Internet Connectivity Outside of the United States
Ant writes "A Yahoo! news story says that nearly 60 publications in countries bear the PC World name, or are associated with it in some way. The editors at several of them were asked to report how their readers get online. Not surprisingly, the report indicates that many countries are substantially ahead of the United States in online access." From the article: "For example, in the United Kingdom, you can buy DSL service with a download speed of up to 24 megabits per second. In Denmark, some people have fiber-optic connections as fast as 100 mbps. And in Italy and Spain, broadband service is cheap, and dial-up service is free (except for the cost of the local call). Still, many countries have their own connection quirks ..."
As any libertarian will tell you, government regulation and meddling in a market can only hurt consumers.
It's for this reason that the United States, with fewer government controls has a superior and chepaer broadband, telecoms network...oh what? Crap.
Turns out for some things regulation is better - look at how a poor country like Cuba has better healthcare (with lower infant mortality rates) than the wealthy US.
Oh, and I note they don't have sweden on the list where (last I heard) you could get 100Mbps for something like 30 euros/month in a large city.
There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
You mean Americans don't have to bring an extra long network cord from home for internet access abroad?! :P
But whenever I try and test my connection it comes up between 1 ~ 5 mbps. Did you get those numbers from the providers or the people? And, most importantly, is this something that consumers experience world-wide or are Cox & Comcast raping me by the side of the road in a desert?
Yes you can get 24mbit but very few people have access to that. Many are lucky to get 1Mb and many on MaxDSL are having terrible problems trying to keep their 4-6Mb connection stable. Those on cable are better served with 10Mbit being pretty cheap.
Almost everyone I know is on broadband but none are on 24mbit and most on 1Mb.
I want a list of atrocities done in your name - Recoil
So Does Canada, But I'm still paying $30/month (cdn) for 10mbps down, 2.5mbps up ADSL.
There was a story either on TWiT or Digg recently that noted that the US providors had been given tax breaks and so on to the tune of several hundreds of billions to ensure they provided fast internet access for all. They had failed to meet all the requirements and deadlines but naturally got to keep the money.
I want a list of atrocities done in your name - Recoil
I like the "upto" 24mbps in the UK, reality is that only a small percentage of inner cities are currently enabled for that sort of speed. Dont get me wrong it's coming to the sticks but I live in a field and I want it NOW!!
Here, if you drive 20 minutes, you're two blocks from where you started.
You can get ADSL2+ in [some parts of] Denmark. You can get 10 Mbps/512 Kbps for 299 DKK (~52 US$) or 20 Mbps/512 Kbps for 499 DKK (~86 US$), and that includes free telephony...
I'm "stuck" with what my employer wants to pay for, which for the moment is 4096 Kbps/512 Kbps, which is not bad at all. I'd love to get 20 Mbps down though ;)
Any technology distinguishable from magic, is insufficiently advanced.
Nothing about France's DSL in TFA.
That's strange, because France has one of the best European DSL, if not the best.
For 30 euros per month, you get the maximum of what your line can technically support (up to 24Mbits if you are near the ISP equipment), with lots of services included.
That's with the Freebox, a DSL modem made by Proxad, based on Linux. Among the free services, you have:
- unlimited net access (no quota)
- unlimited phone calls to land lines in France, and many lines in countries (it costs zero to call a mobile phone in USA for example)
- tv access if you are in a "degrouped" area (sorry I don't have the english term)
That's what we call "triple play offer". And they are now migrating to "quadriple pay offers", the new boxes are wifi, and a wifi-gsm phone can be bought.
Pretty cool, no ? I wonder why this is not in the article.
Yann
I live in the US. I have 24 Mbps service at home (unless it has gotten faster again while I haven't been looking). My city also has free wireless access, but I don't even bother.
You have to keep in mind that when people say "in Denmark" or "in the UK", that doesn't mean universal availability, it means that in some places, you can get that. You also have to keep in mind that nations like Denmark or the UK have a larger middle class than the US as percentage of the population, so that, across the whole population, they may be better off, but the actual group for whom things like Internet access matters, may be served about equally in both places.
Do we have to have these comparisons thrown at us all the time? IE The United States vs The World, round N?
I'd love to have a better connection here in the States. But what does that have to do with the bandwidth in the UK? Am I supposed to use this information in some valuable way?
