Sep
28
2007
0

Welcome Toby !

02:19 friday morning and Toby made his entrance. Mum & junior both doing very well. big sister doting on him already

Written by Scott Brown in: Family |
Sep
28
2007
0

DVD over Broadband ?

 

Blogged from ThinkBroadband.

 

Will downloading DVD quality films replace rental?

With the rise of postal DVD services like lovefilm.com and others, one wonders how high street rental shops are doing. Japan is going one step further and one broadband provider (KDDI) is offering its customers the option to download a DVD image for ¥500 (£2.15), which can then be burnt to a DVD-R for viewing on DVD compatible devices. Read more on the service at www.tech.co.uk, and for an English version of the KDDI website use this link.

A full standard DVD is around 8GB in size since lots of films now using double layer DVD discs. This can take a long time to download and a guide for times for a full 8GB dual layer DVD can be seen here:

  • 56K dialup, more than 14 days
  • 0.5Mbps broadband, 36 hours
  • 2Mbps broadband, 9 hours
  • 5Mbps broadband, 3 hour 36 minutes
  • 10Mbps broadband, 1 hour 50 minutes
  • 20Mbps broadband, 56 minutes
  • 50Mbps broadband, 24 minutes
  • 100Mbps broadband, 12 minutes

Of course in the real world while it is fairly easy to run a 0.5Mbps connection flat out for some hours, contention between other users on a network becomes more noticeable as the bottleneck that was the last mile of connectivity is removed. This means people with faster connections are likely to see the speeds move up and down a lot over the course of a large download. An aspect not visibly present in Japanese services are download limits, which if a service like this was to run in the UK would very often prove to be insufficient.

One big problem for any commercial service looking to offer large downloads is the ability for providers to grow their networks to cope with the loads without large increases in price. Since KDDI is only offering this service to its own broadband customers, it is likely these costs are factored into the download price, which while looking cheap to us in the UK is actually double the cost for renting a movie for a week in Japan.

KDDI already provides a fibre based service carrying a symmetric 100Mbps broadband service as well as telephone and digital TV. The promotional price is ¥5040 (£22) with the 30 channel TV service costing an additional £10 a month.

The price of the KDDI service which is cheaper than ADSL shows that the fibre based services are having to compete on price, the suggestion being that speed is not the largest deciding factor when choosing a service. This raises the big question of who would dare to speculate on a large commercial roll-out of fibre to the home services like this in the UK, if the market is too price sensitive.

Written by Scott Brown in: Broadband, Technology |
Sep
24
2007
0

Arghhh…..Killer wabbit

clipped from biboz.net

conejito salvaje

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Written by Scott Brown in: Funnies |
Sep
19
2007
0

Barf

Not sure if someone off camera’s just told him a good joke, if he sneezed or he did indeed chuck his cookies…damn funny thing to do with your helmet on though. Like sneezing in a spacesuit ?!

clipped from biboz.net

vomitar

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Written by Scott Brown in: Funnies |
Sep
19
2007
0

British Gov’t to intervene

It’s been suggested by Mr. Timms (Head geek if ever I saw one!) that there may be some mileage in the Gov’t intervening in the British broadband market and make 21CN a reality sooner rather than later.Currently BT the encumbent (recumbent shurely ! - Ed) primary wholesale Telco in the UK is the only group looking at the next generation of BB delivery however this is largely still over the now laughably slow Copper POTS network. They are mainly looking at ADSL2+ running at higher frequencies with upgraded kit in the exchanges and at end-of-the-street cabinets. Still doesn’t get us into the market in competitive terms with the rest of the BB enabled world, and take up will again be driven by population density and market forces, so the majority of your non-urban dwellers (myself included) can go whistle.

I ain’t holding my breath but it’s a small nod in the right direction.

clipped from news.bbc.co.uk
Stephen Timms, Minister for Competitiveness, ordered a summit to look at the role of government in providing next-generation broadband.

Stephen Timms, Minister for Competitiveness

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Written by Scott Brown in: Broadband, Government, Technology |

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