Broadband Britain: Where's our revolution?

Slow and steady won't win this race...

COMMENT

Yesterday the comms minister, Lord Carter, unveiled a draft strategy which the government hopes will ensure the UK keeps pace with tech change and grows its digital economy over the next five years and beyond.

The interim Digital Britain report sets out a pledge of universal broadband access by 2012 at speeds of up to 2Mbps via fixed and wireless networks. The final word will come in the summer when the full report is published.

The first point to make here - as noted by Forrester analyst Ian Fogg - is that while universal broadband access is a worthy aim, setting such a low speed bracket smacks of a "lowest common denominator" approach to broadband delivery.

Broadband from A to Z

Click on the links below to find out more...

A is for ADSL
B is for BT
C is for Cable & Wireless
D is for Dial-up
E is for Education
F is for Fibre
G is for Goonhilly
H is for HSDPA
I is for In-flight
J is for Janet
K is for Kingston
L is for Landlines
M is for Murdoch
N is for Next generation
O is for Ofcom
P is for Power lines
Q is for Quad-play
R is for Remote working
S is for Satellite phones
T is for Trains
U is for Unbundling
V is for VoIP
W is for WiMax
X is for Xbox
Y is for YouTube
Z is for Zombies

Far from future-proofing the national network, Carter's strategy is one that looks more like getting by on barebones. While it might be enough in the short term, were it to be magically deployed overnight, in four years' time - the date set by Carter for achieving universal access - speed and bandwidth requirements will only have increased.

Getting more people fast internet access inexorably leads to increased use of web apps and services, which in turn will fuel the need for speed.

Carter said the government's thinking on not even setting a floor of 2Mbps is there may be parts of the UK where it would be prohibitively expensive to even ensure a 2Mbps connection, and he likened this to the wiggle room given to utility companies - saying, essentially, a glass of water in London is not the same as a glass of water in another part of the UK but they are both drinkable.

While this argument is understandable - and will have its sympathisers, certainly those who have to fork out the cash for infrastructure upgrades - it does mean the report's universal broadband pledge has been watered down to the point where it's woefully weak.

Another point about UK broadband that risks being muddied by talk of 'universal access' is the difference between the 'have nots' and the 'can't haves'. Broadband notspots aren't the massive problem they once were - we are a Fat Pipe Nation these days (on a personal note, last year my mum was finally able to get broadband to her house in rural mid-Wales). According to Forrester's Fogg, broadband is technically available to more than 99 per cent of UK homes.

The 35 per cent figure of broadbandless homes that is bandied about is more likely to refer to people who, for whatever reason, don't sign up for broadband services - be it financial, cultural or simply a lack of interest. And there is evidence to show those on lower income and in ethnic minority groups are less likely to be signed up.

To tackle the have nots, Carter's report sets out an intention to encourage the development of "public service champions of universal take-up" - with the Beeb being invited to take "a leading role in driving take-up".

And while encouraging take-up - and educating people on the benefits of broadband - is of course a laudable aim, perhaps the government's energies (and cash) would be better spent on persuasion by impact?

Widespread access to 100Mbps+ broadband is surely more of a call to arms for digital Britain than an apologetic and flaccid 'up to 2Mbps'. Let a UK superfast broadband network - enabling truly next-gen services - act as a champion.

As it stands, Lord Carter has decided to continue taking time out considering whether it's wise for the government to help fund fibre-speed deployments, and the interim report suggests he favours "market-led" investment. Which is very likely to mean more of the same: relying on BT et al to put their hands in their pockets, and/or local communities to get so bored of waiting for the digital revolution they start digging up roads themselves.

Or in other words, an evolution not a revolution. And an opportunity missed.

Comments

There are 6 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Robert Syputa

    The story is much the same in many 'developed' markets in Europe and North America: entrenched interests and laggard politicians persuaded by them hold back significant progress to a next generation society that we now all should be rallying behind.

    While modern societies have moved to information based means, we stay shackled by buggy-whip legacy thinking, unable to free our thinking as the first step towards freeing ourselves literally from dependence on transport just in order to communicate... the very thing that robust broadband communications can transform into personal and group creativity led prosperity.

    A similar state of funk exists in the economically befuddled United States of which I am a citizen: because of local, regional, state and national regulations and divisions, a national 'take over' of broadband is nearly impossible. However, it would be more feasible for a government led program to deliver FTTN, fiber optic to the node. This can be a takeover or at least harmonization of fiber backbone complimented by the build out of fiber to within 2-5 kilometers of every group of more than 10 building units. Rural subsidies can then help bridge the otherwise open commercial delivery of what works best.

    A call to arms is needed for economic and to create a new 'Green way forward' for all nations.

    • 30 January 2009 23:29
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  2. 2. Phil Thane

    I'm also in rural-ish mid-ish Wales and we have ADSL "upto" 8Mb/sec. Fastest I have ever seen is around 5 and only briefly. Evenings and wekends it drops to around 50Kb - ie about the same as dial up. At that speed it's really only useful for email and IM. Cloud computing and on-line storage?

    • 31 January 2009 11:58
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  3. 3. Chris Tolmie

    There is a real opportunity to provide Fibre to the Community and utilise the copper for the last kilometre as an interim solution. This would provide better than 8M for most and would not require every street to be dug up. Come on government - do an Obama and invest in infrastructure, not VAT cuts to encourage imports of gadgets!! Campanies like Nortel, Alcatel and others must be ready and waiting to provide the kit and jobs.

    • 2 February 2009 16:52
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  4. 4. vic hansen

    If the government wants to spend money to get us out of a recession, comms is the place to start. It is an investment in the future and should be up there with technical education, railways, energy efficiency and green energy (and energy independence) in giving us an edge in future. I can sympathise with the idea of better hospitals and arts sponsorship, but that is spending, not investing...

    • 3 February 2009 14:33
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  5. 5. Mike

    Lowest common denominator! I would love to get 2Mbps. I live less than 5 miles from the exchange and still only get 350Kbps due to the way the existing BT infrastructure is deployed.

    • 4 February 2009 11:21
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  6. 6. anonymous

    It would be better to link all BT exchanges via fiber and light them up as internet point of presence, and then fix a price to install link from home to exchange (£1800) with a fixed cost for maintence per year (£180) and allow total access for any ISP to the connection bearing in mind that it was tax payers money that paid for the exchanges in the first place, and with the CN21 upgrade they would now be free space in the exchanges. but more chance of seeing Lord lucan riding shergar

    • 4 February 2009 11:45
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