BT Shows First Fiber-Optic Broadband Rollout Plans 119
MJackson writes "BT has revealed new details about the roll-out of its £1.5bn programme to deploy super fast fibre optic broadband to as many as 10 million UK homes (40%) by 2012. Scotland will become one of the first places to benefit from next-generation broadband services, with more than 34,000 homes and businesses in Edinburgh and Glasgow receiving speeds of up to 40Mbps and potentially 60Mbps from early next year (2010). Overall, BT Openreach, which is responsible for ensuring that all rival operators have equality of access to BT's local network, aims to deploy Fibre to the Cabinet (FTTC) based next generation broadband services next summer (2010) to 500,000 homes and businesses in the UK."
Great! (Score:5, Funny)
So we'll have much faster BitTorrent downloads? Oh wait..
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So we'll have much faster BitTorrent downloads? Oh wait..
Tor and freenet should work better too.
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I think the GP is hinting that, without progress on copyright and politics, technological progress will be held back anyway.
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Pretty much - BT is the only thing that actually uses my 16mbits of downstream.
Screw faster connections for home users, how about having a minimum sustainable speed requirement for commercial web server connections? What use is a faster connection at home if the *insertURLhere* server only gives me 5% of what my brand spanking new fiber optic soundwave ultra-awesome connection has to offer?
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What use is a faster connection at home if the *insertURLhere* server only gives me 5% of what my brand spanking new fiber optic soundwave ultra-awesome connection has to offer?
* Sharing a single connection between multiple users
* Streaming video (e.g. iPlayer [bbc.co.uk], or IPTV)
* VPN, e.g. for working from home
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Are you telling me that 10+ down and 1+ mbit up aren't enough for a bit of VPN and video streaming? Sure, I can't stream a BD-ROM with my pipe, but pretty much anything else is no problem ;)
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Aye, now that I upgraded from 1.5 to 7 Mbps DSL, it highlights the limitations of most servers out there. I imagine the situation is similar in the UK, and they'll still clamp down on "The Other BT."
but ... (Score:1)
I don't know what this means: my house is about 20 years old - is that new enough?
Currently, combined broadband & phone packages cost about £25-£30 a month if you want to avoid download caps, so I assume higher bandwidth will cost £40+
At least it may push down the price of up-to-8Mbps services (and late
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I don't know what this means: my house is about 20 years old - is that new enough?
I suspect what they mean is that they'll be rolling it out in housing areas that are being built now rather than to existing housing.
So unless you want to move to a brand new house, no.
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I don't know what this means: my house is about 20 years old - is that new enough?
It probably means anywhere where underground ducting/conduiting has been installed, particularly on business parks. Other locations would required digging up the pavements to make space for the new cabling.
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Virgin are charging £52/month for their 50meg offering, but I expect that will fall a bit when there is competition. Also, there is no word on what upload speeds BT will get but hopefully it will be better than the rather pathetic 1.5mb VM manages.
"New" means new estates, where they are having to install telecoms from the ground up. So, your new house may be only slightly larger than a rabbit hutch, but at least it will have moderately fast broadband :-)
Anonymous Coward (Score:4, Informative)
Bah... Been there, done that...
Optical broadband is already rolled out in Norway, the "entry level" line is 10/10mb (yes, symetric), very stable and high quality with separate extra bandwith for Ip TV.
Now, if the rest of the world follows, internet content will only get heavier and the demand for even more bandwith will grow :-(
Guess we'll have to double the bandwith every 18 month in the future?
Re:Anonymous Coward (Score:5, Insightful)
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Norway Population - 4,644,457 (July 2008 est.)
UK Population - 60,943,912 (July 2008 est.)
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You're correct, BT is the main problem, however my point is that there are more people in the UK then there are in Norway and you can't just dig up the road then put down last mile fibre without it being very expensive.
