Monthly Archive for October, 2011

What’s actually going on?


It still surprises me that after 18 months there seems to be confusion in the twittersphere about what is actually happening in terms of broadband deployment and the goal of the government’s policy.

There have been conversations which seem to jump from a position that to every home is the only real solution to suggesting they are being short-changed by some mythical with nothing in between.

This is far from a simple binary mechanism – anyone who suggests “Fibre good, everything else bad” is at best badly misinformed. The debate is far too important to be stifled by this kind of mantra – it has to move on.

One of the great shifts in thinking within the industry has been to consider multiple solutions – gone are the days when ADSL won simply because it was the best solution to reach the widest audience. Now the best technology from a basket of possible solutions is becoming the norm.

So this is my attempt to make it all a little clearer – hopefully.

There are essentially two different government broadband policies:

  1. Basic broadband – To ensure everyone has access to at least 2 Mbps
  2. NGA broadband  - To make the UK the best superfast broadband market in Europe

Both policies are currently working towards 2015, and both are being delivered by BDUK. But, while the delivery of NGA broadband may have some impact on the basic broadband policy, they are essentially two different things – basic broadband is not NGA and vice versa! This is a simple undeniable fact.

The two EU Black/Grey/White models

The grid shows how these two different measures – NGA and basic broadband – are likely to play out in the UK. The purple area is where the commercial developments will focus, and the red is where the Government’s policy will have its key impact – the black boarder around the NGA White/Basic White is where the rural community broadband fund will focus.

NGA Broadband

The definitions of NGA and superfast broadband are many and varied but essentially the Government’s goal is to deliver fibre to the cabinet to 90% of the population as a base reference offer – that is not the same as actually delivering FttC to 90%, only that this is the base upon which other solutions will be measured.

It means that a company wanting to bid into the framework will need to offer at least FttC but will be able to deliver FttP or anything else they can successfully argue delivers at least as much as FttC.

The EU currently views NGA as a fibre-based fixed-line solution and specifically excludes satellite and wireless solutions; it is highly likely that some microwave technologies will be included in future definitions if they deliver specific characteristics but unlicensed and light licensed solutions like WiFi are unlikely to be ever considered as NGA even if they deliver high speeds.

Any suggestion that satellite or BT’s BET are NGA is simply wrong, and I’ve never heard anyone in either BT or the satellite industry claim otherwise! Just ignore anyone who suggests they are, they simply aren’t credible.

The main NGA contenders today are FttC/VDSL and FttP in both point-2-point/Ethernet or PON variants.

Changes to NGA broadband in the UK

The two bar charts above attempt to show the impact of the Government’s policy on NGA broadband. Today there are commercial pledges to deliver a competitive physical infrastructure to at least 50% of the country, predominantly in the areas where Virgin Media are updating their cable network and BT is delivering their Infinity service.

In addition, BT has pledged to reach two-thirds of the country with an open-access wholesale service, making a further 17% Grey in the EU’s language. This leaves the “final third” where traditional commercial approaches begin to fail.

The Government’s aim is to extend the Grey area from 17% of the population to 40%, with only 10% of the population unlikely to see NGA services in the medium term.

Why only Grey? I find it difficult to see a case where the Government would invest in a competing NGA platform where one already exists but it is at least a theoretical possibility if the existing NGA service doesn’t deliver a whole service and is vertically integrated. As I’ve written before, if you run an NGA network and you don’t offer wholesale competition then you are carrying a risk that it is at least legal for the state to subsidise a competitor even if its poor value for public funds and probably unlikely to happen.

The focus of the £20m rural community broadband fund is on this final 10%, where communities are prepared to become more actively involved in a more ambitious plan.

Basic Broadband

Today its possible to argue that anything above 512 kbps might be classed as broadband; the Government is redefining that as 2 Mbps and that it should be as near universal as practicable.

Changes to basic broadband in the UK

The bar charts above show how today there are in fact two degrees of White basic broadband – there are those that currently receive a services above 2 Mbps but have no choice of provider, and those below 2 Mbps regardless of how much competition there may be at the telephone exchange. The Government’s policy is to remove the top White section, where services are less than 2 Mbps.

Some of this will be solved by the NGA plans – there are locations where the cabinet, as well as the premises, is a long way from the exchange. Evidence is already beginning to appear where BT is deploying Infinity in Hertfordshire with some homes now in an NGA Grey area when they were previously in a notspot – it is also the focus of organisations like Rutland Telecom.

Where the NGA policy won’t solve the notspot problem, the Government will intervene to ensure all premises are reasonably able to receive at least 2 Mbps.

In communities where the 2 Mbps offer doesn’t meet their ambition, the £20m rural community broadband fund may be able to help turn a basic broadband offer into a viable NGA plan where the community will exists.

Blackberry, Apple, outages, control and collaboration


Its been interesting to watch from afar the and stories this week.

When my last contract came up for renewal I looked around, asked the opinions of those around me and after long deliberation I still opted to renew with another Android phone.

