IIn 2000 there was 512/128 cable services, it is a rare time period where BT was ahead of cable. Cable services wre live before adsl but adsl had the higher spec speeds. However between then and now cable has most of the time been ahead on speeds. I didnt say cable was innotive but rather BT have typically been reacting to what cable are doing. If cable didnt exist BT may well still be serving 512kbit dsl.
The FTTC rollout in terms of people is almost certianly going to be smaller than current cable coverage as its targeting less densely populated areas.
compare these 2 maps.
http://pressoffice.virginmedia.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=2...
http://www.nextgenerationaccess.com/How/BTFTTC/btftt...
They not too dissimiliar from each other, the noticeble difference i can see is VM's coverage spreads out more east and south west, south east. BT's appears to be more concentrated and they simply drawn a line.
The one thing I will accept is that rural residents have been far more vocal about their needs for faster broadband, there is dozens of campaigns and news articles with their moans. Also the political pressure to target such areas as well.
The argument about the need to target wealthier people should stop tho as the price of infinity is exactly the same as adsl. Not to mention the fact wealth doesnt necessarily mean extra revenue, as they can be very tight with their money. Hard evidence supports that poorer places will have a higher demand for speed based on higher utilisation of resources.
Rich/poor really shouldnt be in the equation tho, it should be purely done on population density, yes that means london first followed by other cities.