Another interesting article on Cable vs. DSL:
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  Cable vs. DSL: Which one will get you                                  on the Internet faster? 
                                              "Please don't make me go back," my wife pleaded                                             with me. "Everything has changed. The old way                                             just will not do any more." 
                                              I had not expected Cecile to give up her                                             high-speed Internet connection on her Macintosh                                             without a fight. But I was unprepared for the panic                                             in her voice and fear in her eyes at the suggestion                                  that she would have to go back to dialing up via her modem every                                  time she wanted to get onto the Internet. 
                                   Giving up high-speed, always-on Internet access, once you've                                  tasted it, has that kind of effect. It's like asking someone to stop                                  driving. Or to go back to washing clothes by hand. 
                                        No more World Wide Wait. 
                                        No more busy dial tones. 
                                        No more tying up the phone line to get online. 
                                        No more getting cut off by the Internet service provider for                                       lack of activity. (In Cecile's case, her dial-up ISP was                                       cutting her off if she so much as got up to answer the door.)
                                        No more setting mental limits on what you do with the Net.                                       Searches that once took minutes suddenly take seconds.                                       Plug-ins that took too long before zap right onto your                                       computer. Sound, images, video - they all pop onto your                                       screen like an MTV video. 
                                   Few things today are as transformational as high-speed Net                                  access. The leap is greater than from LPs to music CDs. It beats                                  even high-definition TV. 
                                   But what about the cost - $20 or so more a month, I ask Cecile.                                  Are you sure you don't want to go back to dial-up? Her                                  expression tells me I'm misguided even to bring up the issue. 
                                   Two kinds of access
                                   For the past four weeks, Cecile has been using the @home                                  Internet service through TCI cable access. Because I already had                                  high-speed access through DSL, or digital subscriber line, from                                  US West, I told the cable company to connect Cecile's Power                                  Mac 7300 on a test account. That way, I could compare the two                                  at the same time - and see how high-speed access affected                                  Cecile, a non-techie who uses a computer as a tool, not a hobby. 
                                   Our North Seattle home has the rare distinction of qualifying for                                  two kinds of fast Net access. 
                                   We have had DSL since last September. Cable arrived just last                                  month. West Seattle and a few other Puget Sound areas also offer                                  both types of service (with DSL being supplied in some instances                                  by GTE or a third party such as Covad, catering mainly to                                  business, rather than US West). 
                                   But overlap is generally pretty rare. Less than 1 percent of the                                  nation today has multiple options for high-speed access. 
                                   Eventually, that is expected to change. Besides major telephone                                  companies, cable companies and third parties, satellite providers                                  are expected to toss their hats into the ring, too. 
                                   Competition may bring prices down from the current level, which                                  averages $40 to $60 a month depending on the level of service                                  and local rate structures. 
                                   So how do DSL and cable connections compare? After about a                                  month of testing the two in our home, I came to some conclusions                                  that surprised me. First and foremost was: Speed difference is not                                  the issue I expected it to be. 
                                   On a rated throughput basis, cable modems and DSL far                                  outperform 56 kilobits per second, the standard way to dial up to                                  the Internet. Tests show a 10-to-30 times improvement in                                  download speeds. 
                                   In theory, cable should be faster than DSL as well. Cable                                  throughput is rated up to 10 megabits per second, where DSL                                  tops out at around 7 megabits per second. And most DSL access                                  is at minimum levels, around 256Kbps. 
                                   But because of the way cable works, sharing its resources in                                  neighborhood hubs, and because the Internet itself is wildly                                  unpredictable in delivery speeds, cable modems tend to deliver                                  well under 1Mbps. 
                                   Cable's fluctuations
                                   Our household discovered cable's fluctuations early. When first                                  installed, the cable modem actually ran slower than Cecile's                                  dial-up service. The next day, TCI's technicians checked                                  everything out, uncovering no problems. 
