BT to offer ultra-fast 330Mbps broadband

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BT to offer ultra-fast 330Mbps broadband

BT will also start doubling residential broadband speeds to up-to-80Mbps this spring, earlier than expected


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BT's ultra-fast direct to the premises fibre-optic broadband promises speeds of up to 330Mbps. Graphic: Alamy



BT plans to roll out "ultra-fast" broadband to homes and businesses next year, offering one of the fastest speeds in Europe and the world.

The telecoms giant said on Friday that more than 7m premises now have access to fibre-based broadband, and it expects to start doubling broadband speeds from up-to-40 Mbps (megabits per second) to up-to-80 Mbps this spring, earlier than planned. Two thirds of homes and offices supplied by BT will benefit from these faster speeds by the end of 2014.

The majority of BT's fibre connection is to so-called "cabinets" or junction boxes at the end of the road, with a copper line running to the office or house.

The company is also about to launch an up-to-330 Mbps ultra-fast Fibre to the Premises (FTTP) service on demand. After running a successful trial in St Agnes in Cornwall, it will conduct further trials this summer and intends to roll out direct fibre-optic connections to homes and businesses in the spring of 2013. BT believes ultra-fast broadband will appeal to small and medium sized businesses that need to send and receive large amounts of data. It could also benefit local authorities, a BT spokesman said.

It is unclear at the moment how much ultra-fast broadband would cost. "Some internet service providers may choose to pass on the charge whereas others might absorb it in return for a long-term contract. It may also be the case that local authorities wish to assist with installation costs if they deem FTTP to be a priority," the spokesman said.

BT Openreach chief executive Olivia Garfield said: "FTTP on demand is a significant development for Broadband Britain. Essentially, it could make our fastest speeds available wherever we deploy fibre. This will be welcome news for small businesses who may wish to benefit from the competitive advantage that such speeds provide.

"We are also doubling the speed of our standard fibre broadband this spring giving internet service providers the chance to offer speeds of up to 80Mbps. This will ensure that residential customers have world-class speeds for all their family's needs."

The Cornwall trial showed that additional fibre can be run on demand to a home or office in a Fibre to the Cabinet (FTTC) enabled area. Previously FTTP speeds were not possible in FTTC enabled areas but BT has come up with a solution that takes advantage of the fibre it has already deployed between the exchange and the street cabinet.

The news came as BT, Britain's biggest broadband retailer with over 6 million customers, reported an 18% rise in adjusted profits before tax to £628m between October and December, its third quarter. Revenues were down 5% to £4.8bn, however.




Julia Kollewe
guardian.co.uk, Friday 3 February 2012 09.35 GMT
© 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved

BT to offer ultra-fast 330Mbps broadband | Business | guardian.co.uk
 
just wish bt would fix the areas with slow net first some people in the uk have under a meg and some still on dial up
i for one stay in a big city and still have to put up with speeds less than 4 meg. f... y.. bt
 
It's a never ending cat & mouse game between Virgin & BT.

But most of the time Virgin can deliver what it promises where as it's not much use having an upto 330 meg BT line if all you can download at is 10meg. :)

Virgin may be a crap company to deal with in person, but their network and stability and speed is second to non in my opinion, and I've been with them over 15 years.
 
whats the point in bt upping the speed that high? who honestly pays for top tier internet just for email and browsing? people want the speed for p2p and newsgroups and bt horribly limit downloads on both :(
 
That's a hell of a lot of porn!!

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Did you all miss the " revenues were down 5% to £4.8bn, however". £4.8bn ,why is my broadband so expensive from BT. Profiteering glutoness ba*****ds. So wow you didn't make as much profit as last year boohoo. I'm only ranting cos BTinfinity isn't set for my area till 2013.

That evil women Thatcher promised that privatisation meant better competition in pricing. Crock of S*!%.
 
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