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That's how Verizon has been laying fiber in the US. They have huge crews that work along the roadside, even in cities, digging holes and drilling tunnels for conduit. They can go under roads, driveways and sidewalks. I'm sure it is expensive, but it hasn't stopped them.
And I'm a very happy fios customer now, with a 20Mb/20Mb connection.
Same thing in Paris... (Score:2)
Orange (the historical isp/phone, ex France Telecom) and Illiad (isp named Free) are battling it over in Paris to provide Ftth.
My building owners coucil ("Co-propriete") agreed to go with Free (the ISP has to "propose" to the owner of the building, in this case the "council" representing the owners of each flat), and the building was vertically "fibered" 4-5 months after they issued their writ of acceptance.
I had to explain to an assembly of elderlies why I preferred Free's technological choices : a mix of
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UK area 244,820 km2
Norway area 385,252 km2
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More mass and less people means it's cheaper to dig up the ground to lay down fibre. I poorly explained this point in my previous comment, however that's what I am trying to say.
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"
Bah... Been there, done that...
Optical broadband is already rolled out in Norway, the "entry level" line is 10/10mb (yes, symetric), very stable and high quality with separate extra bandwith for Ip TV.
Now, if the rest of the world follows, internet content will only get heavier and the demand for even more bandwith will grow :-(
Guess we'll have to double the bandwith every 18 month in the future?
"
And if harddisks stayed at their 50 MB size, we only would be able to store textfiles on them. Now, with 1TB+ d
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BT's plans won't even catch up with you guys then. They are only planning fibre to the cabinet, not to the home, so the line from the cabinet to your house will still be a normal copper telephone line and access will be via ADSL. They can offer higher speeds due to newer, better spec'ed lines and reduced line length, but it's still copper.
Virgin claim to offer "fibre optic" broadband, but similarly only go as far as the cabinet. They also claim to offer "unlimited" service, but throttle anyone who uses it t
Too little... (Score:2, Insightful)
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Dumbass. It's your ISP that implemets the caps and throttling, not BT Openreach. They merely provide the connectivity from the POP to the customer.
This should be +1 informative, not -1 flamebait. The AC is correct.
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What AC?
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Virgin Media are already offering speeds "up to 50MB/second" in Cabled areas - at a cost of 35 pounds.month (XXL broadband).
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It's not just South Western England and rural areas, it's pretty much all of Yorkshire (North, East, South and West) and the Lake District as well as much of Scotland and most of Wales. About the only places not neglected are London and some other big cities like Manchester.
We're seeing signs of rollouts to rural areas to appease OFCOM but they always go to the extreme with this, they rollout a 1mbps connection to a single person in the middle of the Pennines or whatever and go "Look, we care about rural pe
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Doubt I could find it easily now, but what struck me then, was how many exchanges were suffering issues for ages and BT had no scheduled interest to sort the problem. You could be complaining to your ISP, having checks of your line - it would all be academic.
What do we need the bandwidth for? (Score:5, Interesting)
If P2P is illegal - and frankly any internet traffic seems to be illegal according to the Orwellian UK government at the moment, what are we going to use 60Mbps for - checking Email?
Mind you, 60Mbps is really going to improve the performance of the botnets, so spam levels will go up.
Re:What do we need the bandwidth for? (Score:5, Insightful)
iPlayer and whatever content providers BT wants to get into bed with will eat this up.
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If P2P is illegal - and frankly any internet traffic seems to be illegal according to the Orwellian UK government at the moment, what
Don't worry, the government will tell your what you may use it for.
Re:What do we need the bandwidth for? (Score:5, Interesting)
iPlayer streams are around 1Mb/s. Given the availability of fast enough consumer links, I wouldn't be surprised if the BBC started streaming the shows with the same format they broadcast them, which can eat up 20Mb/s easily. Two people in the house watching different streams? That's 40Mb/s. Download a big file in the background and you've got your 60Mb/s right there.
