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June 9, 2010

UK need to up fibre optic broadband roll out according to FTTH Council

The UK needs to increase it’s roll out of true Fibre To The Home (FTTH) broadband as we are lagging behind the rest of the world.

The call for the UK and the rest of the EU to roll out 100Mb fibre broadband connections direct to the home (FTTH) came from Hartwig Tauber, the director general of the FTTH Council.

To push the point home of the UK’s lack of ambition he pointed to the fact that last summer Japan were pushing for everyone there to have a minimum 1Gb fibre broadband connection, while over in the UK our government said they wanted there to be a minimum 2Mb broadband connection for everyone in the country, this is 500 times small than the target Japan has set!

The FFTH Council did acknowledge the EU’s target of making sure everyone within the EU would have broadband access by 2013 and that  by 2020 there should be a minimum 30Mb broadband connection, although upload speeds and also minimum speeds was still unclear as many “up to” speeds don’t actually guarantee users will actually receive this broadband speed.

In the UK there are currently only 5,000 homes that have full Fibre To The Home connections and across Europe this totals around 2.5 million. However, in comparison to the Far East where fibre broadband is much more widespread there are around 38 million people who are connected with fibre directly to their premises.

There was also a slight dig made at the FTTC (Fibre To The Cabinet) installations that BT are installing, this is where the fibre is taken to the street side cabinet then VDSL2 technology is used via the existing copper network to take the broadband to the home, this results in slower broadband speeds than full fibre, with BT offering up to 40Mb broadband connections via this type of installation.

Tauber said this on the issue:

The applications that people will want in the future, such as being able to download HD movies, will need faster speeds. An HD video of 20GB would take five hours to download on VDSL speeds of 10Mbit/s, but just 30 minutes on fibre of 100Mbit/s.

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November 5, 2009

Fibre Broadband trial starts in Glasgow

Glasgow has been selected as the third location that is getting to trial BT’s Fibre To The Cabinet (FTTC) next generation high speed broadband.

fibre optic cable Fibre Broadband trial starts in GlasgowThe trial is available to business customers who are in the Glasgow Halfway area and will allow these business to trial the FTTC which will offer them broadband download speeds of up to 40Mb and upload speeds of 2Mb. The trial will run until the start of April 2010.

A survey conducted by BT of 7,200 SMEs (Small and Medium sized Enterprises) that had faster broadband found that 61% believed that faster broadband had a positive impact on their business.
The survey also found that 28% of these SMEs were using faster broadband to improve their websites and another 25% so that they could use higher bandwidth applications and technology online.

BT are aiming to have 40% of homes and businesses in the UK enabled to receive next generation fibre broadband by 2012.

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October 9, 2009

BT to double Fibre To The Home availability offering 100Mb

BT is to more than double the number of homes and businesses that will be able to receive it’s fastest FTTH (Fibre To The Home) broadband.

BT’s Fibre To The Home (or Fibre To The Premise as BT call it) will be the fastest broadband BT will offer with speeds up to 100Mb and is to be made available now to 2.5 million premises and not the 1 million as originally planned. The move comes as BT have findings that it is going to cost far less to deploy than they had originally anticipated meaning that even more people will be able to benefit from it.

BT will be deploying Fibre To The Cabinet (FTTC) elsewhere and the hope is that around 10 million homes and businesses will have a fibre broadband connections by 2012. FTTC is expected to deliver broadband speeds of 40Mb.

BT has cut the costs of FTTH by moving away more from having to dig up roads to using existing underground ducts where copper wires are already running, they are also planning on using telegraph poles to run the fibre optic cables between these, again which takes away the expensive cost of digging up roads.

BT has also updated the speeds and prices that communications providers will pay to use BT’s Generic Ethernet Access over Fibre to the Cabinet (GEA-FTTC) that will deliver broadband at 40Mb download and 10Mb upload, this is an increase from 5Mb upload speeds and won’t cost the providers any more. The wholesale price to the providers is £88.80 per year.

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September 10, 2009

BT Broadband stores to showcase fibre broadband

BT are going to showcase how good their fibre broadband is by opening two BT Broadband stores where potential customers can go in and see how fast the fibre optic broadband is and sign up for the service.

With BT currently installing fibre optic cable in Muswell Hill (North London) and the Whitchurch area of Cardiff these are the locations of the 2 new BT Broadband stores. The one in the Whitchurch area of Cardiff is due to open this week and the one in Muswell Hill next week.

The BT Broadband stores will be able to show how having BT’s fibre broadband (Fibre -To-The-Cabinet) with download speeds of up to 40Mb could improve their use of the Internet including gaming, Internet TV, downloading and using it with CCTV.

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August 18, 2009

Glasgow to get fibre broadband sooner

Glasgow is going to have next generation super fast broadband sooner than expected which will be available to over 15,500 homes and business in the Cardonald, Crookston and Hillington parts of the city will be able to use the BT fibre broadband network that will deliver broadband speeds up to 40Mb.

Originally it was planned that early 2010 would be when the fibre broadband would be available but BT have brought this forward to Autumn 2009. They are installing 56 street cabinets and around 30 miles of fibre optic cable from the exchage to the cabinets (FTTC).

A BT spokesperson told ZDNet yesterday that the reason Glasgow has been brought forward is because of some of the issues they were facing in Muswell Hill that the cabinets were too big and unsightly for their neighbourhood, we are sure the residents in Glasgow who will start receiving the next generation broadband a few months sooner won’t be complaining!

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July 7, 2009

BT start Fibre To The Cabinet pilot

BT have started their pilot test of fibre broadband in parts of North London and Wales. The two areas chosen to start receiving Fibre To The Cabinet (FTTC) are Muswell Hill and Whitchurch.

fibre optic cable BT start Fibre To The Cabinet pilotThe trial services will be available via BT Openreach which means that other broadband providers, including Sky and O2 Broadband will also be included in offering the FTTC to their customers.

Both of the locations that the pilot schemes are being tested at have over 15,000 premises (residential and business) and 100 roadside cabinets.

It is envisaged that customers will receive broadband download speeds of up to 40Mb and upload speeds of 5Mb.

Fibre To The Cabinet involves laying fibre optic cable from the telephone exchange to the street side cabinet and then using the  existing copper lines to connect the cabinet to the house.
FTTC is the cheaper alternative to FTTH (Fibre To The Home) which involves taking the fibre optic cable from the telephone exchange right to the house which also offers the fastest speeds.

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- Filed under: Fibre broadband
- Tags: BT Openreach, Fibre broadband, Fibre To The Cabinet, FTTC
Author: Mark @ 3:37 pm


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