as dialup).
I dont hold much hope for them delivering this kind of service.
The trouble right now in the UK is we only have one cable service provider able to deliver very high speeds. Virgin Media
basically have a monopoly on Cable. Virgin were brilliant when i lived north of the Midlands but
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That said, I do have friends who have had o
Meh. (Score:2)
It won't be all over London, it won't be free, and it won't be public.
Love the idea - will believe it when I see it! (Score:2)
I've been thinking about reliability of connectivity quite a bit recently... Using a 3G dongle as a backup is one option - but with this option attracting either a noticable monthly charge or requiring a pre-pay to be renewed every 1 or 3 months... it is a bit frustrating... for a service I hope I never need to use. I'm currently wavering on the brink of taking the plunge - the clincher will be if I find time to convince myself that I can configure automatic fail-over satisfactorily.
The first interesting
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Why bother with a pay-go mobile for texts if you can be connected to the web at 0.5mbps everywhere you go?
Well I for one won't be lugging my laptop (or even a netbook) around everywhere I go just so I can keep in touch with people.
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I don't see that wifi run from a cable companies street-side boxes is all that good as a backup. First, your signal is likely to be appalling (run something like inSSIDer and see how many networks you can pick up from indoors - you'll get you, your immediate neighbours, maybe a couple of others - now where's the nearest street cabinet to you?), second it's likely to be busy and overcrowded in any populated area (even if by accident of homeowner's laptops defaulting to it by mistake, or people sitting in ca
Congestion fees? (Score:2)
Sounds amazing. Still, I bet there will be a fine for sending your data packets through the downtown area during peak hours.
I love this (Score:2)
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All the CCTV and databases waiting as you type away, for free, sharing your MAC, ip, passwords, unique browser data and a nice face pic when you look up.
They have your online interests, face, track your car via OCR, your friends with you
If you make a VoIP call - your voice print too - enjoy your free anonymous laptop use in London.
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Woke up on the paranoid side of the bed this morning I see. Granted, we are talking about Anonymous and I suppose that they'd pull out all of the stops for that. Then again ... is Anonymous really naive enough to consistently hit the same access points or leave identifying information on their computers? Now I don't know much about Anonymous, but I'm going to assume that they at least did some research on the Anonymous part.
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Anonymous is anyone who calls himself anonymous. I.e. mostly idiots, like followers of any fad, with a few security conscious individuals sprinkled throughout.
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So you're basically saying that the police would be doing Anonymous a favour by culling the idiots?
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Well lets see http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1041011/MI5-launch-spy-sky-UK-manhunt-British-Taliban-fought-Afghanistan.html [dailymail.co.uk] for the interest in voice prints.
http://www.pcpro.co.uk/features/363802/wired-coppers-the-new-technology-behind-old-bill/3 [pcpro.co.uk] Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR)/CCTV.
and the http://www.independent.co.uk/news/facerecognition-cctv-launched-1178300.html [independent.co.uk] http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/4035285.stm [bbc.co.uk] for the joys of tracking y
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Expect many vans, GCHQ tracking and Forward Intelligence Teams to be all over this wonderful "free" gift :)
All the CCTV and databases waiting as you type away, for free, sharing your MAC, ip, passwords, unique browser data and a nice face pic when you look up.
They have your online interests, face, track your car via OCR, your friends with you ... all for free and in the open.
If you make a VoIP call - your voice print too - enjoy your free anonymous laptop use in London.
Yes, because MI5 are literally going to force you to use this service with a gun at your head.
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Expect many vans, GCHQ tracking and Forward Intelligence Teams to be all over this wonderful "free" gift :)
All the CCTV and databases waiting as you type away, for free, sharing your MAC, ip, passwords, unique browser data and a nice face pic when you look up.
They have your online interests, face, track your car via OCR, your friends with you ... all for free and in the open.
If you make a VoIP call - your voice print too - enjoy your free anonymous laptop use in London.
and changing/spoofing a MAC address is soo hard.. erm.... not really
http://www.klcconsulting.net/Change_MAC_w2k.htm [klcconsulting.net]
http://amac.paqtool.com/ [paqtool.com]
i could go on... but you get the point
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Free wifi has kind of gone by the wayside in the UK. It was a nice idea five years ago, when many people used wifi to get online. Most people now have 3G, which is more convenient since you don't need to actually be near somewhere that "does wifi".
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Free wifi has kind of gone by the wayside in the UK. It was a nice idea five years ago, when many people used wifi to get online. Most people now have 3G, which is more convenient since you don't need to actually be near somewhere that "does wifi".
Except that 3G is pathetically slow most of the time. Maybe it's diferent in London, but certainly in the countryside in the Uk it's barely usable.
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Why should we pay for your free wifi? If you need the internet that bad go to a cybercafe. Do you expect free phone calls too?
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Free WiFi EVERYWHERE in London? (Score:3)
Cor.
That goes along well wif' our surveillance cameras, dunnit'?
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That was my first thought. It may be blistering for the US. The rest of the first world? Not so much...
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I live in a small city in a very sparsely populated state which is mostly lacking fiber access, and yet the cheapest broadband I can get is 15Mbps. For very little more I can go to 60Mbps. Your jibe was true 5-10 years ago, but even in the middle of nowhere we have decent service now.
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Yes, and I know of a town of 3000 with 100mbps fiber service. That doesn't make it widespread.
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The headline is more than likely directed toward the US demographic, where the only thing higher than about 15Mbps is if you're lucky enough to live in one of the few cities with fiber service.
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.. 10Mbps isn't "blistering" in any positive sense.
I'd settle for 10Mbps and, oddly, it's what I pay for from Virgin Media. I do hope all the extra traffic isn't going to even further degrade my bandwidth! That said, getting 10Mbps all across London sounds great!
Next, we want it to be able to pass a connection from POP to POP as we wander around without feeling like it's dropping and re-connecting (just like a mobile phone does) then we lucky Virgin Media people can use skype or somesuch throughout London ... Sur-weet!
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The Australian dollar is a bit more than the US dollar at this point.
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Why would taxpayers be paying for something provided by a private company?
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