US Loses More Ground In Global Broadband Race

May 29, 2009

The United States is the world’s largest broadband market.

But the country lost considerable ground last year in the average broadband speeds its residents receive.

And the despite its affluence, the U.S. remains far from the top of the list of developed countries in the number of broadband subscribers per 100 inhabitants. With 26.7 broadband users per 100 residents, the U.S. is 15th and trails many Western European nations along with Korea and Canada. Denmark leads the world with 37.2 subscribers per 100 people.

The survey is interesting fodder for the debate that has sprung up over President Obama’s planned broadband spending initiative. With some of the leading nations having received government support, the analysis from the European based Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development points to their advantage.

The U.S. remains the world’s largest broadband market with 80 million subscribers, or 30 percent of those in the developed countries the OECD surveys.

But in 2007, it was 13th in the world in terms of the speeds its commercial providers offer users. Last year it slipped to 19th.

The average download speed available in the U.S. is 9.6 Mbps, or almost a tenth of what is offered in Japan, where the average speed is 92.8 Mbps. Korea, which like Japan uses a lot of optical fiber, provides an average speed of 80.8 Mbps, and countries such as France (51 Mbps), Finland (19.2 Mbps) and Netherlands (18.1 Mbps) also best the states.

The U.S. didn’t lose ground last year in broadband per capita. But that points to an interesting observation that should influence government policy makers as they allocate money to extend broadband into rural areas.

Perhaps some of the money should be used lifts speeds in communities that already have broadband since that is where the nation continues to lose ground.

The US is 19th in the world in average broadband speeds, according to th OECD

The US is 19th in the world in average broadband speeds, according to the OECD


Korea Looks To Boost Broadband Speeds To 1 Gbps

February 2, 2009

Korean regulators are looking at extending that country’s lead in broadband by boosting connection speeds to 1 Gbps in 2012.

Korean broadband connections are already a world-leading 100 Mbps

Korean broadband connections are already a world-leading 100 Mbps

Already Korea has some of the world’s fastest broadband speeds with links of 100 Mbps, rivaling Japan and well ahead of the U.S., which has fallen behind many developed countries during the Bush Administration.

The Korean Communications Commission wants to increase wired connections while also improving wireless broadband speeds by a factor of 10 to 10 Mbps, according to a post on the GigaOM blog and a story in Korea’s JoongAng Daily. The government estimates the two initiatives will cost $24.6 billion over five years and create 120,000 new jobs.

Private telecom companies are expected to come up with the lion’s share of the build out with government paying only a small share.

Government planners claim the faster speeds will make high-definition television signals up to 16 times clearer and enable interactive TV services, such as e-commerce and home schooling.

The plan also calls for digital TV coverage to reach 96 percent of the country by 2012, up from 87 percent today.

More than 94 percent of Korean households presently have access to high-speed Internet connections.


Movies On The Internet: Warner To Release Video-On-Demand Movies Ahead Of DVD In Korea (Where Networks Are Fast)

September 30, 2008
Warner Bros

Warner Bros

In a sign of things to come, a major Hollywood movie studio decided Tuesday the Internet is a better place to distribute movies than DVD.

Warner Bros. said its video-on-demand releases would be available two weeks ahead of DVDs. Of course, this is in Korea, where networks are many times faster than in the pokey U.S.

(U.S. network speeds have lost ground to many developed nations during the 8 years of the Bush Administration. But this is another story.)

Typically movies hit the theater before rental shops, DVDs and video-on-demand.

The studio said it would kick off a test in coming weeks. “Korea is the ideal market for us to expand our digital distribution strategy,” said Thomas Gewecke, president of digital distribution. More than 94 percent of Korean households have broadband.


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