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An Openreach engineer working on the "Superfast West Yorkshire" project in Wetherby (2014) at a manhole. Following the Telecommunications Strategic Review (TSR), in September 2005 British Telecom signed undertakings with Ofcom to create a separate division, for the purpose of providing equal access to BT’s local access network and backhaul products. [3]
An Openreach engineer works at a UK VDSL cabinet. ADSL-like long-reach performance is one of the key advantages of VDSL2. LR-VDSL2 enabled systems are capable of supporting speeds of around 1–4 Mbit/s (downstream) over distances of 4–5 km (2.5–3 miles), gradually increasing the bit rate up to symmetric 100 Mbit/s as loop-length shortens.
BT originally stated that it would accrue annual savings of £1 billion when the transition to the new network was completed, and hoped to have over 50% of its customers transferred by 2008 (see External links below for current progress on the roll-out of optical fibre by Openreach). Capital expenditure was put at £10 billion over five years ...
BT Wholesale sells the service to ISPs and IPTV providers, who use it to provide ADSL services to customers over Openreach telephone lines. [ citation needed ] The IPstream product covers the transport of data between the end-user's premises and an interconnect point of the ISPs choice, such as their main colocation facility, which is served by ...
Founded in 2002, Fleet Solutions was responsible for the management of BT's 35,000 vehicles (29,000 of which were Openreach vehicles) as well as providing management to a further 50,000 vehicles for other organisations. [9] Two months later, Fleet Solutions' new owner, Aurellius, dropped BT from its name as it rebranded to Rivus Fleet Solutions ...
In January 2010, BT launched a new product called BT Infinity. 4 million homes in the UK are covered by this service.Most homes will get FTTC service and have up to 40 Mbit/s broadband, those with FTTP will get 100 Mbit/s and a 20 GB monthly usage allowance in 2010, with an unlimited package also offered.
Wholesale line rental (WLR) is a service in which a telecommunications operator takes control of all the connections made through a telephone line from the native operator and collects the subscription fee from the subscribers.
On 26 November 2018 Openreach announced it is launching G.fast services to 81 additional locations in the UK. [54] On 24 June 2020 Openreach announced G.fast deployments will officially remain on pause until at least April 2021, as Fibre to the Premises (FTTP) takes priority. Openreach Confirm G.fast Broadband Rollout Paused Until 2021 UPDATE