Tuesday, May 2, 2017

Top-10, Bottom-10 Speed Experiences on U.K. Networks Can Vary 500%

You cannot blame consumers for being a bit confused about their internet access speeds, which are, virtually always, offered “best effort,” without quality of service guarantees that provide a minimum “always available” speed.

Even on a single service provider’s network, with identical network platforms and the same amounts of resource sharing, the difference between the bottom 10 percent and top 10 percent of experienced speeds easily can reach 500 percent.

One expects that sort of variance on telco digital subscriber line access networks, where speed and distance are inversely related. Customers on shorter access lines always will tend to experience higher speeds than customers on long access lines.

The same sort of gaps also seem to exist on fiber to home networks where access line distance should not make much difference.

Those differences do not reflect “busy hour” congestion, when typical speeds on every platform will tend to dip, but only the high-low differences across a single service provider’s network.

UK Broadband Providers and Services in April 2017
(Download Speed in Mbps)
Provider
Download Speed of bottom 10%
Median Download
Mean Download
Download Speed of top 10%
Hyperoptic Gigabit
107
253.7
268.1
499
Virgin 300 Mbps
34.3
89
108.4
215.9
BT Infinity 3&4 (FTTP)
39.8
73.3
93.3
191.2
B4RN
2.7
62.8
143.7
405.7
Virgin 100 Mbps
19.5
56.3
55.5
90.9
Zen Internet up to 76 Mbps (FTTC)
27.5
55.7
53.4
73.7
TalkTalk UFO (York)
16.8
54.2
68.7
137.2
BT Infinity 2 (FTTC)
29
50.9
50.6
72.5
BT Infinity 2 (FTTP)
27.6
49.8
52.7
82.8
KCom Lightstream
27.6
49.8
52.7
82.8
AAISP (FTTC)
22.2
49.1
68.8
73.6
Virgin Media 200 Mbps
24.4
48
77.4
159.3
Hyperoptic 100 Mbps
21
47.8
50
78.2
Small/Medium providers - up to 76 Mbps (FTTC)
22.4
45.9
47.7
72.8
Gigaclear
21.1
42.4
66.5
98.8
PlusNet Fibre Extra (FTTC up to 76 Mbps)
17.5
38.9
40.1
66.1
Sky Fibre Pro up to 76 Mbps
26.6
38.5
44.2
63.7
EE Fibre Plus up to 76 Mbps
22.2
37.4
39.9
61.6
IDNet (FTTC)
14.9
37
40.5
72.9
Daisy Wholesale (FTTC)
12.9
36.6
38.3
71
SeeTheLight (IFNL - FTTH)
12.2
36.3
36.2
57.6
TalkTalk Fibre Plus up to 76 Mbps
15.1
31.7
33.5
56.3
Vodafone Broadband (FTTC)
12.8
29.5
31.6
52.4
BT Infinity 1 (FTTP)
10.8
29.3
29.1
47.6
BT Infinity 1 up to 52 Mbps (FTTC)
12.5
29.3
29.8
48.7
Eclipse (FTTC)
10.6
29
33.4
63.6
PlusNet Fibre (FTTC) up to 38 Mbps
14.1
28.3
27.1
37.1
EE Fibre (FTTC) up to 38 Mbps
10.8
26.3
24.8
36
Sky Fibre (FTTC) up to 38 Mbps
11.6
26
26.4
37.5
TalkTalk Faster Broadband (FTTC) up to 38 Mbps
12.5
25.2
25
36.9
Zen Internet (FTTC) up to 38 Mbps
7.4
22.9
22.4
36.9
Small/Medium Providers (FTTC) up to 38 Mbps
7.8
22.5
22.3
36.9
EE Mobile
3.1
21.6
28.3
59.3
Virgin 50 Mbps
2.6
21.3
24.4
52
Hyperoptic 20 Mbps
5.3
20.3
16.9
22
Vodafone Mobile
3.6
15.5
19.1
40.2
O2 WiFi
2
14.8
18.4
39.4
Quickline (Fixed Wirless)
4.3
12.6
13.3
23.9
Relish
2.1
11.4
15.3
33
O2 Mobile
2.6
11.2
15.8
34.4
Europasat (satellite)
2.5
10.5
11.1
21.3
Three Mobile
1.9
10.4
16.6
39.8
IDNet (ADSL)
2.5
7.1
8.8
16.3
KCom (ADSL)
2.2
6.6
7.4
13.2
Zen Internet (ADSL)
1
6.2
7.6
16.3
Vodafone Broadband (ADSL)
0.9
5.8
7.1
15.6
EE (ADSL)
1.1
5.8
6.9
14.9
Plusnet (ADSL)
0.9
5.8
6.9
15.1
Sky (ADSL)
1.2
5.7
7
15.1
Entanet (ADSL)
1.7
5.7
7
14.2

source: Think Broadband

Monday, May 1, 2017

SIP, IP Voice Growing at 21.5% CAGR, Frost & Sullivan Says

Session initiation protocol and IP voice market, considered as a single category, will grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 21.5 percent from 2015 to 2020, and a user base at a CAGR of 18.1 percent, according to Frost & Sullivan.

Very few telecom product markets now grow that fast. Still, as important as business voice and voice trunking are for business customers, that growth will have almost no impact on overall industry revenues, as those markets are too small to “move the needle” one way or the other.

On the other hand, it is the relative smallness of the business voice market that makes it an important product category for specialists in the industry, as the market or markets are too small for any tier-one service provider to supply, long term.

Globally, the business voice market represents about $28 billion in annual spending, for trunking, managed services and unified communications services, according to IHS Infonetics. These days, sales of business phone systems might not even reach $2 billion annually, globally.

Most specialist markets are fragmented, and the SIP trunking, IP telephony, unified communications market or markets are prime examples, especially in the hosted voice segment of the market.



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