Posts Tagged ‘IT support Wrexham’

Gov To Review Next Generation Broadband

The government has said it will review the future of broadband internet in the UK amid calls that it should help firms pay for installing new infrastructure.
It said it wants a better understanding of how to pave the way for moving to “next generation broadband networks”.

The review will be carried out by the former chief executive of telecoms firm Cable & Wireless, Francesco Caio.

An increasing number of consumers and firms are using broadband services and new, high-capacity cables are needed.

The review has been ordered by the Department of Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform.

The business case for next generation access is weak.

According to the industry, the current telecoms infrastructure cannot cope with the increase in demand for services such as downloads of films, videos and music.

The review will report back to ministers and Chancellor Alistair Darling in the autumn.

“We need to prepare the way for the UK to adopt groundbreaking new technologies to ensure that we do not get left behind – competitively or technologically,” said Business and Competitiveness Minister Shriti Vadera.

Last April, the Broadband Stakeholder Group, a government advisory body, warned that the government had two years to find ways of boosting investment in the next generation of broadband connections.

France and Germany are already trialling broadband services with much faster download speeds than anything offered in the UK.

But installing the cables and other technology needed for very high speed broadband is extremely expensive.

An estimate by Enders Analysis put the cost of providing that service to 5.6m BT residential customers at £1.1bn.

Analysts say cost is not the only problem.

“The business case for next generation access is weak, Virgin Media already has a high speed network and Sky has a strong hold of the premium content that users might actually pay for,” said Ian Watt, head of fixed-line research at Enders Analysis.

Other analysts point out that the benefits of switching from the old, dial-up internet service to broadband was clear and customers were prepared to pay for it.

But according to Nickin Patel at Spectrum Value Partners it is “not clear” to consumers what the benefits of even greater speeds would be.

Next generation broadband plans -

France: 4 million homes connected by 2012
Germany: 50 cities connected by 2008
US: 18 million households connected by 2010
Japan: 31% already connected, 95% by 2010
UK: Review underway

Source – BBC


Vista Service Pack 1 on ice

Microsoft has suspended distribution of one of the updates required for Vista service pack one (SP1), after customers complained that their PCs wouldn’t boot up properly once KB937287 had been applied.

The servicing stack update, which was pushed out to the Windows Update site last week, is an essential part of the Vista SP1 puzzle – without it, the operating system’s full service pack can’t be installed.

Despite Microsoft’s decision to hold the update back until its engineers fix the PC reboot error, Redmond insists that Vista SP1, which was released to manufacturing on 4 February and is already available to MSDN subscribers, will still be available for general consumption in mid-March as planned.

Microsoft product manager Nick White said last week that the pre-SP1 release of two final prerequisite updates, which included KB937287 and multi-component update KB938371, were “just one more example of how we’re continuing to actively invest in improving the Windows Vista experience through Windows Update”.

BUT yesterday – following the spillage of plenty of blood in the TechNet forums – he scaled back that somewhat optimistic claim.

“So far, we’ve been able to determine that this problem only affects a small number of customers in unique circumstances,” White said. “We are working to identify possible solutions and will make the update available again shortly after we address the issue.” He did not, though, indicate exactly how many customers had actually experienced the error.

White said that any Vista customers who have been hit by the problem should either call Microsoft or use System Restore to fix the problem.

The Vista team had already admitted that it’s been wrangling with driver failure problems during installation of SP1. This latest issue raises the stakes ahead of the planned mass-release in March.

Source – The Register