PC Magazine asked me to write about New Zealand's fastest ISPs as part of a series looking an online speeds in countries around the world.
The story uses data collected by Ookla, the company behind speedtest.net and uses aggregated data collected by the online service. Ookla found New Zealand has an average download speed of 20.96
Mbps. That's respectable, but not great. It ranks us at 45 out of 188 measured countries. We're a long way behind Hong
Kong which averages 89.4 Mbps, but then we are not a small, compact city-state.
The good news is that we're already comfortably ahead of Australia, which gets just 16.0 Mbps. That's only going to get better as our nationwide UFB and RBI networks gather momentum.
So who are the fastest ISPs? You'll have to read the story to get the full details. We've found the nationwide fastest
ISP and broken down the results for Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch too.
As I say in the report, it's not a perfect measure as Ookla doesn't differentiate between copper, fibre or mobile data
connections. And aggregation means ISPs with more rural customers will look worse than those operating mainly in the big
centres. Hence:
Spark (formerly Telecom NZ) and Vodafone dominate New Zealand's broadband market; together they account for around three-quarters of all connections. Smaller
ISPs get better average speeds in our table. That's in part because Ookla doesn't differentiate between mobile data and
fixed-line broadband, nor does the nationwide figure take the huge gulf between rural and urban speeds into account.
Spark and Vodafone have many mobile and rural data customers, while 2degrees is mobile-only, which also means lower average speeds.
I understand PC Mag intends to repeat these tests. That will be interesting as it means we'll get an external look at
how the government's UFB and RBI projects change overall performance. We'll also see if our new networks lift our
broadband performance relative to the rest of the world.
Readers with long memories may recall I was managing editor of the Australian and New Zealand editions of PC Magazine
when the titles where printed here in the mid-1990s.