That's almost terrifying.
We don't even have fibre where I live and probably never will, so this is but a dream anyway :(
https://www.aston.ac.uk/latest-news/...rage-broadband
That's almost terrifying.
My quick calculation says this is 358 terabytes per second.
Good grief.
So clever my foot fell off.
It makes me chuckle that they feel 69mbits/sec is the national average! We get 4mbits/sec if we are lucky.
Are your neighbours with different providers getting the same sort of speed ?
We used Orange in France (equivalent to BT) and got 2mbps. Then I thought why am I paying a premium price for a crap service and switched to their cheaper offshoot (Sosh - similar to Plusnet). It saved us about £13 a month and the speed quadrupled.
Last edited by catflem; 9th April 2024 at 13:58.
301 terabits according to the article, which in a sense would be 37.625 terabytes of stuff going down the wire every second, but - not all of that would be "payload" or actual transferred data, some of it is protocol overheads Staggering nonetheless. Another consideration is the speed of the hardware attached to the network, I have to wonder how much data they sent across. Even the fastest regular commercial computer memory has data rates measured in GB (not TB) per second.
Good correction. Maths was never my strong point.
Still absolutely staggering.
So clever my foot fell off.
The broadband speeds at our new place are pretty poor but if you really need fast broadband, Starlink is available everywhere in the UK now and offers warp-speed compared to the cable providers.
BT in their wisdom stopped rolling our fibre to the property at our next door neighbours, so we pay the same price as them for fibre to the cabinet (10 to 15 MBPS). No sign of them restarting fibre rollout anytime soon, unless the road clubs together and pays for it!!!
Looked at Starlink but by-god is it expensive. Don't have the £75 per month to pay for that (but owning a Tesla I've already lined Elon's pockets :-( )
strange. Starlink here is 40€ a month + 250€ for the kit. I’m only getting 40MBps on 4G (I guess trottled by the supplier) - so tempted by Starlink. Any real world data on speeds please? Scrub that - found a site https://www.pcmag.com/news/starlink-...s-2023-vs-2022
Last edited by MartynJC (UK); 9th April 2024 at 16:35.
“ Ford... you're turning into a penguin. Stop it.” HHGTTG
By coincidence I have just finished setting up the new cablemodem sent to me by Virgin as part of my new contract. Coaxial to the 'modem, then gigabit ethernet to the Mesh hub. 5GHz and a gigabit ethernet connection to my desktop, and I am getting 900Mbps download and 100Mbps upload. Overkill even for WFH, but if I had let my old contract lapse I would end up paying £40pm more for half the speed...
I have never had a copper (or aluminium) telephone line to the house, so no chance to compare, or get it upgraded to fibre.
End to end telecommunications are only as fast as the end devices that use them. So this sort of speed is pointless in every day use. Having said that, if time division or statistical division multiplexing can be developed to operate at such speeds then use as intersite or interexchange would be more useful - likely that is the way it will ultimately go.
Best Regards - Peter
I'd hate to be with you when you're on your own.
I also held my nose and bit the bullet and had Starlink installed. I needed something much better than what Sky could provide.
Equipment is currently half price and pretty much plug and play unless you want to instal the dish on your roof. We added an extra cable to go to the neighbours and they have an access point and a separate network and therefore we split the £75 monthly cost which brings it down to just a tenner more than Sky! The speeds are great but can be bettered by good fibre. Top speed to date was over 300Mbps but currently around 110Mbps. Weather and load can affect speeds.
Also the Starlink WiFi router doesn’t have a great range and so using a TP Link Deco 75e Mesh system to push the signal fully around the house!
Yes, it's as good as it gets via cooper cable. We have a fibre option, installed, in the loosest possible way, by one company, they just dig up anything and everything as they have the contract apparently, shame I missed them digging up my front boundary..
but they then have a complete monopoly once the initial sweetener is finished, but I'm reluctant to use that.
But, everything works. Very occasionally the TV is slow but it's very rare. We use another place with slightly higher speeds (via a mobile router) which again runs various devices and rarely struggles. Sometimes I wonder about these "speeds"..
I get 70Mbs and don’t see why I need anything faster yet.
For those struggling with broadband speeds, there are a couple of threads on here about using 4G or 5G mobile phone services. This, of course, requires a decent signal on at least one network at your home. It's been my solution for around 8 years in two properties and using Vodafone 5G currently. Having just done a speed test I'm getting 264Mbps down and 47Mbps up, and all for £22 a month.
My ffriend managed this with 3 for over a year, but got kicked off under their "fair usage" policy.
It was a few years ago so they are probably more relaxed about it now.
The routers at work have 4G failover cards in them, but the signal is so poor it's a pretty hopeless situation and easier to take your laptop to the cafe.
500Mbps down and 500Mbps up, equilalent of 15 pounds/month.
We just upgraded from 120/40 copper for free as they asked us 2x if we would do it and then the 3rd time we said no they said well everyone else your way is going onto fiber so can we just upgrade you and keep the price the same - we then said "yes please".
Mad really as our two offices are both on 300/300 (for 20 people and 10 people).
CityFibre is in our area..installed today with Toob - 900meg for £25 a month