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Broadband Pricing Across The World?

Freedom_Canadian writes "I was wondering if it would be possible to put up a world map with broadband internet pricing. The prices in Eastern Canada are ridiculous comparing to some states, around $24 US for DSL or cable. I would like to know who is getting screwed, and who are the lucky ones." What are the best and worst prices in your own area? Perhaps someone handy with graphics can collect some good data points from your comments and create such a beast.

11 of 843 comments (clear)

  1. Paying More For Choices by Oculus+Habent · · Score: 4, Informative

    Ah, the benefits of a free market. When your access is partially or fully government subsidized, it can be plenty cheaper. We aren't getting screwed necessarily; we are paying for choice (even if it doesn't exist in your area).

    For my area, I get DSL for $40 (Verizon or the one Verizon reseller), dial-up for $15, or I can go for my own leased line. At work We could get Business Cable ($150+), dial-up $15, or (the chosen option) a fractional T1 from our telco. It's $300-something for 384k.

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  2. ADSL is cheap in Western Canada.. by PFAK · · Score: 4, Informative

    I pay about $35/mo (CDN) for my 1.53mbps/640kbps ADSL in British Columbia with great upstream, low pings, and it's not even PPPoE.. which is just great.

    I guess it depends what part of the world you live in, the cable here is great too.. capped at 8mbps/512kbps if you want Shaw, but it's a bit more pricy at around $45/mo unless you get the cable/TV bundle.

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  3. Vancouver Area Here by Nexzus · · Score: 5, Informative

    Telus Basic residential DSL. 150K down, 50K up. $34.95 Canadian per month. (Plus basic phone line, $22 Cdn per month)

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  4. In the UK by 26199 · · Score: 4, Informative

    In the UK there are basically two options:

    NTL (cable)

    150kbits; 18GBP/month = 33USD/month

    600kbits; 25GBP/month = 46USD/month

    1000kbits; 35GBP/month = 64USB/month

    BT (ADSL)

    500kbits; 23GBP/month = 42USD/month

    In all cases upstream is worse than downstream; on NTL it's only 120kbits on the 600kbits option, I'm not sure about the others. With BT you get 250kbits upstream.

    BT also supply office connections, you can look up the numbers for those if you're interested ;-)

    1. Re:In the UK by samjam · · Score: 4, Informative

      The 25GBP price
      600kbits; 25GBP/month = 46USD/month

      Is I believe dependant on receiving an extra service, either telephone or cable-tv from NTL.
      Certainly the same applies to telewest area but I believe that NTL and Telewest are now merged.

      I had to pay 30GBP per month for the 600K service because I didn't want another service.

      ALSO: NTL, at least around the Leicester area seem to block by default many ports; someone I know had to run VNC server on an unusually low port in order to be able to get incoming connections.

      Also, not all ADSL are the same; a few offer fixed IP addresses, and some dont put any kind of artificial restriction on service use. Telewest on the other hand prohibited running public servers or using the connection for VPN in to corporate network when I last heard.

      Sam

  5. Here's a site by tyrani · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://www.broadbandreports.com/ It has prices and speed statistics from people who test their machines.

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  6. New Zealand prices by olliej_nz · · Score: 4, Informative

    You're not being shafted, in New Zealand our ADSL cost NZ$70 a month, for 10gig of traffic, oh, and thats only 128kbps, or 256kbps cable for the same price, after that its 20cents a meg...

    NZ$70 is about 35->40 USD

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  7. Prices in Germany by 'gourne · · Score: 5, Informative
    Here in southern Germany DSL 768/128 costs about 50$ (12EUR for having it/ 30EUR for using it with a flatrate).

    Cable internet is available in my area as well. Prices range from 10EUR(12$) for 64/64 to 120EUR(150$) for 4096/1024.

  8. Sweden by matoh · · Score: 4, Informative

    10 Mbit/sec Ethernet through Bredbandsbolaget AB: SEK 320/month (~USD 45)

  9. Japan calling here by blndcat · · Score: 4, Informative

    At the moment I'm paying around 4000Yen (37 USD) for my ADSL connection a YahooBB, 26Mbit down - 1 Mbit up, connection. The speed/price is about average in Japan though of course we don't really get anywhere near that in real world speeds.

    roll out of the 45Mbit/3Mbit service starts this month for a few hundred yen more.

  10. Re:Location, Location, Location by gujo-odori · · Score: 5, Informative

    I don't know what your experience in Japan is, but mine was as a network engineer at an ISP, and the local loop distances are really not significantly different than they are here. Moreover, those local loops have already been in the ground (or on the pole) for a long time; it's not like they have to run a new local loop to your house to install DSL. Finally, if you did have to run new local loops, even if the distance was shorter, I would expect the cost per kilometer to be higher in Japan, offsetting much or all of the distance savings.

    DSL prices in Japan can often be comparable or maybe a little more than what they may be in many areas of the United States, but the big difference is the speed you get in Japan for that price. Take a look at this:

    http://www.gol.com/personal/ntt_adsl_e.html

    Look at the line on the bottom of the pricing chart. You can get 40 megabit down DSL (Yes, 40!) for about 4000 yen/month. The exchange rate is about 107 yen to the dollar, so that's under 40 bucks, or looked at another way: it's $1 per megabit, how fast would you like to go?

    Also, notice that the ISP fee is the same regardless of speed, and the telco fee varies by only 150 yen from the price of 1.5 meg service to the price of 40 meg service. I imagine that not many people in a 40 meg service area will go for the 1.5 meg service :-)

    This small price differences reflect the facts that in Japan:

    1) The DSL market has actually grown competitive;

    2) It doesn't really cost you, as a telco, any more to make the line go faster if it will support it. It doesn't cost you that much more as an ISP either, because even if I have a 40 mpbs down DSL line, when was the last time you saw an FTP server that would feed you at that rate?

    Here in LA, I have 2 meg down business cable (no restrictions, global static IP), and I can get near wire speed from an FTP site with a big pipe.

    In Japan, I had 100 megabits from my desk to our network core, with only two Cisco switches in between, yet the fastest downloads I ever saw were on the order of 8 mbps, from an FTP site that was both close (only a few hops away) and had massive bandwidth, the biggest pipes in the whole country. I expect high-speed users probably see similar performance, or maybe less, because they aren't plugged right into the network core over 100 megabit ethernet. So what good does 40 megabit DSL do you if no FTP site will serve you at more than 8 - 10 mbps, and there are very few even of those? Unless your provider runs a huge FTP mirror and it has huge bandwidth to the DSL network, you'll never realize anywhere near the potential of that pipe.

    In Japan, you can also get 100 megabit fiber to the home for not too much more than I pay for my business cable. Here's a price list:

    http://www.gol.com/personal/ntt_b_e.html

    But again, what good does 100 megabit service do you if you can't pull at anywhere near that rate?

    These highly competitive prices are despite the fact that nearly every aspect of running an ISP (or telco) in Japan is more costly than it is in the United States, and come from the fact that while it took a lot longer to get any kind of competition going in the telco market in Japan than it did here, they have at length done so. Best of all, the competition seems to be actually working as intended, whereas it has mostly failed here in the United States.