Okay, this is going to be long....
The thing that stood out the most in the article Fushigi linked was:
“These findings have significant implications for marketers seeking to connect with Canadian consumers on the Web,”
Great, just what I need sucking up my bandwidth and making my web surfing experience all that much slower....more flash, more crap, less content blah blah blah.
Mercutio said:
you people who whine about $50 bills from your broadband ISPs all, uniformly, suck
I can understand your frustration with your own situation, and can easily see why you would think we're a bunch of whinners. Let me try to put forth a counter argument that might temper that perspective a bit (although if I still couldn't get broadband, I'd be livid....greater Chicago, who would figure).
Anyways, consider that when the broadband cable services first came out ('96/'97) they offered unlimited use. Further, in the case of Rogers cable, a residential line was 3Mbps. I never obtained such lofty rates, although achieving about 2/3 theoretical speed was rather typical...and at that rate, things move quick (to the point where it would be kind of silly to complain that your connection speed was "slow"). Problem number one, however, was that there were frequent down times and email server problems as they rapidly expanded (growing pains some would say). Eventually (say mid '01) things began to stabilize...but this was not after several hundred thousand dissatisfied users banded together under the Residential Broadband User Association (or something like that). Personally, I suspect that the sheer weight this lobbying group was beginning to collect was enough to get the big companies to get their act together (think fear of government intervention - the bane of all successful business models).
Alright then, (stealing the name branded to the 1941 period of u-boat successes in the N.Atlantic) Summer '01 to end of Feb '02 was truly the "happy times" for Canadian cable broadband users. And the companies knew this, broadcasting a series of television commercials showcasing their unlimited access and fast speeds. One such commercial featured a young girl capable of completing her schooling via distant education courses available only throgh the virtue of quality broadband connections.
Sadly, the happy times met an immediate end. But it wasn't unexpectedly, cause everyone knew it was coming for months. Simply, the plug was pulled on Excite@Home - the backbone network to my cable provider. What was their in term solution? Why lease bandwidth off their chief rival's network (Bell Sympatico....a DSL 1Mbps) of course! Let me say this, that things crawled (comparitively for a while) was a understatement...it resembled the good ol' days of dial up at times. So here you are, paying for a premium service that had just become decapitated.....
Okay, I'll give them credit though, because within about two months time, speeds were increased (no where near what it used to be like, but to a tolerable level - i.e. it was noticably broadband again). I'm not sure what they did in terms of setting up their own network backbone, but for a while it seemed promising that the "Son of Broadband" might just grow to be as mighty as the former King had been.
Unfortunately, the son turned out to be a false prophet and status quo was not to return. In fact, quality was to erode even further. Quietly, the 3MBps line connection was adjusted to 1.5Mbps (of course they reserve such a right in the EUA). At this particular time, my connection speeds were sitting around 1.2-1.3Mbps. Which is pretty close to the newly imposed cap. In this regard, I count myself lucky as far too many people weren't even seeing 1Mbps. Problem two, the band cap was accompanied with a price increase ($5 or 12.5%). Jokes about that previously mentioned school girl began to surface, citing that littly Jannie was unable to complete her course work and was forced to drop out of school because she no longer had a sufficent broadband line, nor could she afford the inferior one. I'm sure the succinct humour was not lost on most.
Was there an alternative? Not really (unless you wanted to drop back down to dial up) as the only DSL at the time pretty much did the same except they imposed a monthly bit cap. Enter the new business model. You may wish to peruse this article which surfaced on CNET many months later:
http://news.com.com/2100-1023-975320.html
Anyways, flash forward today. I'm noticing my service is getting even slower - see my recent thread (is the inernet under attack?). Is the futre looking better? No...the provider might adopt a bit cap any time.
So what am I whinning about? Well consider that after tax, said cable service costs ~600/yr. 600/yr for something that is getting worse an worse. Where and when does the erosion end? My cable TV bill goes up each year, but at least I still get the same amount of programming (yet sadly, said quality is dropping exponentially - but thats obviously another issue). Anyways, thats my rant.
I have to admit, the Videotron service that e_dawg and Sherif both listed looks mighty appetizing...too bad nothing like that exists in T.O.
As for you who can get broadband but pay ~$80US ! I feel sorry for you ... I just hope that the quality and level of service you recieve is miles ahead of what many broadband subscribers in Canada have received. As for those of you who haven't been able to get broadband in your area yet, my heart goes out to you. I would not be a happy camper - dial up sucks. I can't help but think that you guys missed out on the happy times. Albeit, optical networks in the future may bring about some of the good times again...But I just shudder at the thought of what the level of commerialization and prices might be.
Cheers, CK