A fortnightly column on technology and the web
I was all set to write a scathing piece about Lord Carter’s newly published Digital Britain report (http://tinyurl.com/ksp9t7) when, in a break with journalistic practice, I decided to read it first. In fact many of its proposals make sense.
For instance I now accept the case for the controversial 50p-a-month tax on phone lines in order to subsidise broadband provision in remote parts of the country. I also like the report’s plans for expanding 3G coverage, and the idea of handing over FM frequencies to new, ultra-local radio stations. I do just wish it had considered one or two bigger bets, even if only to reject them — such as the advantages to be gained by spending one or two billion pounds to give Britain a nationwide, Korean-style next-generation broadband network when compared to the localised benefits expected from costlier projects like Crossrail.
Any other quibbles? Well, in discussing ultra-fast broadband, the report mostly concerns itself with increasing download speeds, even though many significant new technologies such as video-conferencing really depend on faster uploads. There was also too much talk about ‘inclusion’. If there’s one area of life where there’s no point getting exercised about social injustice it is consumer electronics, where the poor can often afford today what just five years ago was the preserve of the super-rich. Indeed a bigger issue may be reverse discrimination: the million or so middle-class men forbidden by their wives from installing a Sky dish while the lucky sods in the council flat round the corner get to watch Premiership football on a 50-inch HD Plasma.
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