Tag Archives: Super fast broadband

Consultation on bringing Broadband to the masses

THE GOVERNMENT has launched a consultation on bringing new broadband services to 90% of households in the UK by 2017. To partly finance this, a Next Generation Fund will be created by imposing a charge of 50p per month on all fixed telephone lines in the country.

Launching the consultation, Secretary of State, Lord Mandelson said: “This investment is about bringing the future of broadband to areas of the country that would otherwise miss out. We cannot underestimate the opportunities this will bring for homes and businesses which is why we are taking action to make sure everyone benefits.”

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Volunteers needed to help bring broadband to isolated RNLI outpost at Spurn Point

Humber LifeboatA local campaign aims to bring ultrafast broadband to one of the most remote lifeboat stations in the country.

The Humber Lifeboat  Station is situated at the tip of Spurn Point. The site is a perfect location for the life-saving service to be based and hundreds of lives have been saved since it was first established there in 1810.

The station is home to the crew and their families – a small population of only 29 people. Living at the station can be quite difficult if you consider that the nearest shops are 8 miles away. Most of the services that we all take for granted are generally not available at the site and this includes broadband.

Now Fibrestream have announced plans to bring a fibre optic link to the base to help the families keep in touch with the outside world.

However volunteers are needed to lend a hand in digging a two foot trench to bury the cables. Fibrestream have issued a “shout” for people to come down to Spurn, pick up a shovel and help the crew to dig their own fibre.

If people want to lend a hand then they are asked to get in touch see Fibrestream Digging Deep for RNLI.

Other information:

RNLI (Royal National Lifeboat Institution) Website.

About Spurn Point.

Local sources of help and information on volunteering: Hull Volunteer Centre and East Riding Voluntary Action Services.

£156m Regeneration of Orchard Park in Hull – Superfast Broadband Opportunities

Redi-Fibre

The Hull Daily Mail has reported that Orchard Park in Hull will benefit from £156 million to re-develop the area. As somebody who originally hails from the estate then this is interesting news – albeit with concern that decent properties will be culled and existing communities face uncertainty and upheaval.

The redevelopment will include the demolition of 1,040 existing properties and the building of 1,700 new homes.

This development takes place in the context of other projects happening in the area including a new £14m health care centre opening later this year, and proposed new £38m Academy school on Queen Elizabeth Park to replace the existing Sir Henry Cooper secondary school. It is also hoped that any redevelopment will lead to a revamp of the estate’s shopping centre which has been a long-standing need in the area.

The Orchard Park Estate was originally planned in the late 1930′s. The Hull Daily Mail commented at the time that living on Orchard Park would be like living in a new sort of world with its own parks, cinema and bomb-proof shelters!

The Estate actually got constructed in the early 1960′s and may not have included the hoped for cinema and shelters, but was built with the most modern television cable system available at that time already installed into its infrastructure.

Rediffusion was a Hull based firm that pioneered the concept of cable television. Each new home built on Orchard Park had television cables already pre-installed. The local school Sir Leo Schultz High was wired up and even had its own TV studio.

In light of this historical link that Orchard Park shares with new technology, then there is, once again, a marvellous opportunity to build the new estate with regard to, and to cater for, the most modern systems currently available?

Fibrestream have announced exciting opportunities to bring super-fast broadband to the city and, in my humble opinion, perhaps needs to be a partner in this venture.

There is something extremely satisfying and equally justifiable in bringing modern digital inclusion technology to an area of the city that has for so long been associated with social exclusion!?

Items of interest: Remembering Rediffusion

100mbps Broadband to be brought to Thornton estate in Hull

The Daddy of all Broadband!

Super-fast Broadband of 100mb per second download speed – “the Daddy of all Broadband” – is set to be brought to the Great Thornton estate in Hull according to the Fibrestream Blog.

Fibre Optic CableIn a unique partnership involving Fibrestream and the Goodwin Development Trust then up to 400 flats on the estate will benefit from the new internet speeds provided by modern fibre-optic cable with linked telephone and High Definition TV services.

Hull City Council appears to have supported the project and has made a commitment to seek common ground with the East Riding Council on connectivity issues.

Fibrestream is not just leading on the technical aspects, but is also actively exploring new ways in which communities can have a real stake in the new technology through developing new mutual ownership models.

We wait to see the full details of the project to emerge but this is a truly exciting development in the city with ramifications across the East Riding.

Related information: The Future of Broadband BBC Technology.

Digital Britain – who pays?

Occasional rant from the Hedon Blog about all things digital:

digital-britain-logo1

The Digital Britain Summit took place last Friday 17 April 2009 at the British Library. This conference was designed to discuss the emerging ‘digital revolution’ and to ensure that Britain is at the front of technological innovation. A key aim is to secure universal broadband access for all.

As the Digital Britain Forum blog reveals, the one day event could be followed online in a variety of ways i.e. Twitter updates, streaming video and photos on Flickr.

But how many people actually did follow the day’s proceedings? I suspect, for a significant majority of the population, the discussion has gone completely over their heads with ‘Twitter’ and ‘Flickr’ being largely unknown, because – whether you have a broadband connection or not – digital exclusion is currently the norm!

Unfortunately, I was doing much more mundane things on Friday and so missed the news about the event. I will search through the material, however, because I have been a long-time supporter of bringing the benefits of digital technology to ‘ordinary’ Joe and Joesephine public – not just as beneficiaries but as participants in the digital revolution.

However, one question that I feel has remained unanswered in all the geek-world hype, particularly in regard to super-fast broadband access for all: Who will pay for it?

South Korea is often cited by those who extol the virtues of super fast broadband – apparently they have brought 100mb speeds to most of the population (whether they want it or not – equal opportunity to benefit is guaranteed) – however, that nation benefited from Government intervention to make that happen. Unfortunately there is no sign from Friday’s conference that the ‘credit crunched’ UK Government is going to embark upon such massive national public investment.

So who will lead Britain into the ‘super’ digital age? BT (British Telecom)? Virgin Media? More to the point – which of these giants is willing to invest in the infrastructure to make it happen?

We also have a microsm of national events locally with the addition of ‘local player’ Kingston Communications (Karoo Broadband).

As I stated earlier… a key question remains unanswered: Who will pay to bring new fibre-to-the-home super-fast broadband whether on a national level, or here locally in the East Riding?

Perhaps the solution is bigger than the individual different commercial and political interests. We need to come to a community consensus about such things!? And perhaps this is the case locally too!?

Local consensus and partnership to achieve the common good? Hmm… sounds pretty radical to me!!