The slow-down thing was not my saying, it was other people who said it and they did not say it was openreach doing it they think it is their ISP, but as I have said myself I doubt they would do that it would cause a stink. I also did not say they were in the same place I live, I do chat to people in other towns and cities.
But saying that, it would not shock me if at some point providers don't use some sort of tactics to get people to change over. Look at supermarkets taking manned checkouts out to push more people to selfscan or scan and shop. Companies will try anything to i push/force/nudge people to using what they want us to use, look at banks closing branches and getting rid of cash machines to push/force/nudge more people to using cards or contactless. Tesco using lower prices to push more to clubcards. Sainsburys doing the same sort of thing to get more people to use scan and shop.
Companies do these things so if a ISP, did try and slow down traffic to people still on FTTC, it should not shock me one little bit, notice i said if.
I have been reading Kitz for a while, I saw that post so thought i would reply, what is wacky about
Why? It should be up to the consumer at the end of the day. Sure if everyone in a city is on fibre and there are only a few left on FTTC then maybe I agree with you, but until that happens, people should have the choice and not be forced to move by increasing prices for FTTC or making out that there is a fault that can't be fixed.
Ok, maybe the part about the fault not able to fix is a bit, but again this is how companies work, there would be no proof that Openreach can't fix a fault.
Take the situation I was in around 5 years ago,
a few weeks after i recontracted the phone line went dead, it was fixed but for some reason the ECI modem I was using with the hub zero had stopped working, I borrowed a Huawei modem from my neighbour as they had a home hub from BT and it worked. Plusnet was in the process of sending me a new hub, so I kept my neighbour's modem connected until I go the new hub and that did not work either. So plusnet sent Openreach down here 3-4 times I think to try and sort it out, but they could not, then plusnet sent me the Zyxel , which worked for a couple of weeks and then stopped connecting, so I borrowed my neighbour modem again and until I was able to source my own Huawei modem from Ebay.
Now if FTTP was available here then and the complex repair thing was in place, do you think Openreach would have come down so many times to try and sort out the problem? Their own equipment would not sync which confused them.
I don't know what they did or when, but for the last year everything syncs again, even the old ECI modem. I thought maybe they changed the cabinet from Huawei, but I learnt on here they don't do that, so maybe they had a fault and had to replace something that sorted out my problem.
Anyway, the thing is, I doubt openreach would have bothered so much if FTTP was available here at the time.
Ofcom is a complete waste of space and if they told me the sky was blue I would have to go a look for myself.
But at the end of the day it should be up to the consumer to a certain degree, i agree that at some point we will all be on FTTP, which is what I said to my next door neighbour a few days ago, they are not going to change unless pushed because they have less reason to go for FTTP than me. they have Sky q, but they don't watch on demand stuff, to be honest I wonder why they have Sky in the first place as all they watch are the normal Tv channels most of the time and I think they have true crimes on now and again and the only other thing that is connected is an Echo dot and a tablet, plus their phones, so they won't change i doubt until they are pushed.
I would change to FTTP before then.
I agree with you about with more people moving from FTTC to FTTP then FTTC sync speeds are likely to increase, I doubt it will make any difference to me as I am on the edge of the distance from the cabinet to me of getting a pretty decent speed, I get a constant 36Mb/s, not that I am constantly test the speed, but when I do, it is always 36Mb/s. I tested it a couple of days ago when I thought something was going strange as a game downloading seemed very slow, but all was fine, so I took it that the server I was getting the files from was on a go slow.
As for Kitz, you and your buddies are safe there, the site is too old, out of date with news and is not worth bothering with
Adrian
Desktop machine Ryzen powered with windows something or other.
Plusnet FTTC