Skip to navigation
   
Mark Tennent's Blog
Broadband endowment

By Mark Tennent in Reader

Posted in Internet on January 9, 2009 at 1:29 pm

Permalink | Author Profile

When we got our mortgage some years ago, Mike, the chap arranging it, told us about endowment mortgages. He drew charts to show how good they could be, by paying for the house and leaving a pot in the bank. Mike gave us the documentation, for us to sign alongside the warning it was not guaranteed there would be enough money to pay the mortgage at the end of the term. We elected to get a repayment mortgage instead.

Come forward a few years to see people complaining because they were also told about wonderful returns from endowment mortgages and chose to buy one. They had signed to say they understood that the final amount depended on the financial markets, with just as much chance of a shortfall as a windfall at the end of the term. As the last recession hit and with endowment mortgages running extremely short, the government decided we would all bail them out by saying that the policies were “mis-sold”.

The same thing is happening with broadband. Millions of customers, according to Ofcom the telephones regulator, are being ripped-off because they get less than half the broadband speed they pay for. Speeds are at their lowest during peak times, which is between 5pm and 6pm on Sundays for some strange reason. In rural areas, throughput is likely to be 15% lower than in urban areas. Like endowment mortgages, why did some Ofcom jobsworth think this research showed anything we didn’t know already?

The small print
Broadband supplier’s contracts state clearly that they will not guarantee line speed and most will have a fall-back position for those unhappy with throughput. For many situations where an 8MB line produces an unreliable speed, a 2MB link will give a consistent, almost maximum figure, at a lower cost to the subscriber.

When one signs-up for broadband there is an initial check on the line to show its theoretical maximum. With telephone line based broadband, it depends on distance from exchange and the quality of lines inside and outside the home. Add another extension or fax, or even plug into the wrong port in the wall socket and connection speed can drop significantly.

Different software used by broadband suppliers can also affect line speed. We are lucky to have almost the full set of unbundled services available at our local exchange. Yet we also find that BT’s 8MB Max services, albeit bought via ISPs such as Aquiss, give consistently higher speeds than the other suppliers’ 8MB links through the same local loop. From what we can make out, BT’s Max software checks line speeds regularly and adjusts it up and down whilst other suppliers use fixed ‘profiles’ which can provide a slower throughput in return for reliability.

Our BT service improved even more this week when BT switched our ISP to IPStream Connect instead of IPStream Central Pipes. It could be even better if BT were able to charge more for letting other broadband suppliers to use BT’s lines, then invest in ethernet service to the street cabinet. With the government and opposition parties complaining about Britain’s outdated Internet services, BT also needs to get back any investment it makes in a fibre optic network or it won’t start to build one. It is Ofcom who are holding this development back by not allowing BT scope in charges for access to the proposed £1.5 billion upgrade.

For most users, broadband speeds are acceptably fast already. Even a 2MB link can go faster than much data is transmitted. It is only the rise in bandwidth-hogging for TV and movie downloads that put a great strain on BT’s copper network. The TV companies already have their own monopoly methods of digital transmission via RF and cable, with satellite coming on stream as well. If they are swamping broadband services surely they too should be paying towards improving the delivery methods?

12345
Rated: 20% (1 votes)
Loading ... Loading ...

Previous Post | Next Post

 
 
Comments
This article has no comments yet.

Make a comment

* required

* required

We stop spam using reCaptcha.
Type the words below and click Submit Comment.

   
Tag cloud

Nano Time zones Honfleur OpenCL The 88 1Password wifi Macromedia Maggie Thatcher FourTrack Orange encryption Service menu Simon Pinkerton French Resistance insurance cellphone Mike Spindler HP FontDoctor Cocoa Spamhaus Steve Linford Spam CAN-SPAM Logmein Ignition Dell Lawrence Dudley Motorola Windows XP Adobe Flash 'Flash Cookies' Macromedia Hotpoint Steve Jobs anarchie Logmein for the iPhone Cisco QuarkXPress Media Player broadband speed iPod Civinfo HSBC Mighty Mouse Logmein Coffee break French CyTV Lucidcake 'Andreas Junghans' Apple Mac Mini LaserWriter British Telecom Coding Monkeys remote control pxl SmartScale iChat proxy server manager BBC iPlayer Telefonica Ofcom Honda Civic iPhone BST phpBB Quark EST Adobe 1802 Mac OS X Services Dell Studio Hybrid Elgato EyeTV3 Elgato CYTV Andreas Junghans Bonjour Gauloise Garmin Moondrop to Gascony SoundSource Moho Books Jonathan Ives Linksys Lotus Notes France Telecom entertainment industry O2 Suitcase Fusion FileMaker WordPress iPlayer Downloader 32- or 64- bit Kernel Startup Mode Selector Jim Kidwell Michael Mann Jamie Oliver BT Central Pipes Mike Markkola Dr Who SETI PC Tools iAntiVirus MacWorld Expo Insider Software Mosaic BT vBulletin Anarchy Apple GMT Optiplex FTP BT Connect compression Mac OS X AppleTV Rogue Amoeba Phil Schiller MacWorld magazine Cheltenham and Gloucester MacBook IBM SimplyRAR Claris HomePage ADSL Carbonized Port Map Growl Safari 4 uplink pontum SpeedMail Call of Duty satnav Back to My Mac Lewis Hamilton Bacchus Windows 7 Acrobat ClamXav Extensis Helen Mirren Genuine Fractals Napster Rick Stein Safari-tweaks Freehand Apple Newton Bellhop veronica Andrew Tomazos Apple Macintosh App Store 20CN Entanet Andrew Potts paperless bills Time Capsule 18185.co.uk softwear TV and Video Fetch Gestapo ADSL2+ Ron Wayne CS Suite Lotus portforward Zune gopher CAPTCHA unilities Aquiss Audio Books for Free Service Scrubber iPad Tobias Meyerhoff Panic Inc 21CN Mac OS X 10.6 PDF Western Digital MyBook Pro Parexcel WordService Smart Guides Transmit Fatboy iPod Xendai Firewire SuperDuper Many Tricks software iTunes Linotype FontExplorer Hamlet TNT Snow Leopard Apple Portable Phototshop spy satellite images Mac Pro Q2ID Adobe PageMill Public Enemies Muscadet Broadband Max Linotype FontExplorer Pro Apple iPhone EDS TomTom Government atvFlash Joan of Arc Seagate Barracudas FontAgent Pro Netgear CRB checks CoPilot Live font manager Siemens onOne Software Apple TV Apple Cube Kate Beckinsale EyeTV Kira Knightley Leopard Hat Full of Sky Vidahost iPlayer 'Library of Congress' 'digital images' 'Image Engineering' 'Matthew Brady' photography 'Samuel Morse' MacBook Air CalcService iPad Mini Markzware Gennaro Contaldo CoPilot broadband web browsers Suitcase Fusion 2 Apple iMac MarkWahlberg MacPro Gil Amelio
Advertisement
Advertisement