I believe that optical fibre has been installed in the road outside our house, and now we get "offers" to switch to another provider. I would if it made sense, though others are saying - "but it'll work faster".
However we are only a hundred metres or so from the green box which brings Open Reach fibre to our neighbourhood, with a copper link the last few metres to our house.
I periodically check the performance of the networks using various speed tests, and typically it goes something like this:
Ping 40 ms [probably less than an eye blink]
Download 67-72 Mbps
Upload 16-18 Mbps.
Quite often the response times for web queries and other activities are quite long.
However, I believe that is because the remote servers are not coping with queries fast enough, and has nothing to do with the network data rates.
Am I wrong?
There are several "packages" being offered to connect direct to the new fibre system, offering high data rates, but clearly at a range of increasing prices.
Surely we could listen to several radio stations, and view several HD TV channels simultaneously with the data rates we are currently getting, and delivery of radio and TV via internet is not normally a major problem anyway.
It would be good to have faster response times, but that seems to me to have very little to do with network data rates - unless the network providers are deliberately slowing down some traffic to force us to "upgrade" to a different package. That wouldn't surprise me.
An added complication is "what companies or organisations are we dealing with?". Currently we are on EE, which I have been told is just a BT subsidiary anyway, so the services have been provided by BT OpenReach. The "new" fibre is maybe Highland Broadband, but is that a different organisation, or simply another repackaging of BT?
However we are only a hundred metres or so from the green box which brings Open Reach fibre to our neighbourhood, with a copper link the last few metres to our house.
I periodically check the performance of the networks using various speed tests, and typically it goes something like this:
Ping 40 ms [probably less than an eye blink]
Download 67-72 Mbps
Upload 16-18 Mbps.
Quite often the response times for web queries and other activities are quite long.
However, I believe that is because the remote servers are not coping with queries fast enough, and has nothing to do with the network data rates.
Am I wrong?
There are several "packages" being offered to connect direct to the new fibre system, offering high data rates, but clearly at a range of increasing prices.
Surely we could listen to several radio stations, and view several HD TV channels simultaneously with the data rates we are currently getting, and delivery of radio and TV via internet is not normally a major problem anyway.
It would be good to have faster response times, but that seems to me to have very little to do with network data rates - unless the network providers are deliberately slowing down some traffic to force us to "upgrade" to a different package. That wouldn't surprise me.
An added complication is "what companies or organisations are we dealing with?". Currently we are on EE, which I have been told is just a BT subsidiary anyway, so the services have been provided by BT OpenReach. The "new" fibre is maybe Highland Broadband, but is that a different organisation, or simply another repackaging of BT?
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