                                   The first two days were excruciatingly slow. But then, like magic,                                  the logjam began to loosen. Over the next four or five days,                                  service crept up gradually to fast-lane levels. In the ensuing                                  weeks, it remained there, although still well below the 1Mbps                                  rating. 
                                   TCI offered the explanation that the system was still new in my                                  neighborhood. Cable gets faster as the system caches - or stores                                  in memory for quick access - the Web sites its users typically visit.                                  As the system became familiar with our home's usage patterns, its                                  speed increased. 
                                   DSL does not suffer from the shared-resources pitfall. Speed                                  levels are set by how much users are willing to pay. 
                                   DSL has its own set of limitations. Costs escalate dramatically as                                  rated throughput increases. The minimum rate, 256Kbps, is well                                  under the advertised throughput of a cable modem but costs                                  more. 
                                   Then there is the Internet itself, as well as speed differences in                                  browser software and computer performance, including graphics.                                  A slow Internet server will bring any connection to a crawl. Your                                  computer's ability to handle plug-ins, complex layouts, video and                                  sound also will affect your sense of speed. 
                                   After working with both systems, I concluded that at a certain                                  level, fast is fast. The Web blazes satisfactorily on either system;                                  neither disappoints, even at levels well below the rated                                  throughput. 
                                   I conducted a highly unscientific test with Cecile where we both                                  typed in a series of the same URLs. We pressed the "Enter" key                                  at the same time and waited for pages to display. In all cases,                                  DSL performed faster than cable. DSL particularly was faster, by                                  a factor of 33 to 100 percent, on sites that Cecile had never                                  visited before (and the cable system may not have cached). 
                                   Our real-life test did mirror results printed in the March 23 issue                                  of PC Magazine, which found "the ADSL connection ranged from                                  50 to more than 100 percent faster" in a series of tests. 
                                   Just to show that YMMV (your mileage may vary), however, the                                  April 30 edition of PC Magazine concluded "cable-modem                                  services generally outperformed DSL and satellite connections" on                                  a standardized set of throughput tests. Go figure. 
                                   Bottom line: At autobahn speeds, shades of difference hardly                                  matter. 
                                   Instead, the factors that will differentiate the two services (as well                                  as satellite or other high-speed suppliers) may come down to                                  more mundane issues: cost, ease of installation and use, flexibility,                                  related services and incentives, and the all-important support line. 
                                   As it stands today, pricing is definitely in cable's favor. My home                                  DSL line costs $40 a month. But that does not include Internet                                  access. For that I need to sign up with an Internet service                                  provider that supports DSL (many in the Puget Sound region do -                                  check out the Personal Technology section's recent rundown of                                  ISPs). 
                                   Typically, fast Internet access is going to cost $20 or more a                                  month extra over a dial-up account. DSL (from US West) also                                  costs more as the throughput speed increases: 512 kbps costs                                  $65 a month, 768 kbps $80 a month. That is as fast as home                                  service goes in our area. If 1Mbps were available, it would cost                                  $125 a month, and 7Mbps would run $875 a month. 
                                   Installation also costs more with DSL. There is a $110 setup fee                                  even if you install the network card and modem yourself. If you                                  have a technician do it for you, it costs $145 more. Although the                                  network card is included with installation, the modem costs $69. 
                                   Cable costs $150 for installation, which includes the card and                                  modem. 
                                   Cable costs $40 a month, but includes the ISP. That's the big                                  drawback, though: You cannot choose your own ISP. Cable                                  comes with @home Internet service. 
                                   For around $10 a month more, you can get content access to                                  America Online as though you were an AOL subscriber. Other                                  ISPs can offer similar content packages, according to TCI. But                                  none does yet, and whether some will remains a question mark. 
                                   In our case, Cecile's previous dial-up ISP account was costing us                                  $23.75 a month. Going to cable, then, would cost only around                                  $16 a month more - a great deal, considering the speed increases                                  and convenience factor. 
