Broadband must be a spending priority

For the economic health of the nation, the government would do better to bankroll an optical fibre rollout rather than prop up profligate banks

Written by Dave Bailey

Reading Google evangelist Vint Cerf’s blog the other day, with its description of the “next-generation internet”, I wondered just where he keeps those rose-tinted spectacles, and what kind of crystal ball he uses. Certainly not one of those all-seeing, future-revealing palantirs featured in Lord of the Rings. After reaching the end of Vint’s treatise on Web 3.0, I half expected him to say, “the lion shall lay down with the lamb and we will all live happily ever after.”

One of the funnier parts of Vint’s sermon on the mount was this little gem: “A box of washing machine soap will become part of a service as internet-enabled washing machines are managed by web-based services that can configure and activate your washing machine.”

Give me a break ­ so when I load up my machine, I’ll be logging on to the Daz web site to pick the best programme to get out all the sweat and grime from my clothes after a hard day’s toil in the Computing labs? I think not.

However, next-generation applications will at some point require next-generation access and that means optical fibre. But before you start consuming those high-bandwidth applications over the “next web”, you will need to be in one of those areas due to have fibre rolled out.

So it wasn’t much of a surprise when BT announced that it would fund a £1.5bn rollout of fibre ­ but only to those lucky enough to be in the right place. It would probably add another five per cent to the value of your house ­ once the dust
settles on the current economic turbulence.

BT’s move into optical fibre rollouts was probably driven by looking over its hefty shoulder at what some of the smaller carriers such as H2O Networks and Geo were doing. H2O Networks has already rolled out fibre to Bournemouth, with Northampton and Dundee next on the list.

Surveying the state of global fibre rollouts, it looks as if the UK’s aspiration to be a leader in the information economy of the future is stuck on the hard shoulder of the information superhighway.

To address this situation, the government commissioned a report on how the UK should deal with the problem. Francesco Caio recently delivered that report, which concluded that the UK should stop short of a massive splurge of cash from central government and instead encourage the private sector to invest where it saw fit.

The problem is that the private sector wants to be sure of a decent return on investment (ROI) before it commits, and seems unconvinced that Joe Public would put their hands in their pockets to pay to have a fibre connection.

The UK’s communications regulator, Ofcom, also believes that firms ought to be allowed a decent return on risky investments and has said that it will put in place a regulatory framework to that end.

But is it that risky? Quocirca communications analyst Rob Bamforth recently said that these new services could be extremely viral. For instance, a new “super” Facebook application, perhaps allowing high-definition video calls across the network, could swamp current network capacity if take-up rocketed. BT’s future cash cow might not lie in rolling out fibre connections, but in backhauling fibre connections that it says it would offer other ISPs wanting to join in. Would Ofcom cull such an animal, or consider it a “decent return”?

A comprehensive optical fibre rollout for all UK citizens is too critical to be left to somebody whose main motive is ROI. If we can dish out billions for nuclear submarines, aircraft carriers, the Olympics and bailing out failed banks, surely something like this ­ which would have far more effect on the economic wellbeing of our country ­ needs to be funded properly. Can we afford to gamble with the future competitiveness of the UK in this way? Answers on a postcard.

reader comments

related articles

Computing comment logoCommunications

Innovation will help broadband prosper

Cost-effective solutions are the only way for Britain to receive next-generation broadband 02 Oct 2008

 

Who should pay for the rollout of next-generation broadband?

26 Sep 2008

Government should not subsidise next-gen broadband

But there is still a role to play, says Caio report 12 Sep 2008

Copper upgrade could exclude 82 per cent of Britain from high speed connections

BT's copper network upgrade could leave most of the country with speeds below 50Mbps 15 Aug 2008

BT pumps £1.5bn into high-speed broadband

Plan will deliver 100Mbit/s broadband to 10 million homes by 2012, if Ofcom creates the right regulatory framework 15 Jul 2008

Vint Cerf talks up the next-generation internet

Rosy future for Google and web users - but no mention of hackers 26 Sep 2008

Vint Cerf talks up the next-generation internet

Rosy future for Google and web users - but no mention of hackers 26 Sep 2008

Bournemouth wins bid to become UK Fibrecity

Wins bid to host ultra high-speed broadband network 07 May 2008

related whitepapers

today's top stories

Nine priorities for 2009

Computing editor Bryan Glick looks at the workplace trends, policy issues, business drivers and technological developments that are most likely to influence IT agendas in the year ahead 07 Jan 2009

Panning for data gold - a guide to information management

Progressive IT chiefs are teaming up with business leaders to provide users with compelling new ways to sift through and make sense of corporate data 06 Jan 2009

Review 2008: Top 10 most-read stories of the year

We reveal the 10 articles from 2008 that you read more than any others on Computing.co.uk during the year 02 Jan 2009

Flash teddy

A reader who didn't sign his name sent us a very useful compendium of amusing USB drives, from which we take this... 06 Jan 2009

Using business process management to thrive through the downturn

Our panel of experts discuss how to bridge the IT-business gap 06 Jan 2009

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

IT Salary Checker

Check salary here

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Should the government cut costs by scrapping major IT projects?

Should the government cut costs by scrapping major IT projects?

Tell us what you think

Previous poll results

Latest audio and video articles

Podcast imageAudio

Computing podcast - the highlights of 2008

The Computing team pick their personal favourites of the year 18 Dec 2008

Xperia X1Video

Video Review: Sony Ericsson Xperia X1

First Looks Editor Ian Williams gets hands on with the Sony Ericsson Xperia X1 12 Dec 2008

Latest in-depth articles

panning for data goldFeatures

Panning for data gold - a guide to information management

Progressive IT chiefs are teaming up with business leaders to provide users with compelling new ways to sift through and make sense of corporate data 06 Jan 2009

Microsoft-YahooAnalysis

The stories that failed to materialise in 2008

vnunet.com looks at the events that were set to unfold this year but never did, and the likelihood that they will occur in 2009 02 Jan 2009

Advertisement

Primary Navigation