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I lived without broadband for a week

‘I lived without broadband for a week’

I do everything online. I work, shop and socialise online, I connect to the office PC from home, pay my bills over the internet and even watch TV online.

So how would I cope without my broadband connection for seven days? By Garnet Roach (14/08/09)

‘I was ready to grieve’

I needed to know what I was about to let myself in for so I consulted an expert.

Graham Jones, an internet psychologist, warned me that I would miss my beloved broadband.

“Essentially, the first few days are spent missing the item that's removed - in your case, the internet. You start a process similar to grief, though not as profound,” he said. “You wish you could have your connection back; you want things to be like they were.”

You start a process similar to grief, though not as profound

However, he added that I would soon get over the first phase.

“Then the realisation kicks in that you can't get what you want. So you start filling the time with replacement activities,” he said. “For someone without the internet it might be making phone calls, reading books etc. Later, you start to wonder why you were worried about the loss and become grateful for your new found freedom.”

So I was expecting boredom - not being able to catch up on missed episodes of Eastenders, watch videos of juggling cats on YouTube or simply Googling interesting things I came across during the day - but what I wasn’t prepared for was just how inconvenient it would be.

‘I wasted my week queuing’

Not having the internet was frustrating; it also made me late and disorganised.

I pay all my bills online. So this now meant that I would have to phone up my credit card company to pay my bill - which would have been fine if I already had their number. But I didn’t. And I couldn’t go online to look it up. So I rang 118 118, got my credit card company’s number, and ended up being late meeting a friend because I was on hold for so long.

I also missed trains because I was on hold to Transport for London - when I could have checked schedules in seconds online. My weekly travel alerts didn’t arrive, so I didn’t know that the Victoria Line wasn’t running or that there had been a security alert on the Piccadilly Line.

Then there was the amount of time I spent queuing - in the bank; in Sainsbury’s on a Saturday morning for shopping I then had to carry home; at the ticket office to see a show. More than an hour of my week was spent queuing needlessly.

I normally check my balance and transfer funds in seconds using online banking, Sainsbury’s delivers my shopping at a time that’s convenient for me, and I usually buy cinema or theatre tickets online to save time.

‘Painful interruption’

So Graham Jones was right in some ways; I didn’t miss the entertainment aspect of the internet - I watched those DVDs that have been lying around for ages, saw friends more and even wrote a letter. But the interruption to my schedule was painful.

I’m lucky enough to live in London and my fast, reliable broadband connection was back once my week’s experiment was up. But for some people in the UK, trying to do their online banking, shopping or even email services is a daily frustration.

According to the Communications Consumer Panel which champions the consumer with communications regulator Ofcom, 75 per cent of people with the internet at home say they couldn’t live without it - and I’m definitely one of them.

However, more than 4,000 homes are in a “broadband notspot”, connected to a local telephone exchange that doesn’t offer copper wire ADSL broadband at all, while a further three million Brits get less than 2Mb, according to internet research firm SamKnows.

This experiment has given me an insight into what it’s like to be one of these people.

Access to broadband is an issue for society - a reliable internet connection doesn’t just save you money, it also helps you stay connected and is a great social tool, maximising your free time and making life easier - something that everyone should have the choice to use.



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Comments

Oh so very true, every word. Been there and agree strongly.lol - Nov 21 2011 5:15PM
I agree with Jerryup to a point. Sure there is the Thompson Local, Yellow Pages etc, to find numbers. However, once you have been using the Internet for so long, you simply don't think of those things. The Internet was a "luxery" that was slow and expensive. Now it has revolutionalized the way society have conducted business on both a personal and business level. Some people just make do with the Internet speeds they are given, simply because they are glad to get the Internet. But some companies take advantage of this and off a unreliable, slow expensive service. The UK has the slowest Internet speeds in the World and something needs to be done to make this a service that is as important as any other. Thankfully Broadband Choices are one company that is making us realise that we as a society do not have to put up with slow, bad service. GOOD JOB to Broadband Choices and WELL DONE to Garnet Roach.
- Aug 24 2009 12:46PM
Damian Phoenix, New Brighton

Along with Garnet, I would find it hard to exist without the net, but I couldn't help noticing that he felt the need to dial 118118 to find out the phone number of his credit card company.
Why didn't he just look on the back of the card, where the numbers have been published on every card I've ever owned for years?
- Aug 23 2009 9:29AM
Jerry Pocock, UK

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