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MtX
Sep 26th, 2005, 06:05 PM
Swedish ISP Be has launched the UK's fastest broadband service for home users.
Be Home 24Meg costs £24 per month and offers an uncapped 24MB internet-only connection. It is currently available in London and will be rolled out to 20 other cities over the next year.
Be said that the service will handle two High Definition TV channels and " three or four" standard TV or video-on-demand channels, along with normal surfing and voice calls. However, the ISP admitted that users may not always get a 24MB connection.

The move is expected to shake up the offerings from other operators. UK Online has said that it will launch a 24MB service in October at £30 per month.
Five of the top seven ISPs are still only offering broadband at 2MB at prices from £12 to £25 per month. Average connection speeds are 1MB. Only NTL and Telewest are upgrading their networks to provide services of up to 10MB.
Be said that it will launch a voice over IP telephony service and video on demand sometime in 2006.
"This radically advanced capability will change the way people use their computers, and opens up a world of opportunities as exciting as the advent of the internet itself," said Dana Pressman, managing director at Be.

Subscribers need a BT telephone line connected to an exchange in which Be has installed its equipment, and must pay a £24 connection fee and provide three months notice of cancellation. Potential subscribers can check here to see whether they can receive the Be service.
Chris Stening, general manager at UK Online, said: "We have been pushing the current ADSL technology to its limits since last year with 8MB broadband. Now ADSL2+ will unleash a new wave of broadband innovation for consumers."

aquariaguy
Sep 26th, 2005, 06:37 PM
Bah...25 pounds? Thats more than 50 dollars. I'll stick to my $30 a month all inclusive high speed from Sympatico :) Poor student :)

jb22
Sep 26th, 2005, 06:43 PM
I was watching BBC World's Click Online show a fewm onths back and they were talking about areas in France that were getting 30mb per second. I think itm ight have been more of a test setup for delivering video content of the Internet.

Madcatmk2
Sep 26th, 2005, 06:43 PM
A 8 megabytes adsl line is impossible. It should be written 8 Mbps.
See http://www.broadbandreports.com/shownews/67096 .

Casanova
Sep 26th, 2005, 08:35 PM
I know of a company that will get more than that real soon in Ca.

Irb
Sep 26th, 2005, 08:36 PM
What is the point if you're capped at something stupid like 100 gigs a month?

Ziggy007
Sep 26th, 2005, 08:45 PM
I believe some providers in New York provide 15Mb connections for home use currently. Rogers is killing the growth of broadband in Canada!

Kommander_KornFlakes
Sep 26th, 2005, 09:14 PM
Attention cave-dwellers, Rogers used to have 10 Mbpds/sec in 1999.... when there were only about 300 people in it's network, it then went down as more people joined the system, now we are talking about over 100,000.

Wow, how fast can you be with a 30 Mpds connection?

gilboman
Sep 26th, 2005, 09:21 PM
I believe some providers in New York provide 15Mb connections for home use currently. Rogers is killing the growth of broadband in Canada!

you should be thanking rogers actually. they were the first to be able to bring broadband access at reasonable prices to majority of citizens.

i'm not sure if you are old enough to understand the concept of market size and/or infrastructure costs. but you should really take some time to find out the market conditions of other places before comparing them to here. canada is actually ahead of the US in terms of % of broadband users who have internet access

its much cheaper/easier to provide 15mb connections if the people all live in the same building as opposed to across a much larger area

Kakashi
Sep 26th, 2005, 09:50 PM
24Mbps is nothing for residential. You can get uncapped 100Mbps at home in some Euro and Asian countries. And it costs less than what we pay for Sympatico/Rogers/Telus etc. But 24Mbps for UK is very good since they used to only have slow broadband connections, even compared to North America

kilarney
Sep 26th, 2005, 10:17 PM
Attention cave-dwellers, Rogers used to have 10 Mbpds/sec in 1999.... when there were only about 300 people in it's network, it then went down as more people joined the system, now we are talking about over 100,000.

Wow, how fast can you be with a 30 Mpds connection?

yes those were good times when Rogers high speed was that fast

TheBrain
Sep 26th, 2005, 10:28 PM
Big deal I'm at 5mbps and I rarely find a server that can give me that much.

Ferman
Sep 26th, 2005, 11:33 PM
What is the point if you're capped at something stupid like 100 gigs a month?

So that you can hit your quota for the month in a few hours.