Thursday 4 November 2010

Westminster eForum Building 21st century broadband

Sub-titled "paying,laying and simulating demand", this WeF meeting today went over much of the common ground on "superfast broadband"- things do move forward but not exactly in leaps and bounds.

I'll be writing more detailed reviews of each session over the next couple of days, but to give an overview, here is my summary

"Same old barriers" - Robert Sullivan, Broadband Delivery UK: a classic civil servant session: we're reviewing what "best broadband in Europe means" ("When I use a word,' Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, `it means just what I choose it to mean); a strategy paper will be out "soon"; we must have a dialogue about all this. There were some real points too: eg backhaul is an issue.

"Delivering next generation infrastructure" - Liv Garfield, BT. Impressive roll-call of statistics, a sound grasp of reality, and no bullshit. But no solution to final third.

"Making rural broadband a reality": Charles Trotman, Country Land and Business Assocaition; "our members own half of Britain", "The Duke of Westminster's estate has not-spots in it" - perhaps the Duke could cough up a contribution to rural broadband himself !
Malcolm Corbett INCA; "patchwork quilt of initiatives" - INCA is stitching together (not stitching up, I trust)
Jonathan Freeman, Arqiva - surprise, a common radio network would be a good thing
Mark Falcon, Three - surprise,surprise, Three do a lot of mobile broadband.

"100Mbps Britain", Duncan Higgins, Virgin Media
Fast broadband is selling. VM broadband is fastest and most accurately advertised

NGA and 100Mbps demand
Martin Scottt, Analysys Mason: demand comes from multiple uses of known technology (eg HD, P2P), then from increased cloud computing and then who knows (Rumsfeld "unkhown unknowns")
Adrian Crook, Fibrecity: customers buying 100Mbps - offered on a "suck it and see" basis
Colin Browne, Consumer Panel: very anxious that the superfast broadband debate doesn't eclipse the 2Mbps Universal Service Commitment.
Antony Walker, BSG: customers view headline speeds as a proxy for quality of experience; industry needs to understand demand levels for business cases and network dinmensioning; public policy should not be driven just be headline speeds, but by opportunities for innovation and improved productivity

Delivering and laying the 21st century network: Ronan Dunne, Telefonica O2 UK.
Glossy presentation and corporate speak (eg "O2Learn") got in the way of a real message, but clearly there is an investment challenge, a need to revise business modela and a concern about inclusion.

"paying for the laying"
Tim Johnson, Point Topic: £530m not enough (no evidence though)
Andrew Riseley, Berwin Leighton Paisner: Australian Government is investing £26bn and structurally separating Telstra - but will it happen and will it work ?
Simon Loe, Alcatel-Lucent: understated presentation given all they are doing, but highlighted a key issue of how to capture benefits of eg TeleHealth within the business case.
Aidan Paul, Vtesse: usual complaint about ratings system and "fibre tax" - doesn't mean he's wrong though.

Watch this space for more over the coming days.

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