  alex4life Alex4life Premium join:2001-06-22 Delta, BC
| The big difference is the price. Most Canadians pay either $40 CDN a month, or $35 CDN a month. Change that to US dollars, and it's equivalent to somewhere around $22 to $26 American. That's why broadband is getting better penetration in Canada. It also proves that companies CAN afford to sell broadband at cheaper prices in the US. If they ever give you crap like "we need to charge this much to break even", just ask them how Canadian broadband companies manage to survive. Remember, the prices I stated above are for cable AND DSL. It's funny, in the states DSL is on average more expensive than cable, but in Canada, at least where I live, it's the opposite. If I could get Telus Velocity DSL where I live, I'd be paying $5 less a month than I pay now for Cable. Oh, but one thing to mention: some companies (like my provider, and Telus) have monthly upload and download limits. That might be why they're cheaper. Still, this doesn't account for Shaw cable, which charges $40 a month Canadian for unlimited bandwidth. Anyways, for about $25 American, I can complain about my cable connection, that peaks at just about 5 megabits per second and is consistently at 2 MBits/s during peak hours. -- "Nothing fits better than a dead man's shirt" -Jimmy James |