andrewducker: (kitty)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2005-09-27 07:17 pm

The incipient digitisation of everything

10 years ago I had a 28.8 kilobit modem connecting me to the internet, and I was charged by the minute for my connection (plus a £10 a month subscription fee).  I was doing pretty well, the internet wasn't widely known by that point and most people didn't have any connection at all.  This, of course, was in addition to the £10 monthly charge for my phone line (with call costs that increased if I wanted to phone somewhere more than 5 miles from where I lived).

Sometime in the next 30 days I will have 10Megabit broadband, and I will be paying around £35 a month in total for it.  I don't have a phone-line any more - I use Voice over IP instead, which costs only £6.99 and gives me vast amounts of free calls to anywhere in the country, and incredibly cheap calls to most of  the world.  Another supplier has just announced 24MBit broadband for only £24 a month.

All of which leaves me wondering if we're starting to hit the limits of how much I care about broadband.  I can already download music faster than I can listen to it.  I'll shortly be able to download video faster than I can watch it.  I don't need to download entire libraries of congress or Linux installs every ten minutes.  My online gaming is now largely dependent on my reflexes rather than how long it takes the signal to get to the server and back (the final barrier being the speed of light itself, unlikely to be shattered in the near future).

I'm so used to bandwidth being a problem I pretty much failed to notice when it stopped being one (about a year ago, when I moved to 2MBit downstream - and the only reason I got that was that I needed the 384kbit upstream to stop BitTorrent knocking the phone out).  I'm sure the 10MBit connection will make a bit of a difference, but we're now reaching the same kind of areas as Microsoft and Google competing over whether users should have 1Gig or 2Gig for their email storage - it just doesn't affect me.

I'm sure that some day it will again - when I need to upload my entire personality to my backup servers under the Siberian tundra, I'll complain that it takes nearly 30 seconds, and I really need an upgrade.  But until that point I think I can consider it a dead subject for me.

[identity profile] aitkendrum.livejournal.com 2005-09-27 07:15 pm (UTC)(link)
I got to 1 MB downstream and at that point bandwidth worries became pointless, The only issue has been downloading too many things on Limewire and then Pisica accessing the router from another machine.

Wanadoo now do 2MB as standard but charge you the sum of £20.00 to upgrade and do I really need it?

Now 10MB, wow, do you get go faster stripes and chrome on the router?

[identity profile] mirukux.livejournal.com 2005-09-27 07:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Wanadoo now do 2MB as standard but charge you the sum of £20.00 to upgrade and do I really need it?

that's bleedin' cheeky. when bt wholesale lowered the price of 2Mb they offered service providers the chance to upgrade their customers for £5 a pop. most isps including bt yahoo/business broadband (who i work for) and pipex (my own isp) absorbed the costs and upgraded users for free.

[identity profile] aitkendrum.livejournal.com 2005-09-27 07:22 pm (UTC)(link)
New customers get 2MB as standard but existing ones get the 20.00 charge.

Yes it is heartless as almost everyone else I know gets upgrades free!

the 12 month contract ends soon si I am changing provider. Not sure who but one without any download caps or excessive charges :)

[identity profile] bibliofile.livejournal.com 2005-09-28 07:33 am (UTC)(link)
If you threaten to switch providers, are they likely to waive the £20?

[identity profile] a-pawson.livejournal.com 2005-09-27 08:32 pm (UTC)(link)
It is a bit when plusnet do a 2Mb/s connection for £15 a month, and that comes with unlimited usage.

[identity profile] lilitufire.livejournal.com 2005-09-27 11:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Useful data point - they'll waive that if you say you're going to another provider.