I just want to brag a little... :)
At my condo we have gigabit fiber to the house, and 100MBit to the apartments. All apartments can buy either 10Mbit (for 210 SEK, 22.46, or $28.62), or 100Mbit (for 399 SEK, 42.68, or $54.38). And those speeds aren't "up to", they are guaranteed.
/ The Arrow
"How lovely you are. So lovely in my straightjacket..." - Nny
78% of the US population lives in urban areas (2003)
f
42% lives in urban areas with more than 1 million people (2005)
compared to Italy (67%/20%), Spain (78%/23%) and Norway (76%/?), it doesn't look like there's an inherent disadvantage.
source: http://devdata.worldbank.org/wdipdfs/table3_10.pd
Be wary of any facts that confirm your opinion.
many countries are substantially ahead of the United States in online access.
The USA were the first ones with access to the Internet. Every other country got their infrastructure built later. When the more recent infrastructures were built, they used the latest technologies available, which are obviously better than the early ones. So the result of this study is not surprising in my opinion.
Some countries who are building their Internet infrastructure these days are going straight to wireless. I'm thinking of African countries here. What is at stake for them is not performance, but cost. It's much cheaper to plant a few antennas than pull miles and miles of cable to reach each house. The USA is a large country, so they would have done the same probably, had the technology been available at the time.
I moved recently from the US to Spain, and I can't begin to tell how bad broadband providers are in this country compared to the US. It is WAY MORE EXPENSIVE (in absolute terms, but even more when you factor in the fact that here salaries are smaller), WAY LESS RELIABLE and the customer service is so BAD that congress had to pass a special law to deal with these very specific companies. For example, in most of the cases they charge you when you make a customer service call beyond (and I'm not talking about the cost of the local phone call, I mean that they actually make money out of this, even if the problem is on their side). And there is more, much more...
I have not read the article, but as far as Spain is concerned, I can tell it sucks.
Not the government.
Welcome to Paris, France, where the national Telco is testing FTTH (fiber to the Home) @ 2,5 GB down and 1,2 GB up...
4 ,39362365,00.htm
Cost is announced @ 70 Euro / month, no caps...
http://www.zdnet.fr/actualites/internet/0,3902077
Right now I have a 24 Mb DSL for 30 Euro/month. I regularly max up the connection.
In September the fiber offer will be available in my district, I will have to upgrade to PCI-x or something and get a 2 GB fiber card for the router. 4Gb cards are still too expensive, and that network is not scheduled for 4,5 GB internet till 2010.
Sad, no, when the most recent and speedy computer in the room is your router...
Well, I'm ready : Bring on the Pain !!!
I might even re-think about providing a small web-hosting solution to friends and customers...
Da5id
It takes 40+ muscles to frown, but only four to extend your arm and bitchslap the motherfucker
Lets just take urban locations then, you know, places with lots of apartment blocks. Places where the population density is similar to the more dense parts of Scandinavia. Think of NYC New Jersey and LA. The lines already exist, and American telecom companies are already producing all the hardware (routers/switches) required.
Its still stuck at 1997 prices.
"Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you." -Nim Chimpsky
Don't loose focus, governments are solely graded on their Infant Mortality Rate. Here is how the World is graded - https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/rank order/2091rank.html
...
I'm paying $40 american for 3G/768M. What gives with that?
Fucking... I'm moving to Canada.
110100 1101000 1101000 1100110 0 1101111 1101000 1100011 1
The problem isn't having a small or a large country, but how many (potential) customers you have per square km, right?
:-(
:-)
, 8.073578&spn=0.282005,0.553436&om=1
I.e. in a small country with a mall and distributed population, the average cost per custumer will be much higher than in the US.
Here in Norway it is friday afternoon and I'm about to drive up to our small mountain cabin for the weekend. At this cabin the local power company (Rauland Kraft) _by default_ pulls along an optic fibre (or at least a pvc tube where they can subsequently blow in the fiber) on every new installation.
The result is that I have IPTV over a 300 Mbit/s connection, but as of now I can only use up to 10/10 (up/down) Mbit for regular Internet traffic.