I doubt many people will be using 60Mb/s all of the time, but then I don't use all of the 10Mb/s I get now all of the time either (and if I did, my ISP couldn't afford to give me the service at the rate that they do).
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say a couple of new blocks of flats are built and 50% of the new tenants get the new wideband BT lines, how big has the pipe got to be back to the mothership ?
40Mb/s * 25 families = 1Gb/s for each pair of new buildings !! (that's roughly an OC-24 line...)
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The Internet is more than email and HTML websites. I use my connection for videoconferencing with clients [productivi...ldwide.com] and a slow connection is a real detriment. Even if I'll only use 10Mbps for a really high quality connection, there are three other people in my house. Asking what people are going to use fast connections for is like asking what they'll use bigger hard drives for.
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My point was that most of the high-bandwidth-requiring things to do on the internet are frowned upon by the powers that be - I'm sure telecoms carriers won't like you using VoIP or video conferencing as much as the MAFIAA dislike music/video over BitTorrent.
As someone said above - why do we need the internet to deliver video when we already have cable/satellite and such?
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Not only that but BT has joined the voluntary scheme with the record industry for making it easier for them to get your contact details AND judging by their past history of silent and prompt compliance will likely be one of the first to join the latest and greatest surveillance scheme from the Government whereby they have a centr
A big step forward (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:A big step forward (Score:5, Funny)
now they will be able to install CCTVs even in private homes
That'l show those terrorists.
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Good idea. It will make it very easy to investigate paedophiles. On the other hand, if you are innocent you have nothing to fear, and the police will promise nicely not to use it for amusement.
Therefore, if you object to CCTV in your home, you must be a paedophile and should be sent to jail straight away.
Incidentally, CCTV in some private homes has been seriously proposed [theherald.co.uk].
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Personally I have no problem with them doing that - on the proviso that they first install the CCTV into the homes of the politicians and their families for a 2 year trial. Wonder how many politicians would support it then?
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Have you forgot about the Mexicans using rocket launchers on US buildings south of the border, heads showing up along road sides and various other fun bits to go along with the drug trade?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexican_Mafia [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surenos [wikipedia.org]
http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/january2007/220107mexicangangs.htm [prisonplanet.com]
Of course does this apply to all Mexicans? Of course not. Just as your silly beliefs about muslims do not app
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Isn't FTTH Fiber to the home? How is that last gen? And what would be the current gen? I mean i suppose technically I could connect to my fiber modem by fiber instead of TP-cable, but my connection is capped at 100 Mbps anyway..
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Yeah, I was trolling a bit there. I should have said "current gen" rather than "last gen". Here FTTH rollout started the year before last.
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I'm not convinced FTTH is worth it. It's a massive infrastructure investment to lay that last-mile fibre, and when you already have a cable that can carry 50Mb/s+ into your house, the extra cost doesn't seem to justify the increased speed.
If anything, I'd expect that kind of home Internet connection to fade slowly over the next few years. Quite a few non-geeks I know have started using HSPA instead of wired connections. The cost is less than I pay for cable Internet. It only works with one computer a
Not too bad... how about 1,000 MBps? (Score:5, Informative)
Available NOW [netvigator.com], not in a few years?
Hong Kong has it. 30 Mbit (down, 10 Mbit up) for cheap (about USD 33 per month) and up to 1,000 Mbit for those with more money to waste (about USD 280 per month). This is for residential use, by the way. Available in residential buildings.
Admittedly not available everywhere (like for me: I only can get traditional ADSL but then I'm living in a village so no surprise there), still this is nothing new. Good for the UK that they are catching up with their former colony.
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In Japan... Living in what would be consider the worst part of the greater tokyo area, and on 100/100 optical connection.
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Hell even in a third-world country like South Korea you can get that (1000/1000) in Seoul or Busan. It costs a little more than the readily and cheaply available 100/100 connection, but it's there. I just moved back to Vancouver and I'm about ready to give up on the internet altogether.
