| ip-label.newtest and PC Actual strengthen their partnership with a first-ever comparison of triple-p |
The CMT, the Spanish telecom regulations authority, counted 6.7 million broadband internet subscriptions in Spain at the end of last year, and the figure is constantly rising. Internet service providers are therefore confronted with an increasingly large and ever more demanding clientele which makes no bones about switching ISPs because of disappointing performance or to gain access to a wider selection of services.
In an effort to answer these questions, ip-label.newtest deployed robots which measure the performance of triple-play services as an internet user would perceive them. The aim is not to offer a snapshot of internet quality in all broadband households, but to track trends in order to give the closest representation of performance. To do so, subscriptions similar to those that an individual would subscribe to were taken out with each of the internet service providers rated in this first comparative panel (Jazztel, Orange, Superbanda, Telefonica, Ya.com). To be able to differentiate the performance observed for each ISP, the subscriptions were installed on telephone lines built in a strictly identical environment in Madrid (lines created at the same time, at the same distance from the DSLAM, same quality copper, same rate of attenuation, and so forth). In this way the performances recorded on identical test campaigns, on equivalent computers and environments, were really comparable. |

The CMT, the Spanish telecom regulations authority, counted 6.7 million broadband internet subscriptions in Spain at the end of last year, and the figure is constantly rising. Internet service providers are therefore confronted with an increasingly large and ever more demanding clientele which makes no bones about switching ISPs because of disappointing performance or to gain access to a wider selection of services. 









