|
www.three.co.uk
Three UK and the Countryside Alliance have founded the Rural Broadband Working Group,
a project aimed at providing mobile broadband connectivity to rural
areas with poor or no broadband coverage. The initiative will give away
almost 4 million MB of high-speed mobile broadband connectivity,
alongside the dongles and MiFi’s needed to get people online. In
addition to free mobile broadband data services and devices provided
for a year in eleven rural communities, free public access will be
provided in communal areas using a MiFi device.
Three and the Countryside Alliance today announces the launch of a
project aimed at getting people online in rural areas of poor or
non-existent broadband.
Called the Rural Broadband Working Group, the initiative will see the
operator work with local politicians and the Countryside Alliance to
identify rural broadband ‘not-spots’ and give away around 4m MBs of
free connectivity, alongside the dongles and MiFi’s needed to get
people online.
The project, which will also involve input from Race Online 2012, is
aimed at helping communities, families and businesses in rural areas
that while not served by fixed line broadband providers, do have access
to Three’s high speed mobile Internet network.
The first wave of activity will see the group working with local
political influencers to identify eleven rural communities, and to
provide free mobile broadband data and devices for a year. In addition,
free public access will be provided in communal areas such as pubs and
community centres using a MiFi device.
As well as the social and educational benefits broadband brings, the
initiative will also help local communities save thousands of pounds
each year, with research by the post office suggesting families with
broadband access can save up to £840 every 12-months by being connected
The first village to receive free connectivity is Gringley-on-the-Hill
in North Nottinghamshire. The village of around 750 people, has a pub,
village hall, church and school but poor quality access to fixed line
broadband services. Gringley-on-the-Hill is set to get around 30 mobile
broadband dongles and MiFi devices. Some of these will provide access
in the local pub and community centre.
Hugo Dunkley, Chairman of the Gringley-on-the-Hill Parish Council,
said: “We had written to the House of Lords, our local MP, the
Department for Business Innovation and Skills and even a large
fixed-line provider about the lack of comprehensive broadband in the
community, but with no success. There was broadband in a small corner
of the village but everywhere else speeds were frustratingly slow.
“Mobile broadband has addressed this problem and the dongles are
allowing the people and businesses of the village to use the Internet to
its full potential for the first time.”
Sarah Lee, Head of Policy for the Countryside Alliance said: "The
lack of access to broadband internet in the countryside is a major
concern which is holding back many rural businesses. The recent
Government announcement of financial help to bring broadband to rural
communities is welcome, but not enough, and may yet take several years
to be properly realised.
“Mobile internet access could be the answer to bridging the digital
divide in the countryside and we, together with the other members of the
Rural Broadband Working Group, are looking forward to identifying
communities that can really benefit from mobile broadband."
David Dyson, CEO at Three said, “Thousands of communities still cannot
access fixed line broadband services, but they do have access to a
mobile broadband network, and that’s where this new initiative comes
in.
“We have built a network designed for the Internet and are passionate
about using this to help more and more people experience the everyday
benefits this can bring.”
Leigh Smyth, Managing Director for Race Online 2012, the cross-sector
partnership organisation which aims to help millions more people in the
UK to get online commented: 'Race Online 2012 is committed to helping
the 8.7 million offline adults in the UK benefit from everything the
web has to offer. Mobile broadband can play a crucial role in achieving
this, particularly in rural areas'.
* Based on Google’s 2010 estimates that the average webpage was now 320kb
About Three UK
Three is a communications company focused on bringing the benefits of
the internet to mobile communications. We offer attractive pricing and
give our customers the widest choice of ways to stay connected. To do
this we’ve built the UK's biggest high-speed mobile broadband network.
Three UK is a member of the HWL group of companies, which include 3G
operations in Austria, Denmark, Hong Kong, Ireland, Italy, Macau and
Sweden.
Three facts about Three:
- Three launched the UK's first 3G high-speed mobile network
offering national coverage for calls and texts, and has more than 97.5%
population coverage for mobile internet services.
- Three has more than 7.5 million customers in the UK and the 3 Group has over 30.2 million worldwide.
- Three is the UK market leader for mobile broadband, and came
first in the five most recent YouGov DongleTrack surveys of Mobile
Broadband customers (July 2010, October 2010, January 2011, April 2011,
July 2011). Three is also the No. 1 network for smartphones – rated
best for overall quality, speed, value, customer satisfaction and
reliability in the YouGov Smartphone Mobile Internet Experience Report
(SMIX). For more info visit
|