
Fat pipe prices on a diet
Published: 1 February 2008 14:50 GMT
Broadband Britain has never had it so good with fat pipes cheaper and faster than ever.
Average broadband costs have dropped 36 per cent in the last four years, according to price comparison site uSwitch.
Back in 2004, customers could expect to pay an average of £27 per month for a less-than-fat 0.5Mbps connection. Now the majority have signed up to packages with speeds of up to 8Mbps at an average monthly cost of just £17.
The list from A to Z
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A is for ADSL
B is for BT
C is for Cable & Wireless
D is for Dial-up
E is for Education
F is for Fibre
G is for Goonhilly
H is for HSDPA
I is for In-flight
J is for Janet
K is for Kingston
L is for Landlines
M is for Murdoch
N is for Next generation
O is for Ofcom
P is for Power lines
Q is for Quad-play
R is for Remote working
S is for Satellite phones
T is for Trains
U is for Unbundling
V is for VoIP
W is for WiMax
X is for Xbox
Y is for YouTube
Z is for Zombies
The most expensive standalone 8Mbps package is currently offered by Orange at £20 per month, while the cheapest is Plusnet's bargain basement tenner-a-month ticket.
When it comes to connection speeds, cable broadband provider Virgin Media's planned 50Mbps rollout - set to be available to some nine million homes by the end of the year - is keeping it at the head of the field (its current top speed offering is 20Mbps).
But other companies are also looking at boosting the UK's fat pipes by laying fibre cabling in sewers - which could realise connection speeds of up to 100Mbps.
Nearly 15 million households in the UK are spending more than £3bn on their broadband, according to uSwitch.
Broadband analyst Point Topic estimates broadband penetration will hit 19 million households by 2012 - or 74 per cent of the country.
The analyst said the UK's telecoms landscape is set for "enormous change", with the rollout of BT's 21CN all-IP next-gen network this year.
21CN, which is due to reach almost 10 million Brits by the end of 2008 provided it doesn't slip behind schedule, will give a boost to broadband services by enabling cheaper and more flexible offerings, said Point Topic.
A recent O2 Broadband survey found slow connection speeds top the list of frustrations for the UK's fat pipe consumers.
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