The Hamilton Spectator

Hamilton faces connectivi­ty woes

COVID-19 pandemic has changed how people access the internet

- JACOB LORINC Jacob Lorinc is a Hamilton-based reporter covering business for The Spectator.

With most of Hamilton’s labour force working from home during the pandemic, access to a stable internet connection is about as essential to everyday life as a functionin­g refrigerat­or. Life gets considerab­ly more complicate­d without it.

And yet, paradoxica­lly, our mass dependency on a stable internet connection can often be the reason it cuts out unexpected­ly.

Throughout the pandemic, schools have reported shutting down classes due to cyberattac­ks, while employees have reported being unable to work due to widespread network outages, twice coming from Cogeco early in January.

One family, living in a countrysid­e home just minutes away from Waterdown, has said it has such lacklustre access to cable networks they often sit outside a nearby Tim Hortons to attend daily work meetings and download documents.

“They can put a man on the moon but they can’t get internet in Waterdown,” said Brad Wallace, father of the family of four, earlier this year.

There are a multitude of reasons for slow or non-existent internet access. Certain areas, especially those that are sparsely populated, are not privy to the extensive cable networks companies like Bell and Rogers have set up throughout Hamilton and other municipali­ties.

Rarely do companies invest in high-speed cable networks in rural areas where they have limited clientele. In urban areas, meanwhile, mass internet traffic can weigh on providers more often accustomed to accommodat­ing heavier internet traffic at later times of day.

Greg O’Brien, the Hamiltonba­sed publisher of a cable and telecommun­ications publicatio­n called Cartt, says the pandemic has dramatical­ly changed how people access the internet, in ways internet providers aren’t used to.

“These networks were configured to be more robust during the evening, when there’s prime-time video traffic,” he said. “Now, that prime-time video traffic is all day long.”

It’s not simply that internet usage has skyrockete­d during the pandemic. Rather, it’s the type of internet traffic that can make the difference. Instead of accessing videos and Skype calls in the evening, as was typical prior to the pandemic, people now use data-heavy internet applicatio­ns regularly throughout the day.

Practicall­y all schooling in Hamilton is taught through variations of Microsoft Teams. Most employees working office jobs are required to join conference calls on a daily basis, if not multiple times a day.

“Early in the pandemic, this shift in internet usage showed where there were weaknesses in the networks. All of a sudden there are thousands of people wanting to download videos or hop on Zoom calls at 11 a.m.,” said O’Brien.

More often than not, increased internet traffic is likely to hurt homes where there are multiple people using multiple devices over one wireless modem. Upwards of five or 10 devices in one home is likely to slow your access to the internet unless you have fibre-optic internet services, says O’Brien.

Widespread internet outages, across neighbourh­oods or throughout cities, are more difficult to pinpoint. Increased internet usage can factor into a slow connection, but other issues like ongoing constructi­on or downed power lines can also be the culprit.

Internet providers aren’t always forthcomin­g about the source of the problem, either.

Following a widespread outage affecting Cogeco customers in southern Ontario earlier in January, company spokespers­on Anastasia Unterner said the issue was “not related to our network and not exclusive to Cogeco.” The outage kept hundreds of students from attending the first day of class following the holidays and parents from attending work.

Cogeco did not respond to followup emails from The Spectator asking what the source of the outage was.

 ?? JOHN RENNISON THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR ?? Throughout the pandemic, schools have reported shutting down classes due to cyberattac­ks, while employees have reported being unable to work due to widespread network outages, twice coming from Cogeco early in January.
JOHN RENNISON THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR Throughout the pandemic, schools have reported shutting down classes due to cyberattac­ks, while employees have reported being unable to work due to widespread network outages, twice coming from Cogeco early in January.

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