In reply to a post by Ignitionnet:I'm trying to work out why Edinburgh is getting twice as many FTTP exchanges as London despite having 1/15th of the population in a lower density urban conurbation.
I'm trying to work out where you got your numbers from.
If they were from this (updated 12/01/2011), there are 3 x exchanges in Edinburgh (City of - there is no Greater Edinburgh conurbation) and 4 x exchanges in London (G.L.A. area - not just the City of).
EDINBURGH FOUNTAINBRIDGE ESFOU FTTC/P Lothian Dec 2011
EDINBURGH NEWINGTON ESNEW FTTC/P Lothian Sep 2011
EDINBURGH WAVERLEY ESWAV FTTC/P Lothian Dec 2011
FOREST HILL LSFOR FTTC/P Greater London Jun 2011
HIGHAMS PARK LNHPK FTTP Greater London Accepting CP orders now.
LEYTONSTONE LNLEY FTTC/P Greater London Mar 2011
MAYFAIR WEWMAY FTTC/P Greater London Mar 2012 (added since 07/01/2011)
The 3 x Edinburgh exchanges are all city centre locations as is Mayfair (I've walked/driven past that exchange a million times and didn't realise it was there - even when there was a BT van stuffed in the entrance. 0 out of 10 for observation!).
A more appropriate question related to that document would be;
Why does the London Borough of Waltham Forest get 1 x FTTC/P + 1 x FTTP (1 x FTTP has to be worth 2 x FTTP/C) exchanges, when it's in the top 10% of the most deprived local authorities in England (Lewisham's in the top 20%...)?
As has been suggested elsewhere, if the FTTP roll-out was based purely on population density, The Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea would be full FTTP already.
There's no FTTP on that list for RBKC!



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