Sujet Abordé pendant l'AG FFDN, papier plus qu'intéressant: A new handbook to help governments invest in broadband. The guide is useful for any public authority investing in broadband or looking at co-funding projects with EU structural and investment funds.
Customers across Europe are getting broadband speeds 25% slower on average than that advertised by their service providers, a European Commission report says.
Europeans consumers are not getting the broadband download speeds they pay for. On average, they receive only 74% of the advertised headline speed they have paid for, according to a new European Commission study on fixed broadband performance.
This research shows that, on average, EU consumers receive 74% of the advertised headline speed they have paid for. xDSL based services achieved only 63.3% of the advertised headline download speed, compared to 91.4% for cable and 84.4% for FTTx. There are significant differences in the European national markets, most likely due to advertising practices.