Some people are unable to comprehend how large a project is needed for anything close to a national rollout. If they, and their mates down the pub, don't benefit, the numbers must be wrong and being fudged. Its all a conspiracy!
Even a 90% target leaves out nearly 3 million properties. You could do the rest of the country, and leave London entirely unserved, and get that result.
There are probably many people in rural UK who think that should indeed happen...
The upshot is that it is a lot of people to be left out.
London is over 12% of the UK population, so that is a lot more than 3%
People do understand the magnitude of the project, whats in question is the lack of accurate and meaningful information. Lets leave aside who discussed what down the pub and look at what many people want to know. Currently they are giving little to no information. I am sure I am not alone in having many enquiries ignored at local level BDUK.
It is public monies that is being spent yet the manner in which it is being spent is extremly cloak and dagger. They must know by now exactly what the in fills will be yet still nothing is said. Is that due to incompitence or the fact their is an election round the corner?
I am resigned to what speeds I have, now it is the mere priciple of yet another fiasco.
People want information and yes the vast majority of those people who want information are those who are left out (obviously), and that is the information that is being withheld.
The whole project is broken up into segments (regions) and they do have the information yet are withholding it. So people naturaly fill in the blanks and suspect corruption. I dont think it is a case of "people down the pub" being so stupid that they don't "comprehend" the magnitude of the project.
Simplisity of it is they will know who will be left out yet are not coming out and saying so. Typical politics
Personnaly I think a far greater use of the BDUK monies would have been to upgrade the current infrastructure to a standard that 100% of end users have access to, eliminating all EO lines where psyically possible, upgrading the rural areas then rolling out fibre where not "economicly viable" (ie where the BDUK monies are needed). In a nutshell ensuring everyone has access to usable broadband first then adding the speed later.
I have just returned from Arrochar (near Loch Lomond) and the internet in almost all areas was utterly dreadful, almost un usable for simple stuff like emails. That is where the money should have initialy been ivested, places like that. Not upgrading people who already have fast internet.