If you want to check your maps or GoogleEarth, you'll notice that Rauland is located in the Vinje community on the central mountain plateau of southern Norway: This is one of the least densely populated areas in the entire country, but we still get fiber to every home & cabin.
http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8&z=11&ll=59.698935
Terje
"almost all programming can be viewed as an exercise in caching"
The market in Sweden is not that regulated and we could tell you that it's the former State Monopoly that holdning the brakes. They are refusing access to telephone stations, they are keeping the prices up, they are the last to implement just about anything (cable, dsl, wireless, fibre, GSM, 3G, and so forth). They are more expensive and offer less flexible terms. The only redeeming factor is that they are large, and have much larger coverage of the population.. They still have monopoly to "the last mile" out in the less densly populated areas, and in the suburbs of the larger cities, and the adoption of broadband are considerably slower in these areas. This would seem quite strange since it's wehere the richest people live and those in the most need of fast Internet access, but it's due to the fact that independant companies doesn't have access to this market, the former Monopoly does.
However.. I must say, after RTFA that Sweden is _miles_ ahead of most countries, even our close naighbours, Denmark and Norway. I would've guessed that they would have been in front of us, but they're not. I cant say why really. We've had some pretty vocal individuals/visionaries in the late 90s who really have set the stnadard of the market an made policy. 100 Mbps for everyone is the goal. Perhaps this was a necessity?
- Henrik
- when the Shadows descend -
Free, like in freebox, is a company name. Internet access is not regulated by the french government. We certainly pay huge taxes (world's biggest tax rates more exactly...) but internet access has nothing to do with it.
It has been regulated for a long time because france telecom was owned by the government, but it was privatized something like 5 years ago. Which gave birth to a myriad of internet providers and wanabe telcos.
So it's more an exemple of free market than anything else... And it's certainly nice to see the speeds go up and the price go down, but it's also a terrible mess for consumers. You'd better make a good choice if you don't want to be tied for 1 year to a company which lacks the necessary infrastructures to handle its growns. My brother signed with "Free" 3 years ago and couldn't log more than 5 minuts per day for 3 months for example... But hopefully things seems to be settling down lately.
You think the UK or Europe is lacking in cultural diversity? wow are you misguided.
Broadband connectivity is getting cheaper in Costa Rica, where I live, because of competition between ICE (the government telecommunications monopoly) and its own subsidiary called RACSA.
Cable modem access is available by 2 private companies (Cable Tica and AMNET), using RACSA as an upstream provider, and costs $35 for 512/128, $50 for 1024/256, and $70 for 2048/256, with unlimited bandwidth. Availability is limited to higher-density areas, but some of the beaches have connectivity via cable.
ADSL is a newer option and is provided by ICE, the telco. Costs are $19 for 256/128, $25 for 512/128, $38 for 1024/512, $62 for 2048/768, $72 for 1536/768, $91 for 2048/768 and $169 for 4096/768. Availability is limited to proximity to the telco's CO, and ports, but they've installed ADSL ports throughout the country, including more rural towns and beach communities.
Just recently, RACSA launched a pilot program for WiMax in one part of the Central Valley. Costs are $29 for 512/256, $74 for 1024/512, and $244 for 2048/1024. Once this rolls out throughout the Central Valley, I hope to try this out because my house is just a little too far for cable modem or ADSL availability, but the 5-mile radius of WiMax and the great view I have will make it possible.
I've never figured out why you would want/need a teeny-tiny cel phone. But then, I don't know why you'd need a color screen or special ringtones either. My phone doesn't even flip or fold up or anything. My husband's does, but I find it less comfortable to talk on than mine. He was actually annoyed to find that the only free phones T-Mobile had available when we signed him up were fancy flip-phones with color displays, he likes mine better.
Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
I'll spell it out for you - no, no, and no.
I am in a rual area.. I'm sitting in a CO (Central Office) in a town that has maybe 850 people. I provide SIP, MGCP, ADSL/ADSL2+, soon Video, etc. We have a Metaswitch (http://www.metaswitch.com), and we use Occam gear (http://www.occamnetworks.com). We have fiber that links a bunch of local towns around here, and everywhere in between we stick little remote terminals to feed people with highspeed internet access. I can get 27mb DSL service here. My buddy that is 6km outside of town.. literally by himself on a farm, can get 7.6Mbps down.
