OT : Broadband Demand Not ´fast´ enough

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Templehorn
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OT : Broadband Demand Not ´fast´ enough

Post by Templehorn »

Study: Broadband demand not there
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<BR>More content needed to drive high-speed use, report says
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<BR>ASSOCIATED PRESS
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<BR>WASHINGTON, Sept. 23 — Almost all U.S. families live in areas where a high-speed Internet connection is available, but many see no compelling reason to pay extra for it, the government reports. A Commerce Department study, compiled from a variety of analyst surveys, cites a need for more music, movies and games on the Internet in order to make broadband connections more popular.
<BR> “NEW APPLICATIONS and services that consumers want and businesses need will provide the tipping point for broadband demand and usage,” says the report from the department’s Office of Technology Policy.
<BR> Only 10 percent of U.S. households subscribe to high-speed access, lower than the rate in Taiwan, South Korea, Hong Kong or Canada. About half of American families have some type of Internet access at home.
<BR> Several technology lobbying groups have endorsed different approaches to a national broadband strategy to encourage further use of technology that would allow even faster connections than current high-speed home networks.
<BR> The report partially agrees with that assertion. “Today’s broadband will be tomorrow’s traffic jam,” it says, but as a whole it stresses a need to increase demand rather than to build more and faster networks.
<BR> The report credits the defunct file-trading service Napster for promoting the purchase of high-speed access as well as PCs, CD-ROM writers and large hard drives. But since Napster fell under legal action from the music industry, nothing similar has taken its place.
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<BR> Another potential broadband explosion lies in online game playing. Internet multiplayer games are responsible for much of the increase in broadband use in Asia, the report said, and newer game-playing consoles such as Microsoft’s XBox and Sony’s Playstation2 either have or will soon be able use such networks.
<BR> The report cites a 2002 poll by Winston Group indicating that telecommuting would make broadband attractive as well. According to the poll, a third of Americans would forgo a pay raise to be able to work from home.
<BR> The high relative cost of fast access is also a hurdle. Most people pay about $50 per month for high-speed connections, whereas slower dial-up connections are only $20 a month. In an August 2002 Yankee Group survey, more than 70 percent of dial-up users cited cost as the main reason they aren’t upgrading to faster access.
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