                                   The accessibility issue
                                   Accessibility is another issue for cable. In the coming two years,                                  cable connections are expected to ramp up more quickly than                                  DSL. But by 2002, twice as many DSL installations are forecast                                  as cable. This is partly because telephone wires are more                                  available, particularly in business areas. 
                                   High density, as you might get in a downtown sector or                                  Internet-heavy neighborhood, slows cable performance. Last fall                                  cable-modem users in the San Francisco Bay Area protested a                                  slowdown in service. More than 500 customers in the Fremont                                  area threatened a class-action suit, according to an article in the                                  San Francisco Chronicle. 
                                   TCI discovered that some users were running Web servers out of                                  their homes, dragging down access speeds for their neighbors.                                  Once limitations were placed on what home users could do with                                  their accounts, the problem went away, an @home spokesperson                                  said. 
                                   But the slowdown did expose cable's weakness. 
                                   Today, the phone company offers better service and support than                                  cable. When US West began installing DSL last summer, support                                  was dismal. Technicians knew little about the system. Phone                                  support also was poor. 
                                   But US West has gradually improved service, to the point where                                  calling tech support recently has resulted in waits of less than 5                                  minutes. And when I did get a warm body, the technician in most                                  cases knew what he or she was talking about. 
                                   US West and GTE (which supplies DSL to Eastside and outlying                                  areas) say new installations will take eight to 10 working days. So                                  far, the two providers do not offer DSL in the same area, although                                  with deregulation they are free to do so. 
                                   Cable, on the other hand, still seems to be learning the high-speed                                  ropes. Installation of Cecile's modem took an hour and a half, and                                  required two technicians - one to install the cable cord and                                  another to configure her computer. 
                                   With practice, cable should take no longer than DSL to install, a                                  maximum of 30 minutes. Both systems would like installation to                                  become easy enough for computer users to do it themselves,                                  saving the hassle and cost of service calls. 
                                   Cable support also lags. Calls are answered readily enough, but                                  support personnel do not seem familiar enough with the system to                                  give practical help. I found myself calling other cable-modem                                  users instead of TCI for help. 
                                   Internet services, the kind of thing ISPs readily offer, may be                                  more readily available through DSL connections than via cable.                                  Several ISPs, who typically offer Web site hosting and e-mail                                  enhancements, offer DSL throughput. But so far independent                                  ISPs are unavailable on cable. 
                                   For users who want high speed and maximum flexibility, an                                  independent ISP that supports DSL is the way to go, although the                                  cost may be slightly to significantly higher. 
                                   In the long run, Web and other telecommunications products and                                  services - not speed - may distinguish fast Net suppliers from one                                  another. Cable companies may begin tossing in voice telephone                                  service or discount premium TV channels as a way of attracting                                  customers. The phone company may do all-in-one SOHO (small                                  office/home office) packages that include attractively priced voice,                                  data and Internet services. 
                                   @home's sophisticated home page for cable subscribers is an                                  attempt to win "eyeballs," with mixed results. It has striking                                  graphics and a wide array of links and services, in the tradition of                                  a Web portal like AOL or Yahoo! 
                                   But the interface is entirely different from the standard browser                                  interface used by Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator. The                                  result: You have to learn how to do things differently on the                                  @home site, a real nuisance, especially to experienced Web                                  users. 
                                   US West offers a portal-style approach through                                  uswest.net . It's a start, and uses standard Web                                  browsing, but lacks the sophistication of @home, AOL,                                  msn.com, Yahoo! and other portals. 
                                   In terms of marketing and service potential, both DSL and cable                                  access seem in their infancy. For now, speed and "always on" are                                  the compelling reasons to go with fast Internet access. Be                                  forewarned: Once one member of your household gets it,                                  everyone from the spouse on down to the gamers will crave to                                  follow. We all have the greed for speed. 
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