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Back the bid: Next generation broadband key to Brighton's success

Let Brighton Bid Let Brighton Bid

Business owners and academics have lined up behind the campaign to make Brighton and Hove a ‘super connected’ city.

‘Let Brighton Bid’ is calling on Jeremy Hunt, Secretary of State for Culture, Olympics, Media and Sport, to allow the city to bid for ultra-fast broadband.

Mr Hunt has announced that 14 cities across the UK are being targeted for the ultra-fast broadband project.

This is currently open to cities that have more than 150,000 dwellings. Brighton and Hove has 125,000 dwellings.

Alex Morrison, boss at digital agency Cogapp in Dyke Road, Brighton, said the city should not be ruled out of the competition.

He said: “If any city in the UK can make use of super-fast broadband then it is Brighton and Hove.

“Organisations like Wired Sussex, in New England House, have been leading development of digital media nationally.”

Tom Druitt, boss of the Big Lemon bus company in Boundary Road, Brighton, said the next generation of broadband services are crucial to the success of businesses in the city.

He said: “I use broadband for work and become increasingly frustrated with slow speeds when I have multiple browsers open.”

High level work

Harry Barnett, lecturer in Global Studies at the University of Sussex, said that students and lecturers need access to the very fastest speeds to deliver high level work.

He said: “Given how the city has become so media-friendly, this seems a very logical progression. Not many British cities can claim to have attracted Disney.”

Tom Harrison, head of production at See That Video Communication and Marketing in Church Road, Hove, said the Government must reconsider its criteria for bidding.

He said: “We upload so much video material every day and send material to our clients that access to the highest possible speeds available is crucial to our success.”

Brighton and Hove’s bid for super-fast broadband needs to be submitted by February 13.

Follow the campaign on Twitter by following the #LetBrightonBid hashtag.

Show support

Tell us why you are backing the Let Brighton Bid campaign.

To have your say fill in our online form at theargus.co.uk/news/brightonbid

Comments will be forwarded on to the culture secretary and published in The Argus in print and online.

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Comments(4)

moronslayer says...
11:46am Sat 14 Jan 12

"Experts and academics..."

Don't ask a barber whether you need a haircut (ref. Daniel Greenberg).

Improvements happen when it becomes a financial no-brainer. Unless, ofcourse, we need to support the on-line gaming community and people choose to subsidise those playing online 'World of Warcraft' in their underpants. Don't the supporting arguments about 'having several browsers open' and similar seem a tiny bit trivial?

eCommerce seems to be working fine. Uploading data can be scheduled and methods refined.

I don't know much about what 'global studies' entails but I hope it goes beyond a previous article about some chocolate-teapot research...about top of the pops in the 80s or something

Busterblister says...
12:07pm Sat 14 Jan 12

A quick check reveals FTTC available to both of the gentlemen mentioned in the article. A quick conversation with their landlords might be the way ahead if they have not already had them.

My experience is that most landlords don't understand broadband, the choices available, and how to manage multi-tenancy solutions.

Symmetrical, uncontended broadband is in a different league from consumer broadband.

Don't forget though, if this isn't available at your customers end, most of the benefits are lost.

Archie Bun says...
2:45pm Sat 14 Jan 12

Bored with this story already since the Argus are mentioning it every day now. If they want the rules to be bent to allow Brighton in then the rules should be bent for other cities too. This is just about self interest by the myriad of digital companies in Brighton and nothing to do with the majority of the populace.

Dirk Gently says...
11:05am Mon 16 Jan 12

I don't understand what the money is actually meant to be used for - is it to subsidise BT and Virgin laying cables to individual properties? Or to subsidise people's broadband bills? Surely not the latter.

If it's about laying cables then I'd be much more interested to hear what the current coverage ratio is for FTTC or better. I thought most of the city already had it. If the demand exists then Virgin should be laying cables already, and I imagine they're only blocked by planning regulations, rather than money, in general.

A further issue, if this is about subsidy, is whether these private companies should repay the subsidy when they start raking in the profits from the consumers...

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