BT Bonds Broadband To Fill Gaps In Digital Britain

BT is testing technology which uses “bonding” to extend the range and speed of broadband, to help deliver the government’s Digital Britain target of 2Mbps for every home in Britain.

BT’s Broadband Enabling Technology (BET) is a bid to put more people online without resorting to wireless to fill in the gaps, an idea that was put forward in the government’s original Digital Britain report earlier this year, and which BT has criticised, arguing that wireless may be able to deliver 2Mbps, but will not meet the actual load requirements of universal broadband.

“We’re really excited about the potential of BET to extend broadband to the remaining not-spots,” said John Small, managing director of service delivery at BT Openreach. BET – already used on business lines, extends the range of broadband to12km, beyond the normal 5km range of ADSL.

It uses SHDSL (Single-Pair High-speed Digital Subscriber Line) to deliver 1Mbps in both directions, but “bonds” two of the copper pairs in the phone cable together to create a total of 2Mbps.

Sharedband, a company set up to deliver broadband bonding, told eWEEK in May that the technology could be an answer to serving many of Britain’s “not-spots”. The company is already providing shared broadband technology to BT Wholesale

BT Openreach is already testing BET in Inverness and Dingwall, both in Scotland, and plans to spread this to eight more UK sites, including Twyford in Berkshire, Badsey in Worcestershire, Llanfyllin in Powys, Leyland in Lancashire, Ponteland in Northumberland, Wigton in Cumbria, Horsham in West Sussex and Wymondham in Norfolk.

Although BT has argued that wired broadband is more reliable and robust than wireless – being unaffected by weather, and also cheaper-per-Mbps than 3G base stations, other options have been proposed, including Wi-Fi, which can be boosted to cover long distances, and is not subject to licence fees.

Peter Judge

Peter Judge has been involved with tech B2B publishing in the UK for many years, working at Ziff-Davis, ZDNet, IDG and Reed. His main interests are networking security, mobility and cloud

View Comments

  • community ISPs have been bonding lines since 2005 to extend their reach in the absence of any BT initiatives to help rural notspots. It isn't new. BT have only decided to do it because notspots have been proved to exist, they took no notice of us until they smelled a government pot of money for the final third. ie the third of digitalbritain that still can't get 'up to 2 meg'. If government fall for this trick they are well suckered. In rural areas there aren't enough single lines for a broadband connection let alone two bonded together. So BT will use the money to lay more copper instead of laying fibre. Fibre is the future. Copper is the past. There is no point in patching up the obsolete victorian phone network in order to pay fatcat salaries and shareholders who are milking it instead of investing in next gen access. We are doomed to stay in the slow lane if the BET plans come to fruition. Korea is already delivering 1000meg through fibre for a tenner a month. Fibre is fantastic. it is the eNdGAme.

    See http://5tth.blogspot.com/2009/09/bt-and-big-lie.html

  • Bonding is a perfect fit for businesses looking for more speed and capacity, but with reliability and traffic prioritisation built in. Our bonding solutions using UBM (unified Bandwidth Manager) can deliver fast and reliable broadband to homes and businesses throughout the UK today!
    http://www.xrio.com or sales@xrio.com

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