Android isn’t as fast of slick as an iPhone but its nearly there; the battery life of most Android phones doesn’t match any Blackberry model; and the Market doesn’t offer as many apps as Apple (although its rare I can’t find what I need).

However, the consensus of opinion was clear – if I bought into the world view of RIM or Apple, that I liked their way of doing things, then Blackberry and iPhone handsets were great – in fact arguably better than anything else on the market. BUT if I didn’t, and I wanted to tailor the device to the way I work, choose what features I had and how they worked then neither was a good choice.

At the time, the Adobe Flash row seemed epitomise it all for me. hated Flash. He’s perfectly entitled to that opinion but the balance of the world didn’t agree – and purely from a pragmatic perspective I didn’t agree but neither you nor I had any influence over Apple so Flash wasn’t available to iPhone customers.

I’d grown to love Swype – an alternative keyboard for both Android and iPhone users BUT I’d have to jailbreak my new iPhone to use it while I just install it on any Android phone. Why should I have to break my warranty and risk frying my new phone simply to use a keyboard I think makes the default choice of the developer looked dated, pedestrian and inefficient?

I have grown to hate iTunes for the same reasons and although we have a bunch of iPods about the place, we no longer buy anything from iTunes, keeping our music library separate and treating iTunes as the required tools for managing the device and not my world view of music.

Its very different on Android – I’ve no idea what thinks of Flash and, while I might be interested in his views as an industry leader, the fact that neither he or Google impose that view on me was enough. I could install Swype at the touch of a button without getting special permission, and Amazon is happy to integrate their MP3 market with my phone without taking control of everything or treating me as thief.

This week Blackberry customers had a massive outage – I know its not breaking news but it is worth spending five minutes thinking about why it happened.

Blackberry customers buy into the soup-to-nuts solution offered, owned, and controlled by RIM. The software, client and server, is developed, owned, hosted and controlled by RIM.

On the surface that’s appealing – a single point of contact delivering a complete solution that delivers my mobile world. But its also a reliance on a single corporate world view, and total reliance on their processes and controls. This week they failed, probably a very small process fault somewhere but it stopped all Blackberry customers dead in their tracks.

If the same had happened on Android, what would the impact have been?

Well I use Twitter and Facebook for instant messaging so no impact there; I use a mix of IMAP and gmail so there is a chance that I might not be able to get some of my mail but as the IMAP client isn’t owned, developed or controlled by Google it would have to be a catastrophic failure for all my mail to disappear. My contacts are naturally synced between Google, Plaxo and LinkedIn as well as Twitter, Flikr, Facebook and so on, so I could still contact people.

The chances of a significant service outage on all Android phones because a Google server died is almost inconceivable.

But, I hear you say, what if the bugs were introduced by an Android update?

Even here the Android approach has safeguards. Android development is a more collaborative approach – its not as open as say, Apache or LibreOffice, but it is somewhat open. As a result the raw development work can draw on many more eyes.

Then, because Google don’t control the Android handset market, any update to the core system will also need to be tested by a large market of device manufacturers, each with their own processes and controls, each with their own reputation on the line.

And finally, when the updates begin to roll, not all manufacturers will deploy at the same time and at the same rate so significant bugs will be discovered long before they become a problem and will have impacted a relatively small number of customers.

And then I have my own little safeguard. I’m an early adopter by nature but when it comes to single points of failure I try to resist installing anything on the day it was released – a hint to all those on Twitter bemoaning Apple this week.

Today, has released version 11.10, the Oneiric Ocelot – I got the pop-up asking me to upgrade – my fingers hovered over the mouse, itching to click “OK” – but I resisted, so far, and only just. I won’t be tweeting today using phrases that include “” and “#FFS”.

I’m sure its been widely and thoroughly tested, that’s its passed through a globally huge alpha and beta programme of diverse and demanding users, I’m confident its worth the upgrade but I still want to be second on this one.

Whether they buy into the whole movement or not (I do), I think the executives of both RIM and Apple could do well to read and understand two books:

  • Eric Raymond’s “The Cathedral & the Bazaar” and
  • “Open Sources: Voices from the Open Source Revolution”

Buy into the political aspects of Opensource if you chose, release your code to your global customers if you like, but please don’t ignore the wider lessons of collaboration and sharing – it does far more than simply make your customers your collaborators, and therefore more loyal and supportive, it introduces safeguards and resilience.

I doubt friends of mine will be willing to dust off their old Nokia bricks a second time because you had another self-inflicted mishap.

Following Tweeters


The world never stops amazing me, and this time (again) its the QGis community with a new Timeline tool to map geo-coded information over time – very cool but what to do with it?

With a very basic understanding of the Titter API and scripts openly available (remember, I’m no programmer) I captured a morning’s worth of Twitter data and plotted the geo-coded tweets as a time-lapse sequence.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PWMkT5y0uhw

I’ll admit its not the most interesting video ever but it does show the power of opensource tools. Not a penny was spent on any of the tools and the base maps; all were Opensource or open-data.

 

 



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