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Research and Markets: Global G-fast Chips Market 2014-2020 - Shares, Strategies, and ForecastsDUBLIN --(Business Wire)-- Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/cxttzm/gfast_chips) has announced the addition of Wintergreen Research, Inc's new report "G-fast Chips: Market Shares, Strategies, and Forecasts, Worldwide, 2014 to 2020" to their offering. G.fast chips market forecasts indicates that markets at $31 million in 2014 will reach $2.9 billion by 2020 Growth comes as every industry achieves leveraging broadband to make social media and smart phones work to grow the business. G.fast is able to make the benefits of broadband available to consumers and support network flexibility for consumers, data centers, and cell tower backbone communications. G.fast networks are flexible and support broadband that is able to reach. End to end broadband networks leverage a combination of optical infrastructure in the long haul and copper infrastructure in the last few meters from the distribution box to the home. Fiber has had rapid advance but does not work in the end, it is too expensive to the home. FTTH is too expensive and DSL continues to be a viable alternative, with DSL set to be replaced at the high end initially by G.fast. Copper based broadband technologies promise to last for a long long time. Though for many years FTTH has threatened to make xDSL obsolete, this has not proven to be the case. South Korea occupies the top broadband user category in both average bandwidth (4.6 megabits) and proportion of the population on a broadband connection (95 percent, tied with Bulgaria). Smaller islands, the Philippines, countries with lots of rural areas, like India, are struggling to deliver useful speeds. The U.S. falls behind East Asia, ranking somewhere in the middle, with the Nordic countries, in terms of broadband speed and penetration. Inside the U.S., Delaware appears well equipped with broadband the Mid-Atlantic state ranked first in every category: average speed, peak speed, connectivity and even "4K readiness," referring to the 15 megabit speed that can handle ultra high-def broadcasts. The slowest US state is Arkansas. Key Topics:
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For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/cxttzm/gfast_chips Source (News - Alert): Wintergreen Research, Inc
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