2048 kbps downstream, 400 kbps upstream. Cablecom Switzerland just upgraded my line (from 600/200) and reduced the price at the same time (~50 USD per month). Nice, nice, nice.
Comcast Cable....dialup...I haven't done that in over 5 years...that was back in the stone age of computing. I can't imagine that people still do that. Even my father who did dial up when he travels no longer does it. He's got wifi service with T-Mobile. Whenever he's in an airport he goes to an airport lounge. If he's in NY or LA he just stops outside a starbucks and grabs his email on his G4 PB. Dial Up is a thing of the past! History!
A friend of mine at work is picking up cable AND DSL because he wants the added speed that a second link will give him. He's such a nerd.
Then I realized that the way the utilities are run here, I can actually get DSL from Verizon AND RCN, while at the same time get Cable modem from RCN and Comcast, for *4* lines.
...But I'm not that nerdy =)
(I actually have cable TV from Comcast and RCN right now - RCN has just never turned off the jacks from when the previous tenants lived here, even after I've called them twice about it. So instead I have a TV in the bedroom to take advantage of it - beats paying to have them set up a second jack, or running the cable myself...)
Still not all that fast when compared to my old college connection, because that thing could take 650mb in under 15 seconds, and I was shocked when it did.
Addendum - At home I use IPNetMonitor Pro which includes a bandwidth monitor and gives you a very good idea of your download/upload speeds at all times, without having to rely on a utility like CNET's, which reports my office connection speed as 128Kb!
2048 kbps downstream, 400 kbps upstream. Cablecom Switzerland just upgraded my line (from 600/200) and reduced the price at the same time (~50 USD per month). Nice, nice, nice.