I wrote earlier this week about Greece and the take-up of the internet and gaming amongst the younger generation here. Their use of the internet is a marked contrast to the rest of Greek society, which has the lowest internet usage amongst the 25 countries of the EU.
I had to laugh at this story from state broadcaster ERT this week - "Digital Greece with Fast Internet"
As per data presented by the Minister of Economy and Finance George Alogoskoufis on Thursday, within the framework of a meeting on digital strategy 2006-2013 held at the Foundation of the Hellenic World, 6.5% of the population will use fast Internet within the first six months of 2007.
The EU average is for 15% of the population to have high-speed internet access. The government here have set an ambitious target of reaching that 15% by 2009.
What made me laugh was that I was reading this story as it limped into my browser through my 31.2 Kbps connection - a connection speed I thought I'd left behind some time in the 1990s.
In an email conversation this week I was asked if I was managing to pick up the streaming commentary of the Test Match. I replied that I felt I had more chance of picking up the score in Morse code despatches via short wave than I had of listening to the radio over the internet at home.
It isn't through any lack of wanting high speed internet access on my part that I can't get connected - the state telecoms monopoly OTE has simply not invested in broadband infrastructure for the country.
Until that happens the 15% target figure is going to be unattainable for Greece.
Search
Download e-books
About Martin Belam
I'm a London-based internet consultant and writer, with 8 years experience in product management, information architecture, and user experience design for global brands like Sony, Vodafone, The Guardian and the BBC. I specialise in advising on search, widgets, RSS, online news publishing and bulk email delivery.
Martin Belam CV
email: martin.belam@currybet.net
tel: +44 (0) 7801 828718
twitter: currybet
About Martin Belam and this site
Recent posts
Recent links
Recent comments
Popular posts
Popular categories
BBC, Doctor Who, Ghost Walks, Media, Music, Newspapers, Search, Social media, Web
No comments yet