BT promises truly universal broadband

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BT is planning to transform its UK telecommunications infrastructure into a pure IP-based network by 2009, allowing customers to get instant broadband access anywhere in the country over a range of devices. The scheme will see BT gradually abandon its existing ATM and PSTN voice network.

If the 21st Century Network project, as BT calls it, is a success, the telco will be able to deliver voice and data services over a network supporting Internet Protocol and Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS). This network will make a significantly greater use of fibre-optic connections than today. In some cases fibre will reach as far as the end-user's premises, superseding today's legacy copper lines.

"This is a decisive move from narrowband to broadband, and from PSTN to broadband," said Paul Reynolds, chief executive of BT Wholesale, at a press conference at the BT Centre in London on Wednesday.

"This is the most radical strategy of a telco business you will see anywhere in the world. It's fundamentally based on broadband everywhere," Reynolds added, who admitted that BT's existing network is not capable of coping with the predicted growth in broadband data services. He added: "We will have a single network running multiple services, not multiple networks running multiple services in a complicated way."

BT plans to begin mass migration from PSTN to IP in 2007. It is starting with a voice over IP trial involving 1,500 customers in Cambridge and Woolwich this year.

Analysts have suggested that voice over IP could make a massive hole in the voice revenues enjoyed by telcos such as BT. BT, though, is playing down this risk. "Voice over IP is an opportunity, not a threat," said Matt Bross, BT's chief technology officer.

A second trial will investigate fibre-to-the-home, providing telephone and broadband services over fibre to a further 1,500 people.

Building the 21st Century Network will take up most of BT's £3bn annual budget for capital expenditure between 2004 and 2009. Once the project is complete, high-speed data services should be universally available across the UK, over both fixed and wireless links. BT calls this access the "broadband dial tone", comparing it to the buzzing noise a fixed-line telephone makes to show that it is functioning. "With the broadband dial tone, you will be able to plug any IP-based device into the network and it will immediately recognise that the network is up and ready," Reynolds explained.

Talkback

I think BT should be applauded for taking the plunge into an all IP based network, where as all its competitors are scred to build a PSTN network as it is

via Facebook 25 September, 2004 01:37
Reply

So if I read this correctly, BT is aiming to switch it's systems over to VoIP.
Funny how at present they are doing all they can to force customers to stay on their current PSTN in order to have broadband, even with a separate company?
I wonder what the OTA and the "Local Loop Unbundling" people are making of this?
www.vonage.co.uk just set up in the UK this year, I want to switch to them but cannot switch off my BT line as it is forced on me in order to receive broadband from another company.
Of the exchanges that have benefitted from LLU, ISPs are simply offering PSTN phone service instead of BT - what about broadband with no phone service?
There are plenty of VoIP services already out there that can be used right now.
The other factor is that if I accessed broadband in any other way I could have no phone service and use VoIP today. As it happens ADSL is the only means available to rural Scotland. I don't expect the local exchange here to ever get around to LLU either. BT needs carving up, this 21st century network will only strengthen their monopoly.

via Facebook 12 March, 2005 03:41
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