
Twenty more trigger levels reached
Published: 25 February 2003 11:13 GMT
BT announced on Monday that a further 20 local exchanges have been added to its broadband rollout programme after hitting their pre-registration trigger levels.
ADSL should be available from each of the local exchanges by the end of May at the latest. In each case, sufficient local residents registered interest in getting broadband - via BT's registration scheme - to persuade the telco that it was commercially viable to upgrade the local exchange
Three exchanges - Brixworth, Goole, and Sleaford - have been given an activation date of 7 May.
Newtown, New Mills, Halstead, Thirsk, Alresford, Liphook, Horsely Fields and Galashiels should all be activated by 14 May.
North Shore, Totnes, Wargrave, Oakham, Headley Down, Southwell, Tavistock and Irvine Oldtown are all pencilled in for 21 May, with the Loose exchange of Kent bringing up the rear with an activation date of 28 May.
The highest trigger level achieved was Newtown's 450 broadband pre-registrations.
These latest 20 exchanges takes to 158 the number that have hit their trigger levels since the broadband registration scheme was launched - of which 23 are already upgraded and offering ADSL.
According to a BT Wholesale spokesman, a further 25 exchanges are within 10 percent of their trigger level and are expected to reach it "in the near future".
Would benefit from: Understanding of Microsoft .Net development environment Salary & Benefits: KCOM Group PLC offers competitive salaries and ...
Wavex offers an extensive benefits package to staff including medical and dental insurance, a company pension scheme, individual travel and training ...
NET2S is a public company floating on Euronext since 2000, our main shareholder being BT. Flexibility and adaptability to work for a rapidly growing ...
CIO Agenda 2008
The exclusive silicon.com CIO Agenda 2008 survey looks at the CIO's tech shopping list for the year, examines whether IT budgets are rising or falling and reveals what the pain points are for tech chiefs this year. Find out more in our latest special report.
Stories from the web...
Copyright ©1995-2008 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. Top of page
Natasha Lomas RIM co-CEO: Qwerty is the next big thing Q&A: Mike Lazaridis, on why smart phones - and keyboards - are the future...
Howard Greenfield Tech Futures: The talkification of the web A software switch gives browsers a voice...