You see, the problem in the USA is not that you have too much land, or any other excuse that you want to make up (do you guys all work for Verizon, or AT&T or something?). The problem is that your country is mainly run by a handful of LARGE CORPORATIONS that control the telco networks. They don't give a shit about rural customers because they can just concentrate on the cities. We have that same issue here in Ontario, Canada.
I work for an independent telco. We are a co-operative, so I guess I'm not comparing apples to apples. Whenever I see an area that does not have access to highspeed services, it is almost always run by BELL CANADA. Bell is the major telco for this province. They bring DSL into a small rural town, but kill it at the edge of town, so people may only be 3km from the office, but they cannot get service - this is due to load coils. Bell could replace these coils, but it costs money. Not too much money to be profitable, but too much money to care about.
When companies grow to the size of Bell Canada, everyone suffers - except the people in large areas. I challenge anyone to ask a Bell customer if they have ever run into ridiculously shitty service with Bell Canada - my experience is that 100% of the people I ask can rhyme off a horror story to me right away. The response time is horribly slow, services are expensive, and things break often. Support is a nightmare, every department is horribly unorganized and slow to respond, and there is utter conufsion when any department attempts to communicate with any other department. Orders get lost, or the wrong data gets entered - in short, the whole thing is a nightmare.
This is what I think is wrong with the state of communications in the USA. The telcos simply don't care about you rural folk, and if you had, or have an independent telco, it will was either bought, or will soon be purchased by one of the large telcos. Small town customer service will be replaced with one of a handful of national offices where you can't actually go and make a complaint. You will be kept at a distance so they can provide you with shoddy service, and not see your face in their office. People have different needs in different areas, but you won't get that service any more. They will strip down their services into bundles, which you either take, or pay through the nose for individual services. Everything will be a "1-size fits all" mentality. There are no "tailored" services for certain areas anymore.
Any other excuse that you give, in my opinion, is false. This is simply a market that is slowly being amalgamted into a stagnant industry that provides the bare minimum service to you, and nothing more, because you simply can't get service from anyone else.
You create your own reality - Leave mine to me.
Do you really need 24 or 100 mbps????? Are you really downloading that much porn that a meager old 1.5 mbps won't get the job done? I would find a figure of "X% of the population isn't' using dial-up (read as broadband)" to be much more meaningful.
"Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it." Mark Twain.
I get so tired of hearing about the high infant mortality rates in the US. The truth is hiding in the nature of the statistics, which so many people conveniently ignore.
Bottom line: the US counts premature babies that die into the infant mortality rate, while nearly every other country counts a dead baby only if it is a full-term birth. If you compare apples-to-apples, the US has one of the lowest infant mortality rates.
thats because you're female, so therefore have a handbag or equivalent to carry your big phone in.
Most men carry phones in their pockets or if you don't mind looking like a nerd, on a belt clip. hence small is convenient.
I agree with you about the flip/camera/color screen etc. Its all a redundant waste of money & battery power to me. I jsut want a basic but tiny phone. Can't get one in the US.
I'm tired of this crap saying America is behind in broadband. What is "behind"? What is "broadband"? Ya gotta give me some meat to make this a real argument. What if Americans simply don't want broadband as much as the rest of the world does? What if we have a culture that's simply different than what the rest of the world has? What if a sociologist came up with a convincing theory about how Americans are so saturated with media sources that they don't need the Internet as much as the people of other nations? It's okay, people, don't give yourself an aneurysm. If you want broadband, pay for it. Don't put your "behind" on to the rest of the nation.
If aspiration is a virtue, achievement cannot be a vice.
Has the UK changed its currency again?
Amazing how clueless online news sites are about character set issues.
"Revolutions are generally only successful when the majority of the population are grossly dissatisfied with the current government and feel the armed struggle is the only option left open to them."
That happens sometimes. Too often, it is like in the Cuba situation, where a revolution occurs because an armed faction is successful in its effort to take over and crush both the existing/previous regime AND any dissent from the populace. A similar thing happened when Lenin overthrew the democratic Russian government.
"This means that although you might have to go without the occasional little luxury, you dont have to see someone else who has more money than they know what to do with living it up"
What do you think they have NOW in Cuba? The super rich guy who has more money than he knows what to do with is living it up (aside from the fact that he is now dying). He has his picture all over the place. He's worth several billions in cash holding, but if you count his vast real estate holdings (almost all of a really huge Caribbean island), he's even much richer than Gates.
