Skip to main content

UK Fixed-line Internet Connections Drop

UK Fixed-line Internet Connections Drop

According to the new Internet Connectivity report from the Office of National Statistics (ONS), UK broadband connections have gone up to 94.1% from 92.8% of all Internet connections. That makes sense as people keep abandoning those old, slow dial-up connections.

But there also something strange happening, the report notes. For the last two quarters there has been a drop in fixed-line Internet subscriptions. So what’s happening?

Recommended Videos

There are several theories. One is that ISPs, who provide the numbers, have given inaccurate figures, according to ZDNet. But the rise of mobile broadband might well be the answer.

Government watchdog Ofcom reported more than half a million new mobile broadband connections in the first half of 2008, and it continues to grow in popularity, boosted by the fact that several services offer a free laptop with a subscription. The ONS only measures fixed-line subscriptions.

Digital Trends Staff
Digital Trends has a simple mission: to help readers easily understand how tech affects the way they live. We are your…
The internet’s ‘phonebook’ is flawed and outdated. It’s time for an upgrade
Desktop monitor displaying the Digital Trends homepage.

The websites we visit are scattered across a vast, messy web of underground cables, racks of metallic boxes, and a myriad of routers that we’ve come to call the internet. So when you punch in an address and hit enter, how does your browser know where to look?

The answer is a system that’s been around since the days that the internet was so small and so compact, it could all be mapped in a single text file. It’s called the Domain Name System (or DNS for short), and although it has kept up with the internet’s evolving role for decades, it has also crumbled more frequently than ever in recent years -- and taken down some of the web’s biggest sites along with it.

Read more
OneWeb launches more internet satellites to take on SpaceX’s Starlink
An Arianespace Soyuz rocket launches from Kazakhstan.

OneWeb is edging toward the launch of an internet service similar to SpaceX’s Starlink, which uses satellites in low Earth orbit to beam broadband from space.

U.K.-based OneWeb confirmed at the weekend the successful deployment of 34 internet satellites, bringing its total constellation to 288 satellites. The communications company said the deployment puts it on track to begin a global internet service in 2022, delivered by a planned fleet of 648 satellites. Before then, by the end of this year, it hopes to launch a trial service in parts of Alaska and Canada.

Read more
The most common Google Meet problems and how to fix them
asus chromebook c523 amazon deals lifestyle

Google Meet has become one of the standard solutions for videoconferencing. And it's a viable option whether you’re joining a business meeting or connecting with friends and family. However, like all pieces of software, Google Meet isn’t perfect, and you may run into a few issues along the way. If you’re having problems with it, this guide is here to help you get back up and running as painlessly as possible.

See more

Read more