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hold on.

I can't defend the idea of a tax to pay for rural internet connection.

But , you commenter's above have no idea how important the internet is today for companies.
It has nothing to do with watching videos on you tube or downloading films/music.
The internet has become a communucations platform , and a transport tool for pretty much all companies. Without email and data transfer you have no chance of expansion.You literally can not run a company in this day and age without a high speed internet connection.

The lack of highspeed internet stifles investment in rural areas and makes it difficult for companies to even consider moving out of the dirty loud shit holes we call towns and cities.

if you want growth and a new economy , new firms have to go somewhere.There is only so much urban space.Its too expensive its dirty and its stifling. Sooner or later , many companies consider the idea of moving out of urban. Most end up shelving the idea , for one simple reason, the data connection.

Its no different to how motorways and major road networks defined the hotspots of industry.
The new motorways are the high-speed internet connections. Where there are none , there will be no development and no growth.

The internet is not a toy , its an economic tool of necessity.

posted by : pfromg, 23 June 2010 Complain about this comment
To all the negative comments...

Up yours and the horse you rode in on!

posted by : Narg, 23 June 2010 Complain about this comment
State of education today

"in the sticks"

It's "in the Styx", as in "out in the (river) Styx", as in out in the middle of nowhere.

River Styx being between land of the living and the dead; don't pay the ferryman for your education.

posted by : StoobieDoobieDoo, 23 June 2010 Complain about this comment
Nice one Tell

We'll just pay road tax so you can add another three lanes to the m25 so more dickheads can sit next to each other going nowhere.
Bit like broadband - the greater the bandwidth the less the compression and the lower the real data rate.
I really really need to see seven or eight shit youtube videos at once - I cant see how I can earn a living in the country without it...

posted by : Tom, 22 June 2010 Complain about this comment
Erm...

"Only rural areas along the UK's west coast including Wales, Scotland, the north of England and Cornwall have been forced to switch from analogue to digital telly so far and they are the areas with limited Internet access."

Actually that's not entirely correct. For starters, Cornwall is not it's own country despite what the crazy buggers down there think, and DEVON, yes that place you get to before Cornwall switch to Digital way before Cornwall did, almost a year if I'm right.

In fact Torbay and transmitters feeding off Torbay (Newton Abbot, Teignmouth, Brixham etc) switched over in April 2009, about 5 months after Whitehaven and Selkirk etc switched.

Rob

posted by : Rob Beard, 22 June 2010 Complain about this comment
The real problem is...

...people are acting like broadband is a necessity, when it's really a luxury. I have DSL at home, and hardly spend any time on the internet anymore. Switching back to dial-up would be a pain in the ass and I wouldn't do it by choice, but on the other hand I wouldn't expect a gov't handout to give me broadband.

posted by : mike, 22 June 2010 Complain about this comment
rubbish...

The phone levy wouldn't have made the slightest impression on the rural/urban digitaldivide. It was a strawman designed to put the media on the wrong foot and stop them investigating the real problems. All it would take to get next generation access out to the sticks is a level playing field for private investors and communities. The way to do it is for gov to abolish the VOA tax on lit fibre, and to compulsory purchase all the assets of the telcos in rural areas who don't want to improve their infrastructure. Throwing money at BT will only result in them paying their £9billion pension deficit off sooner. We need to get some decent competition going otherwise we will be stuck on the victorian copper for another few decades.

posted by : cyberdoyle, 22 June 2010 Complain about this comment
Bumpkins - Serves 'em bleedin right!

Bumpkins' brains are so slow that they'll never benefit from broadband anyway. They can't read any faster than dialup can display it. Their kind of music isn't available from iTunes or any P2P network. They don't read newspapers or use encyclopædias (The Bible tells them everything they need to know). And the iPlayer scares them, especially when they see footage of a moving train coming toward the screen.

I'd spend the money rolling out running water before you start worrying about putting broadband up a hill.

posted by : Cockney Terry, 22 June 2010 Complain about this comment

Country bumpkins are stuck with dial-up for now

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