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Well, the Japanese have lots of savings. That sort of wealth is easily available there. Over in the west all we have is debt so we can't get that kind of service as quickly.
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We already have fiber broadband over large parts of the UK. I had it installed nearly two years ago by Virgin Media.
Re:Not too bad... how about 1,000 MBps? (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, despite their advertising, all Virgin have deployed is a fiber backbone, not "fiber broadband", which would include fibre to the home. For the last mile their 50Mb service goes over the same cables they've used all along.
Not that it matters much when you get 50Mbps downstream and nearly 2Mbps upstream.
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That requires population density, and density is something HK has plenty of, to the point where those services are cheap, however you must share it, and your street/building/rooftop/park/etc. with 10,000 other people.
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I've wondered about this. Are there any bandwidth caps on the Hong Kong and Japanese hi-speed services. These services have among the cheapest and fastest residential access anywhere.
I just wouldn't see much a point with my ISP in Canada upgrading speed if bandwidth caps still remain.
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In Hong Kong, none as far as I know. I have a 6 Mbps ADSL, and no bandwidth caps that I am aware of. There is probably a "fair use policy" but I have never heard of anyone being capped.
The same line is used for their digital TV service; when using the Now TV I see my bandwidth drop to 3 Mbps.
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In Hong Kong, I can get 3G in all underground tunnels. There are more than that I have tried but as far as I know it's available in all tunnels.
Unfortunately the above ground rail lines have less good coverage, but that is the fault of the individual providers.
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Even Slovenia has 1.000 MBps with FTTH for a few years now.
Same as above the connectivity starts with 10/10 for 14 EUR/month and tops up with 1.000/1.000 for 1000 EUR/month.
Not to shabby.
It's not available to all subscribers yet but major cities are all mostly covered and the network is still growing.
Good for Bittorrent? (Score:1, Interesting)
Why Scotland? (Score:2, Troll)
I wish BT would get a move on with this in England. I'm on aluminium cable last 800 metres from the cabinet to my house and that struggles to run 512/216 ADSL.
If they want a beta tester I'll do that for them.
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You sir, have clearly never been to Edinburgh. All the Scottish Bankers and Politicians are there, in great numbers. Halifax Bank of SCOTLAND, Royal Bank of SCOTLAND, SCOTTISH Equitable (pensions, banking) SCOTTISH Widows (pensions), SCOTTISH Parliament, and so on, and so on.
English Bankers and Politicians are quite capable of fucking up their own country.
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"ruin my life and charge me exorbitant taxes."
Like the Poll Tax?
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What nonsense, Glasgow and Edinburgh are the 4th and 7th biggest cities in the UK by population. Scotland sends SOME of its politicians south because that's were the UK parliament is. This is like saying the UK sends all it's politicians to Belgium (EU parliament), in that it's blatantly untrue and misses the real point. British does not equal English. Perhaps the real question should be why not Scotland?
London 7.2 Million
Birmingham 992000
Leeds 720000
Glasgow 560000
Sheffield 512000
Bradford
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Perhaps it's because the issue isn't being run by Scottish MPs, it's getting fucked over by them:
- I didn't vote for a labour MP
- I can't vote on laws passed in the Scottish parliament
- Scottish MPs get to vote on laws passed in the British parliament that wont apply in Scotland
- Scottish MPs have been the deciding factor is passing some frankly atrocious legislation
Note that I didn't vote for Thatcher or Major either.
Feel free to get sick, but don't pretend there isn't a significant flaw in our current mod
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The West Lothian question is a problem, of course, and of course Labour are going to abuse their Scottish majority as long as they can get away with it. I expect a protocol of Scottish MPs sitting out English votes to arise eventually, but it will take time.
Arrow guarantees that no representational system will be ideal; some group is always going to get the shaft. We have it worse at the moment due to recent history
I wouldn't hold your breath (Score:4, Informative)
Guess how many they've done so far...
