Using data from January to March 2017, Which? was able to identify the cities that suffered most from slow broadband â and it doesn’t look good for Scotland
Hoping to identify and then rank which areas offered fast or slow broadband, Which? came upon a bigger divide in download speeds than it had anticipated.
For starters, it would take someone in Ryedale twice as long to download a movie compared to someone in Enfield. Thatâs because 11 areas ranked in the bottom 20 â Ryedale is one of them â fell short of the minimum download speed proposed by the governmentâs Universal Service Obligation (USO).
While the USO was intended to grant anyone the ability to request speeds of 10Mbps, the Orkney islands â the area with the worst broadband â offered a median download speed of 6.3. This was followed by the Shetland islands (8.4Mbps), Highland (8.8Mbps), Ryedale (9.0Mbps) and Purbeck (9.0Mbps).
The findings donât bode well for Scotland, with the bottom three areas residing there, and only one location â Dundee City â featuring among the top 20.
Whatâs more, certain areas within London seem to be suffering the same fate as rural locations, lagging behind the UK average of 17Mbps. Southwark had a median download speed of 10.4, while Westminster had 12.9Mbps and the City of London came away with 13.4Mbps.
Here are the top and bottom 20 broadband speed locations according to Which?.
This follows 2016 research from uSwitch, which sought to find the UK streets offering slow broadband.
It was revealed that it would take someone working or living on Williamson Road, Kent â with an average speed of 0.54Mps â 49 minutes to download a music album. In comparison, it would take Sandy Lane, Staffordshire, residents 22 seconds.
At the time, uSwitchâs Ewan Taylor-Gibson, said: âOn the UKâs slowest street broadband speeds are so sluggish you could fly to the Bahamas and back again in the time it takes to download a film.
âLikely causes include the userâs distance from the nearest exchange or issues within the properties themselves. Wireless connections can be affected by the thickness of walls, for example, but your broadband provider can usually offer a solution if thatâs the case.â
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