Comment by bn-l

4 days ago

> 1Gbps [symmetrical] with unlimited data for $79 a month.

This costs $500 in Australia in the inner city.

You can’t get symmetrical 1Gbps residential connections, but I imagine the EE plans cost more than $500/m.

I’m on Leaptel 1000/400 for $166/m and it’s fantastic. Fingers crossed they offer the nbn multi gig speeds later this year.

  • It's crazy to me how different it is across the Tasman - in NZ you can get 2 or 4 Gbps symmetrical for $150-180/m NZD in major cities.

> This costs $500 in Australia in the inner city.

I'd pay that. I am stuck with 2mb ADSL living in the centre of a major city in Scotland.

Sounds like a business line or something specialist. What's the average civilian internet like?

  • Australia had a uniquely fucked up fiber rollout (the National Broadband Network or NBN). I don't know if it's still fucked.

Intertesting. I get 1Gbps symmetric from AT&T for $90/mo (was $70/mo two years ago when this article was written).

I'm in the Silicon Valley and have multiple ISP options (although AT&T is the only 1000/1000 option).

I guess our prices stay low because if they went too high it would motivate their competitors to move in.

Aussie Broadband is $150/month for 1Gbps/Down 50Mbs/Up, unless you really need the symmetric that is not representative.

UK £37 a month, £5 extra for a static IPv4 address.

  • With extremely limited availability, the best you can get in most places is 1.8Gbps down and 120Mbps up isn’t it? I know OpenReach have recently announced a 1Gbps symmetric service but I’m not aware of any ISPs offering it yet and the wholesale costs are £1,200/year which is realistically going to translate to about £150+/month retail.

    I’m with Zen and paying them, I think, £65/month for their 1.6Gbps package (they don’t offer 1.8 for some reason).

    • There are alt-net fibre providers with a symmetric service.

      I am only paying for 500Mbps but could get 2Gbps if I wanted.