Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Faster Broadband - A Distant Dream for India

"In Japan, broadband service running at 150 megabits per second (Mbps) costs $60 a month. The fastest service available now in the United States is 50 Mbps at a price of $90 to $150 a month.

In London, $9 a month buys 8 Mbps service. In New York, broadband starts at $20 per month, for 1 Mbps.

In Iceland, 83 percent of the households are connected to broadband. In the United States, the adoption rate is 59 percent.

If you take out the countries that have made significant investment in fiber optic networks — Japan, Korea and Sweden — the United States is in the middle of the pack when it comes to network speed.

The large European countries have average download speeds ranging from 3.2 Mbps in Italy to 6.4 Mbps in Germany, according to a study by the Saïd Business School at Oxford. The United States has an average speed of 5.2 Mbps. The study looked at speeds in May 2008, as measured by consumers checking their connections on a Web site called Speedtest.net.

Japan was the standout, with an average speed of 16.7 Mbps. Sweden was 8.8 Mbps. And Korea averaged 7.2 Mbps."

SRC:
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/03/10/the-broadband-gap-why-is-theirs-faster/

But in india, for the general public,the fastest broadband available is 2 Mbps connection. When will India have
broadband service running at 150 megabits per second

1 comments:

kamal said...

oru avid internet user in nyayamana kavalai..

yeah we bloggers have our own worries dont we :P