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Four in ten families now have more rows about their internet use

Four in ten families now have more rows about their internet use than they do about what to watch on TV โ€“ as the typical house juggles NINE connected devices at once.

A poll of 2,000 parents found three quarters have argued about the broadband with their partner or children as they battle to home school and work from home. And families estimate almost a third of all their rows are due to their online activities.

Having too many devices connected at once and clogging up the broadband was found to be the top gripe (23 per cent).

More than one in five (22 per cent) have fallen out over phone use at the dinner table while 15 per cent of parents were left disgruntled by their children playing games online as they tried to work.

Others have rowed because someone tried to download a big file, making the internet slow for everyone else (13 per cent). And a fifth of parents have even faced arguments after asking their children to stop using the internet so they could make a work video call.

Evan Wienburg, CEO of ultrafast full fibre broadband provider Truespeed, which commissioned the study, said: โ€œSo many people are at home wanting a piece of the broadband action, which may affect speed and performance – and cause family rows.

For millions, the internet is the only escape to the outside world at the moment, so for many parents it can be difficult to try and balance that with time spent offline.

And this is all when the broadband service is working properly โ€“ which is great for the fortunate 36 per cent who have a very reliable connection, but can only add to the frustration for those who donโ€™t.โ€

The study found the average family has as many as nine different devices connected to the internet at home at any one time. Although for nearly one in ten, that figure could be as high as 20 or more.

Reliable broadband is also seen as a crucial part of modern life, with a huge 92 per cent of respondents claiming they would be โ€˜lostโ€™ without the internet at home. But a third said this means the โ€˜majorityโ€™ of their arguments are internet-related.

One in four families get wound up when TV shows or movies buffer โ€˜for agesโ€™ before they finally start playing. Another 12 per cent find it irritating when theyโ€™re simply trying to load up their social media channels, only for them to take forever to populate.

It also emerged 31 per cent are โ€˜very reliantโ€™ on fast broadband connectivity as theyโ€™re currently working from home.

But 16 per cent have even struggled to get their broadband to cooperate when sending an email. And 24 per cent have seen a video call shudder, freeze or even drop out entirely, according to the OnePoll figures.

Evan Wienburg of Truespeed added: โ€œOne way of keeping the peace when it comes to broadband battles is to make sure your broadband is up to the job.

You wouldnโ€™t buy a car that couldnโ€™t fit the whole family inside, so itโ€™s important to make sure your broadband connection has enough in the tank to handle whatever your family throws at it.โ€

TOP TEN REASONS FOR BROADBAND ROWS

  1. Too many devices connected to the internet at once
    2. People browsing the internet on phones at the dinner table
    3. Too many people using the internet at once
    4. Children going online when they shouldnโ€™t be
    5. Someone turning off the Wi-Fi while you are using it
    6. Children playing video games at peak times when someone is trying to work
    7. Too many apps connected to the internet at once
    8. People using it to download large files, slowing it down for everyone else
    9. Someone using the internet when you are on a work call
    10. Having to make video calls with friends and family

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