Where were you when the voynix came?
I'd say the problem is perceived demand.
I really doubt that there is anything keeping the cable providers from putting down broadband similar to Birmingham's in Philadelphia, except for cost. They're not going to do it, unless they think there's a market for it.
Let's say that a cable provider did put out a high-speed network like that: they started offering 10MB/s service or something. They'd have to recoup the cost of their infrastructure rollout somehow, so the new HS service would have to cost more than existing service.
There is a perceived risk there: if people don't value the increased speed, they might just refuse to pay the higher rates, and instead switch to come competing service which offers lower speed and is cheaper.
That's why you don't see higher-speed stuff in the U.S.; it's because too few people are asking for it. Most cable companies have several speed tiers, and the majority of people use the lowest ones. I think that it's widely held here that the first 1 to 3 Mb/s are really what sells, and then beyond that, the "average user" doesn't care a whole lot (unless they're heavy downloaders, which the networks don't like anyway).
It's impossible to blame on any one factor; obviously deregulation and the attitudes of the telco and cable companies are one thing, the vast size of the U.S. and "mass" are another, but I definitely think that you have to factor in that the demand for such services may be lower here (or are at least thought to be lower) than in other places, like Europe and Asia.
"Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
Simple economics would dictate that for the same monetary equivalent, a provider could serve more people in Europe than they could in North America.
That is incorrect. Simple economics would dictate that, for the same monetary equivelent, a provider could serve more people in the US. Why? Because you are counting Montana and Alaska in with the rest of the US. Take out the least dense 5 states, and the US has a greater density than Europe. So, NYC should be nearly free while MT would be expensive. But the DSL companies have chosen not to do it that way and are holding NYC to Montana prices and Montana speeds because they are a monopoly more interested in profit than service. They know that the government won't force the monopoly to act in a responsible manner. But, Europe has a greater history of smacking down out of control monopolies, so they act as if there was competition and provide better services. It is not now and has never been about the population density of Alaska for what the prices are in Chicago.
Learn to love Alaska
In the long, it is standards and skilled people that works together makes the difference.
My hypothesis is that you need a long-term plan in the society and in peoples minds, and the free market does not provide that. This is easier in a country with smaller and more homigenous population. Without a common target, we get stuck in local minima and suboptimal solutions with wasted human and natural resources. By free market I mean "laissez faire" with minimal rules. No, the alternative is not communism.
I think this applies to broadband connections among other things. As an example, the "free market" (Yahoo DSL) managed to send us in total three DSL modems back and forth between California and Texas when all we wanted was a change in the name of the account holder of an already working DSL plan. There was no sense what so ever about how many hours and natural resources we wasted to effectively get a name change. Why is this?
For instance, look at the cell phone systems for instance; small countries like Sweden could early agree on using GSM (before that NMT) with well defined frequencies on and all the players in the ball park followed. In the US, it wasn't long ago that one cell phone wouldn't work in another state because different frequencies and different standards were used in the different states (maybe it is still like this), and finally the US (free) market is realizing that GSM is the way to go. I believe the market does not know its own good here. How many these hours from harding people could have been used for better things? Btw, it is funny to see ads from cell-phone providers saying "we've the lowest drop rate" - I can't even remember when a call drop on me last time back home. So, why is this?
I've been living in California on and off the last 10 years and I must say that there actually not not impressed with the "free market" for optimizing technology/society. I think you have add other "rules" of the game to get where we want. I'm a little bit dual about this though, because big and skilled companies do pop up here, but I think that is also the case in other companies though here you have a kind of a magnet bringing the brands to the Bay Area. However, there are so many things that is lagging behind. For instance, the bank system, which somehow is fundamental for a free market, is hilarious and so efficient! Online banking is finally catching up here, but in the end of the day what is called online bill payment in many cases turns out to be sent as printed checks in the mail. That can not be efficient! So somehow the "free market" has created its own standard and its size is preventing it from adopting better solutions.
While writing this, I just received a scam call trying to cheat us into a free directory service using poor sound quality and asking me to confirm our address. Why is this?
Yes, I'm Swedish and yes my family had a Beta VCR for many years when my friends had VHS, so maybe that is why I'm so a-al about standards and working toward a common goal. Don't waste resources, don't be egoistic, realize that every hour counts, and good things will follow.