Interesting, that would be the first DSL connection I've seen with that kind of advertised speed. My only interaction with Qwest (four years ago) was quite terrible, but it was in the capacity of a business leasing eight T1 lines that catastrophically failed every time it rained. It took us three years of bantering to finally get them to own up to the problem and fix it; hopefully their service has improved since then.Qwest offers 20Mb service via existing "fiber to the node, copper to the home" infrastructure AKA, DSL.
Any word on how many subscribers have that kind of service available?
I think we're nearing the cross-over point in terms of broadband usage though. This report shows just over 65 million broadband connections in the U.S. as of the end of Q2 this year. Unfortunately, I can't find statistics from this year on total internet connections, the best I can come up with is that in 2006 there were 132 million internet connections with 42.9 million (32.3 percent) being broadband.
Yeah, that sounds at least reasonable. But that's a massive installed base of users under 56kbps transfer capabilities, and I'd wager a free cup of coffee that at least another half of those on "broadband" are under 1mbit -- maybe even under 512kbit. My point in that paragraph was really that anyone with a >=15mbit connection is in an unbelievably small minority. Hell, I only have 10mbit connection at my house, and while I could conceivably get ahold of a 20mbit connection, the price would double.
The real point is the technology on which 2008 is hinging all of his drivel has a market penetration of single-percentage points -- likely very low single percentage points at that. And the people who could actually tell the true difference? Probably about the same percentage...
Meaning all this banter about how compression is Teh Debil / evil incarnate / terrible / awful / sorely obvious is pretty much worthless no matter how you want to spin it.