Broadband revolution on hold for five years

European pundits have been warning for months that broadband may not be the universal Internet panacea forecast by government. Now the Americans -- acknowledged leaders of the broadband revolution -- are casting doubt on the technology.

A survey from US high-tech market research group Cahners In-Stat Group predicts the pace of growth of broadband in the US is about to slow. This will not come as welcome news for the UK government, which is desperate to catch up with the US and become the best place for broadband in the G7 by 2005.

According to the report -- Hooked on Dial-up: Consumer ISP Trends and Market Share -- most US households will still be relying on narrowband access in 2005. "By the year 2005 there will still be just as many households without Internet access, as those using cable modems or DSL," said In-Stat analyst Daryl Schoolar.

Around 40 percent of US homes will have a narrowband connection to the Internet, with just a quarter of the online population having broadband access via DSL or cable. About 70 percent of US homes are expected to have Internet access by 2005. Thirty percent of households, according to the research, still say they have no need or desire for any form of Net access.

Around 30 percent of broadband homes are connected via ADSL but the majority (60 percent) have cable modem services. A small proportion -- just ten percent -- receive broadband via satellite or fixed wireless.

The findings tie in with research from Jupiter MMXI which predicts a similarly grim picture in Europe. Only 30 percent of online households in the UK are expected to have a broadband connection by 2005, just 15 percent of all homes.

"Germany will be the biggest market for broadband by 2005," said Jupiter analyst Dan Stevenson. "It will have twice as many homes connected as the UK." Stevenson is amazed that the government is still convinced it can become the best broadband nation in the world by 2005.

"I am very surprised the government still stands by that statement. It just doesn't tally with the figures," he said.

For firms hoping to make money from broadband content and services, the future is bleak, Stevenson believes. "The revenue made from broadband will be fairly insignificant by 2005 and most of it will go to the providers," he said.

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Talkback 7 comments

    Well if people like telstra ar ...Anonymous -- 05/06/01

    Well if people like telstra are anything to go by they are pricing broadband out of most people range and there needs to be a cut in the cost of data via the net!

    Broadband in Australia is a jo ...Anonymous -- 09/06/01

    Broadband in Australia is a joke anyway, especially if you live in regional Australia where it's non-existent. Even the promise of DSL seems like a far of dream. Telstra are just greedy, lazy, and unwilling to make any significant effort into improving the communications infrastructure of this country. They sit on their billions of dollars of profit, but their not willing to put a cent into cable or DSL in the country areas.

    Telstra has no vision... I liv ...Anonymous -- 12/06/01

    Telstra has no vision...

    I live in a brand new suburb (Newington, the Olympic village). There are no overhead cables (= no Optus) and Telstra didn't bother to put in cable, although they were asked to. They did install cable to the prss centres and entertainment areas. Now we only have satellite or ISDN as an option, both impractical and expensive.

    Trying o get information on when they are planning to install cable or upgrade the exchange is like talking to a brick wall.

    I guess Telstra focusses on areas where Optus has access.

    15-20 Minutes Use A Day Is Ins ...Anonymous -- 30/06/01

    15-20 Minutes Use A Day Is Insulting The Techonlogy And Capabilities Of The Computer Systems And Networks We Use Today !!!!!!

    The Internet ... wonderful inv ...Marco Piampiani -- 07/07/01

    The Internet ... wonderful invention. A good comparison is actual highways. People suddenly make less use of normal roads so you force drivers to drive at 60 kph ???

    Once a medium - any medium - is introduced, things will develop to fill that medium. You would think Telstra would of had the brains to think of it in advance. Try to get a 512kbps ISDN connection and see how many 1000's it costs per month ... dialup isp's must be pissed, they could aggregate 5 adsl modems togheter and Telstra wouldnt even know what they are being used for.

    To the point now ... give the damn users MORE options for the stupid adsl plan, if 5% are "thieves" do you put the whole state in prison? The internet is pushing more data every day, webcams, flash demos, programs are growing is size, video/movie intros ... Telstra fault is being shortsighted, but they should at least come half way; what next, cut off phonecalls if they go on for more than 8 hours cause we hold up exchanges ?

    3 gigs in a month? I can pull close to that down with my 9600 modem if my math is correct. Think about it ... if the adsl line trickles 1kb/sec EITHER way, you will do over 2.5G per month.

    While the criticism of Telstra ...Anonymous -- 10/07/01

    While the criticism of Telstra is valid. Optus is even worse.
    They have created an eyesore of cables around the cities and are doing little with it. Singtel should change the whole approach. Change the cable from broad band to trickle band. Make it cheap enough to be ubiquitous, so everyone who the cable passes signs up for an annual contract. Sell cable as a low capacity always connected service for email, chat, interactive TV and low capacity browsing like weather forecast, white pages etc. Charge just $60 pa as an add on to other Optus services. Sell dial up ADSL for normal browsing in the same package with a third Optus service such as mobile or long distance. Make the money from cable in the future when you have large numbers signed up by taking a small percentage on the sales value of interactive TV.

    I'm surprised that there is no ...Anonymous -- 13/11/01

    I'm surprised that there is no cable connection in Newington but there is in Auburn, which is one of the neighbouring suburbs of Newington.

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