The week in your words: Broadband, £250 cables and Vodafone
Posted on 13 Jun 2008 at 17:59
In a week that saw more dithering on next-gen broadband, a firm plug a £250 audio cable and Vodafone get a slap on the wrist for its advertising, we take a look back to see what our readers have made of it all.
Britain "should wait for next-gen broadband"
The week began with a government advisory board offering a masterclass in fence sitting, hedge betting and general dithering by suggesting that although the benefits to the UK economy of next-gen broadband could be huge, telecos would be wise not to bother investing just yet. Sleep on it, give it a couple of years, hope it all works out for the best - that kind of thing. Feeding our readers these sorts of stories is a bit like shooing a kitten into a nest of vipers.
"Broadband in UK = knitting with spaghetti," began Mr Flynn, setting us off in fine fashion, and teeing Bobbdobbs up nicely.
"So the introduction of next-gen broadband will bring massive benefits to the UK economy but we're not going to have it because the cost is too much now, but they shouldn't wait too long otherwise we'll miss out? The UK a first-world country with a second-rate broadband service run by third-rate politicians making fourth-rate decisions."
SwissMac, saw his cynicism and raised him some scorn: "How has Britain become a country that has ceased to believe in investing for the future? Is it any wonder that Britain is falling behind steadily in international comparisons of education, training, crime, competitiveness, health, infrastructure, public transport and more? Oh I forgot, so long as we can still go off to foreign wars what happens at home doesn't matter, so long as the multinationals are making a fortune."
And over to gavomatic57 for some whimsy: "I wonder if there was a similar report a few years ago saying we should wait before investing in the rail network, the NHS or the road network."
The £250 Ethernet cable
Speaking of ridiculous investment, who fancies paying £250 for a cable? Apparently it's for the audio enthusiast with the bulging wallet and empty head.
"I'd like to see the costing for a 100m run of this," notes timark_uk. "This must be some top-grade copper cabling used for them to even think about justifying this cost."
Top grade? At this price we'd expect it to be made of dragon's teeth and be delivered to your door with a butler who'll wash it in baby tears everyday.
"A lot of people are, technologically speaking, complete and utter morons and just assume the more you pay the better it is," says gullyg. "I frequently see people who are very clever but seem to have no sense with computers at all. You would have thought that people like this would be able to absorb the information and make an 'informed' decision but a lot of them seem not to at all, you tell them what to buy and they hand over their credit card. Not that I'm jealous that they can afford to just drop into a shop and buy a £2000 laptop on a whim."
We can't afford to buy dinner on a whim, imagine how jealous we are. Nonetheless paulzolo clearly thought there might be one of two "audio enthusiasts" just mad enough to go for this. IN fact, he knows one.
"I know someone who listens to wires. No - seriously - he goes into hi-fi shops with his kit, sets up and tries different kinds of cabling. A year or so later, he'll repeat - hence the cabling I have. He gave me the stuff he was replacing. Can't complain. Saved me a trip to B&Q."
advertisement
- Need a bit of extra Christmas cash? Grass up your boss, says BSA
- Photoshop Mobile on Android review: first look
- ATI Radeon HD 5970: 42% more expensive in the UK
- Office 2010 Beta – 32-bit or 64-bit – The Choice is Clear
- Why Britain's watchdogs have fewer teeth than goldfish
- Tabbed documents: how to make Office 2010 great
- Outlook 2010 People Pane – does it spell death to Xobni
- Microsoft Outlook 2010 screenshots
- Co-Authoring in Word 2010 and SharePoint Foundation 2010
- Microsoft Outlook 2010 screenshots: Backstage view
- ZoneAlarm Internet Security Suite
- Webroot Internet Security Essentials
- Trend Micro Internet Security
- PC Tools Internet Security 2009
- Panda Internet Security 2009
- Norton Internet Security 2009
- Kaspersky Internet Security 2009
- F-Secure Internet Security 2009
- AVG Internet Security 8
- BullGuard Internet Security 8.5
- SMC ADSL2 Barricade-N Pro
advertisement
Printed from www.pcpro.co.uk




