NEWS Broadband take-up is running at record levels ahead of previous predictions, with three million households and small businesses now toting fat pipes, according to the latest figures from telecoms regulator Oftel.
More than 40,000 high-speed internet connections are being installed a week – although Oftel qualifies that by stating they are for download speeds of between 128 kbit/s and 2 mbit/s.
Despite coming in for criticism from various parts of the telecoms industry for its delay in forcing BT to unbundle the local loop for other telecoms providers, Oftel claims "to have played a major part in the creation of Broadband Britain".
David Edmonds, director general of Oftel, said in a statement: "In the last five years the internet has moved from the margins to the mass-market, with half of all UK households and two-thirds of businesses now online. That shift - with some of the lowest prices in the world - was significantly boosted by Oftel's intervention to bring about flat-rate narrowband access."
Other highlights from the research show that half of UK households and two-thirds of UK businesses are now online, one in five homes with internet access have broadband, broadband take-up is outstripping cable modem connections by a factor of three to one and UK broadband retail prices are "significantly cheaper" than in the US and Germany.
Ecommerce Minister Stephen Timms acknowledged the UK had been a "slow starter" but said "real progress" is now being made towards take-up of five million.






Comments
There are 3 comments. Join the discussion
1. Ranko Pinter
I would like to have it explained why the statistics about broadband Britain exclude the broadband service delivered via cable. Is the same rule applied when counting the number of phone lines - those using cable are not counted?
If judged by the reliability of the service, my wife business on ADSL has had more outages in her broadband service during last year than I had in my business using cable broadband.
2. J.S. Walmsley
Why don't you (Silicon.com) take issue with BT and Oftel and Gov? Simple arithmetic will confirm that such claims as "80% of Britain is Braodband enabled" are nonsense! I now pay £100/month for ISDN2 and would happily pay the same for Broadband. For many of us cost is NOT the issue.I just want Broadband for my business in a small village!
3. Roger Neale
I too am in one a a few small villages served by one BT exchange.
When Broadband was first announced and trigger levels set, ours was set at 200. I considered this to be a reasonable level. Recently the trigger level was increased to 500 !!
I am told that this is because BT has discovered that our exchange is wired with aluminim cables and I understand that this will not support Broadband at all. So BT have put the trigger level up to a point that cannot be acheived so we will never get Broadband.
Can anyone confirm this?