Follow enough Romanians on Twitter and it becomes all too apparent all too quickly that unreliable internet connections are one of the great gripes of the country’s twittering classes. There is little point in Romania having the fourth fastest average internet connection in the world (true: read more here) if you can’t use it for hours at a time. It’s like having a fast car you can’t drive at anything like its full speed because of the awful state of the roads. (So not the kind of problem people around Bucharest would know anything about).
Yet the reason that internet connections keep coming and going in Bucharest is not complex, or highly technical. No. There is a very simple reason internet connections come and go: it’s because the city’s cable so-called infrastructure is falling down.
This – for example – is (or was) and probably will be again somebody’s internet connection:
Yesterday however it was just a load of cable strung across a busy pavement (outside Tineretului metro station) that nobody appeared to have any great desire to pick up and repair.
Scenes like this are common. In the Tineretului area alone we were yesterday able to take these pictures of Bucharest’s cable infrastructure:
We of course use the term ‘infrastructure’ loosely. The companies that own it do not. One of our favourite moments of the past year was the boss of a cable company boasting of his firm’s investment in this infrastructure, as though slinging some cables from tree to tree took barrel loads of cash, special skills and know-how.
For some time we were ourselves reliant on a muppet-run organisation for our internet. The cable that delivered us a fairly quick (when it worked) connection was slung from a tree to a garage roof, then over a car park and in through the window of the kitchen. All very hi-tech. It used to go down (quite literally) at least once a week, usually because a lorry or tall van had been into the car park and cut it. It would then take hours for a highly trained brigada de interventie (usually a couple of tataie with duck tape and super glue) to come and sort it out.
In the end we saw the light and signed up with Romtelecom. Using existing telephone lines (which are still basically wires strung from pillar to post, just strung in a far better way) the service never goes down. We instead have other gripes with Romtelecom, mainly their refusal to take more money from us.
We have said before that the one thing which – more than any other – gives Bucharest that Third World-look is the amount of overhead cables the city has. And though we hear that they are being buried in some areas of the city, progress is slow, even for Romania. Those of you still using cable internet should expect plenty of down time for the foreseeable future.
(Hopefully not until you’ve finished reading this of course).

























{ 10 comments… read them below or add one }
this situation is so annoying that I had the need to express my anger and surprise in a short post here : http://likeatrippie.blogspot.com/2010/06/is-this-what-city-network-means.html
I agree with the comment that those cables make Bucharest look like a third world city. What I find even more annoying is those coils of spare cable that are hanging from the poles. I am also amazed that these coils of cable are not being stolen, they must not have any valuable metal in them.
My internet connection goes out for a while pretty much every morning. In fact I couldn’t post here right now because it just went dead for a half hour.
But, fast internet for $11/month which goes out sometimes beats very slow internet in the US for $60/month. I just also have a Orange USB internet stick that I have to plug in most days here in Bucharest at some point as a back up.
Indeed the overhead cables are what most foreigners react to immediately here and they are what makes Bucharest look poor, chaotic and non-Western. But all these things are what make Romania Romania. Land of the peasantry, home of the ultra corrupt.
http://www.hotnews.ro/stiri-international-7718970-trei-hoti-cablu-din-bulgaria-intrerupt-din-greseala-legaturile-transfer-date-dintre-germania-asia-timp-zece-ore.htm
=))
I don’t know what all the fuss is about. MY Internet connection never
Ever since I came here for a week in 1986 I’ve thought that Romania is the India of Europe; big, friendly and chaotic and surrounded by more organised neighbours. And, like India, its electrical infrastructure is stretched beyond breaking point. According to the Economboist the elecricity in India is spread so thinly that they have continual power cuts and its a threat to economic growth. But I thought the internet connection here (in Romania, not India) is rather good, but I realise that’s because I use Orange (when on the train) and Romtelecom (when at home) and I can’t remember when I’ve last had a problem. BTW, all those cables on the streets; perhaps they are part of that big contract that city hall gave to some bozos who were supposed to put all the overhead cables underground…but that was such a long time ago that I guess everyone forgot about it once the job didn’t get done (this is usually what happens to public contracts; they get awarded with a fanfare, years pass, nothing happens, everyone forgets.)
Power cuts are a continual problem early in the summer in our area (when the air conditioning first gets switched on). This time of year they are few and far between (everyone probably on holiday). The electricity infrastructure is at breaking point of course, but then what isn’t in Romania? And where will the money come from to put it right. Everybody already thinks they pay too much in tax, yet still expects Rolls Royce public services.
So everyone agrees that the electricity infrastructure is at breaking point.
It means that one of these months it will break and for an entire week the whole city will be thrown in the darkages.
Yes sir, the end of the world is close, God doesn’t love us anymore.
Yes, especially if you rely on the internet to make a living there is a need to have a backup connection.
But the problem with cables and stuff that comes through the cables is worse: the Bucharest electrical system is overloaded.
Obviously what was built in the 70′s wasn’t supposed to sustain PCs, air conditioning, 3 TVs per household and other modern appliances.
In Berceni for example, power blackouts come far more often than internet down time from RDS. True, RDS do have a problem – they refuse to install a regulator so whenever there is a power blackout all their equipment needs to be reset and this can only be done by their intervention crews.
But if we take power blackouts from this scenario, RDS internet downtime would be about 2 hours / year. Power blackouts included, I think it easily reaches 3-4 days / year.
They need to do something about the electrical system, this city is expanding.