Mobile broadband only at quarter of advertised speeds
By Asavin Wattanajantra,
British mobile broadband users are not getting anywhere near the speeds that ISPs are advertising, according to a new survey.
Broadband monitoring company Epitiro said that UK mobile broadband users only received on average 24 per cent of advertised download speeds, and that the average download speed achieved was just under 1Mpbs.
The survey also claimed that web browsing was 34 per cent slower than speeds achieved with equivalent ASDL broadband services.
The results were achieved using broadband monitoring software downloaded by 1,300 UK mobile broadband users, measuring mobile broadband operators O2, 3, Orange, T-Mobile, Virgin Media and Vodafone.
Although the speeds were so much slower than what ISPs advertised, Epitiro chief executive Gavin Johns was still positive about the future of mobile broadband.
“This exhaustive study confirms the general consensus that mobile broadband services are functional and, while currently slower in practice than their fixed line competition, continually improving,” Johns said in a statement.
“That we recorded a few measurements at relatively higher speeds is confirmation that mobile broadband technology is capable of so much more,” he added.
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open office
open office is great software, and free to download. On a 3g dongle in a rural area (with no adsl due to BT market failure) it takes 47 hours to get OpenOffice downloaded.
By cyberdoyle on Friday Jun 12
Its not even half MB
Slower - its dead. You can not even watch youtube video. I think its misleading to advertise as mobile broadband. I think it should be called mobile dial up. I signed up for 3 mobile through a website http://www.domesticutilities.com and laptop is great but broadband is shit to use it i normaly go outside and use it in the car.
By mzm4u on Thursday Jul 2