Wednesday, 18 April 2012

Bt infinity increase there speed


The boost will come at no extra charge, though existing customers will need to sign up to new contracts, the company said on Wednesday. The move fulfills a promise BT made in May, when the operator said it would roughly double the download speeds and increase the upload rates provided by its fibre-to-the-cabinet (FTTC) Infinity broadband services.

Customers on BT's up-to-38Mbps Infinity package — 'Option 2' —  will get downloads of up to 76Mbps and see upload rates rise from 9.5Mbps to around 19Mbps, the company said. The upstream speed of Infinity 'Option 1' goes to a headline speed of 9.5Mbps, from its current 1.9Mbps. Downloads on Option 1 remain at up to 38Mbps.

"Delivery of the new increased speeds by BT Retail will help to achieve the government's stated ambition for the UK to have the best super-fast broadband network in Europe by 2015," BT said in a statement. "The high upstream speeds will also be of great benefit to customers who wish to upload photos, video, graphics or other rich content."

They will also contribute towards the government's ambition of delivering the best high-speed broadband network in Europe, BT added.

Super-fast rivalry

The rollout should increase BT's competitiveness with its key UK rival in super-fast broadband, Virgin Media, which already offers 100Mbps services. Like BT's Infinity, these are FTTC-based, but in Virgin's case, the final connection from the cabinet to the premises is done over co-axial cable rather than copper cable.

BT's archive: Pictures from the vault

BT also offers a 100Mbps service, delivered by full fibre-to-the-premises (FTTP), but it this is only available to "a few thousand [premises]" at the moment, the company told ZDNet UK.

Virgin got a headstart on BT in 2008, when it launched a 50Mbps cable broadband service. At the moment, it is carrying out a speed upgrade programme unsecured loans that will see the headline speeds of its packages increase to up to 120Mbps.

Previously, BT promoted the Infinity packages it is upgrading as delivering speeds of up to 40Mbps, but changed its terminology after new industry advertising guidelines came in on 1 April.

New customers, and those on non-Infinity contracts, can sign up for the faster services from Thursday at no extra cost, BT said. Existing Infinity customers can upgrade their connections to get the faster speeds, also at no extra cost, but will need to start a new bad credit loans contract, renewable under the terms of the existing contract. For example, if an Infinity customer on a 12-month contract wants to upgrade, they must start a new 12-month contract; the same is true for customers on 18-month contracts.

BT said that Infinity is already available to seven million people across the UK and that the service will reach another three million premises before the end of the year.

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