Internet Services

  • 1980s: the early years

    1980s: the early years
    The 1980s was the first decade where the internet resembled something like it does in the modern day. But it wasn’t capable of anywhere near what it is now. Reckon dial-up is old? In the early ‘80s, the internet didn’t even have that. When it first started to connect computers together, it was powered by a network called USENET. This still relied on phone modems to work.
    [VIDEO]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=szdbKz5CyhA
  • Period: to

    Internet Services

    Internet Services means that part of the Data & Internet Services which is accessible via the public internet. This includes internet access, email facilities, web-page facilities and any other related internet facility or services that we may provide from time to time.
  • 1990s: much ado about dial-up

    1990s: much ado about dial-up
    Dial-up internet took off in the 1990s, and the first commercial internet service providers (ISPs) started offering internet connections to regular households. [VIDEO]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s1_yx_Eg9v4
  • 2000s: the arrival of broadband

    2000s: the arrival of broadband
    Broadband breathed new life into the internet in the early 2000s by allowing the signal in one line to be split between telephone and internet. This meant users could be online and make phone calls at the same time. It was branded the ‘always on’ internet service. [VIDEO]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aLK3ybN6_yE
  • 2010s: streaming, social media and speed

    2010s: streaming, social media and speed
    The 2010s saw the internet become even more essential to everyday life. It helped the web transition from an obscure place for entertainment into a mainstream blockbuster TV and movie platform, thanks to streaming platforms like Netflix and Amazon Prime Video. [VIDEO]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCSl37hk3wE
  • 2020s: working from home, 5G and a full fibre future

    2020s: working from home, 5G and a full fibre future
    Just when we thought we were hitting peak internet, the world was hit with the Covid-19 pandemic. Millions of people had to start working and learning from home, at almost no notice. This put immediate pressure on everyone’s home broadband, as suddenly we were staying in and using the internet throughout the whole workday too. [VIDEO]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NHIs9A6o4UM