BT: Ready to give broadband the V sign?

Next-gen technologies sized up by telco

By Jo Best, 8 December 2005 13:25

NEWS

While other ISPs are falling over themselves to offer higher speeds to customers, BT is taking a softly-softly approach to rolling out faster broadband.

According to Cameron Rejali, BT Wholesale's MD of products and strategy, the telco can't match the speed at which the local loop unbundlers roll out faster broadband services because of the pressure of having to make sure BT's services reach across the whole country.

He said: "We want a large footprint. When we go to a speed, it's not just to a handful of exchanges - we want to enable every exchange."

However, despite ISPs' promises of faster broadband, the typical broadband user - who mostly browses the web and reads email - is often still left wondering why they should care whether their connection is 2Mbps or 12Mbps.

BT's Rejali said ISPs must now start persuading their users there's more to broadband then faster downloads for web pages: "On one level [high speed] is a nice headline but there's not a lot of differentiation," he said. "As we move to higher and higher speeds, we need to educate users and customers what those speeds mean."

Nevertheless, with some ISPs already looking at ADSL2+ - the next generation of broadband technology that can boost speeds to up to 24Mbps - BT is conducting its own trials into where to put its network investment.

Next-generation broadband technologies can promise connectivity of 50Mbps and above - a far cry from ADSL's top speed of 8Mbps to 10Mbps. And, unlike the current ADSL network that BT uses, next-gen broadband can enable any number of sexy - and lucrative - applications including video-on-demand and web conferencing. Currently, the telco is looking at both VDSL and ADSL2+ technologies as potential upgrades for ADSL.

Rejali said that of the two, VDSL seems a likely winner. He said: "With ADSL2+, the technology is out there but there's the footprint challenge - to get 24Mbps, you need to be pretty close to the exchange. I believe VDSL has a better footprint."

Rejali added: "To go in one direction or another would be premature but looking at all the criteria, it makes me lean towards the greater footprint. I think the ultimate future is around VDSL."

He also revealed BT will be targeting network Quality of Service. "Businesses are more and more reliant on their broadband connection," he said. "Reliability just becomes that step-level more important."

The telco is also working on new tools for its wholesale customers to be launched in the new year, including better diagnostics as well as new services around content delivery, rights management and translating material from one medium to another.

Comments

There are 3 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Terry Carlin

    This is pitifully inadequate compared to the approach of the Korean equivalent.

  2. 2. Brian Chappell

    As someone on the limits of current ADSL technology (my 4 year old phone line to my 4 year old house on a 4 year old estate of 2000 large-ish houses is a massive 10.2km) I feel that BT will always be fighting a losing battle until their network planners grow brains.

    VDSL is a great solution providing BT can and will invest in FTTC (Fibre to the curb) or FTTN (Fibre to the neighbourhood) otherwise it's capability over copper is less that 1/10th of ADSL. Leaving those who aren't conveniently clustered around the exchange paying just as much as those who are for a fraction of the service. I can always live in hope that BT would start from the outside in with fibre distribution but I would expect that they will replace the oldest lines first leaving me with poor service for years or decades to come.

    Roll on (and roll out) WiFiMax I say!

  3. 3. anonymous

    What would be good for BT, is to offer increased speeds on "uploading" not just downloads.

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