Of course, if you read their website now the original goalposts have been burned and some new ones installed much further apart and in a different place on the pitch: http://www.btplc.com/21CN/Theroadto21CN/Keymilestones/Keymilestones.htm [btplc.com]
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BT believes it is the only operator in the world to commit to a planned national rollout of a next generation network
I wonder what planet they are living on - maybe the same one as Sol Trujillo of former Telstra infamy.
Virgin Media UK already provides 50Mbit fiber opt. (Score:1)
Broadband XXL
Up to 50Mb fibre optic broadband TV
Over 100 digital TV channels Phone
Unlimited weekend UK landline calls
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Only their backbone is fibre (well, yes, it would normally be). The actual cable network is coaxial cable. They haven't really touched the cables from when NTL/Telewest ran it, and although their service can be good, it's subject to traffic shaping, stringent limits, and is extremely overcontended in many areas.
Very misleading, I know. Someone really should pull them up on that.
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I once made a complaint to the ASA (Advertising Standards Association) but it was not upheld because apparently the average consumer would not draw that conclusion.
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So false advertising is fine as long as the "average consumer" is sufficiently ignorant not to know the difference? That's insane.
Scotland is first because... (Score:5, Insightful)
...both Edinburgh and Glasgow have relatively few BT customers at present. The residents in each city looking for broadband are pretty much all subscribers to the two major cable companies that provide phone services, pay TV and unlimited 1~10MB (shared bandwidth) cable internet for a fairly low fee. The cities are also fairly dense, but not too populated, thus making them good public pilot sites. There are also two fantastic Universities right in the heart of the cities that probably influence a lot of local council decisions.
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Available in certain areas in the Netherlands now (Score:2, Interesting)
Some cities in the Netherlands already have broadband fibre options for residential connections. Living in one of the pilot areas in Amsterdam, I am currently enjoying 20 Mbit/s (symmetrical!), but could go up to 100 Mbit/s (also symmetrical) if I'm willing to pay more.
Internet service can be combined with telephone and radio/TV. RTV is converted to old fashioned cable signal in your home, which with good cabling (and proper channel separation (which they did take care of)) gives excellent TV image quality,
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Because Amsterdam is not in the UK...
The Dutch television distribution system is kind of weird. The BBC does not allow any provider but the old fashioned cable companies to distribute BBC1 and 2. As a kind of compensation the alternatives offered by the digital-over-the-air-TV-providers and these fibre providers is to offer BBC world. Yeah right... that doesn't do it for me.
There is a lawsuit going on at the moment that challenges exactly this 'bbc1 and 2 only on cable' deal.
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The FTA BBC channels are available on satellite also, across all of western Europe, you just need a dish pointing at Astra 2 [wikipedia.org] and a DVB-S receiver. The BBC has done this since the late 90s, but have just recently branded it Freesat [wikipedia.org].
Fiber to the Cabinet? (Score:2, Interesting)
"super fast fibre optic broadband"?!? (Score:2, Insightful)
40 Mbit/s is not "super fast fibre optic broadband". It's "slow fibre optic broadband".
Here in Sweden it's quite common with 100/100, and I have 80/10 Mbit/s (or 80/16 is more close to reality).
"super fast fibre optic broadband" would be something more than 1 Gbit/s. 1 Gbit/s would be "fast fibre optic broadband".
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Agreed.
I live in France and I get 30 Mbit/s for 22 per month, and there's not a single strand of fiber in my home or building, it's all over old school coax cable.
The cable company also offers 100 Mbit/s at the same price for areas where they did deploy FTTB, which is still not "super fast fibre optic" but still a nice improvement.
How fast? (Score:2)
what is the outbound bandwidth? (Score:1)
I am more curious if this is symmetric bw.
As time goes by we will continue to need high
speed outbound (outbound video, etc.)
I also don't think it hurts to be able to
have more distributed servers and that
means more outbound bandwidth everywhere.
We have not yet invented all the reasons we
will want outbound bandwidth.