Brett Posted May 30, 2016 Report Posted May 30, 2016 Homes and businesses in the remote rural Northumberland (England) village of Coanwood, which is home to around 200 people, have become the latest to benefit from BT’s hybrid Microwave (radio) and VDSL based ‘up to’ 80Mbps Wireless-to-the-Cabinet(WTTC) broadband technology. http://www.ispreview.co.uk/index.php/2016/05/northumberland-village-gets-80mbps-wireless-cabinet-broadband.html 2
webtrekker Posted May 30, 2016 Report Posted May 30, 2016 Interesting article Brett. There's hope for the yokels yet then!
Brett Posted May 30, 2016 Author Report Posted May 30, 2016 Not sure how they'll cope in poor weather but definitely a sensible way of enabling rural areas to have faster connections. It still bemuses me that we are building housing estates without FTTP as standard. Lad I work with had just bought a brand new house in Blyth, so new they're still building others around him and he got no more than 2MB LLU. It's definitely one of the things that people take into account now when deciding on residency and I have a reliance for work so living in the arse end of nowhere is alot more difficult she you need a connection for work.
webtrekker Posted September 10, 2017 Report Posted September 10, 2017 (edited) With regard to wireless broadband serving a remote community, I'd just like to say that we have a static caravan on a fairly local coastal site that is covered by BT Wifinity broadband. I can use pc, phone or tablet in my caravan and can easily stream movies via an Amazon Firestick plugged in the back of the tv. With regard to home broadband, I suffered a good few years with a 1.4Mbs connection (Stakeford, from the dreaded Ashington exchange) and, even after supposedly upgrading to fibre, the 5Mbps connection I was given soon dropped back down to 1.4Mbps again. However, a couple of months ago, after contacting my provider (EE) and being told it was out of their hands, I contacted a very helpful bloke at NCC who told me, very revealingly that, although Openreach had been paid to supply superfast broadband to our cabinet, in some cases they hadn't made the required connections! Now sorted and, after contacting EE again, I now have 50Mbps (at the router) Fibre+ broadband. YAAAAY!!! The moral is: don't believe everything you are told in the broadband world! Edited September 10, 2017 by webtrekker 1
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