Get super-fast broadband for £3 a month

Cliff D'Arcy
by Lovemoney Staff Cliff D'Arcy on 04 October 2009  |  Comments 34 comments

Why pay £15 a month or more to get online, when you can get an 8Mb broadband connection for just 10p a day?

A few months ago, something bordering on disaster happened to me: I lost my home broadband connection for nearly a week. My home is my workplace, so this could have caused endless problems. However, from adversity comes opportunity...

Shopping around for bargain broadband

Faced with the possibility of being unable to work at home, I did two things. First, I asked my neighbours on both sides if I could piggy-back on their wireless-broadband signal. They generously agreed and, within the hour, I was back online again.

Second, I decided that it was time to search the whole broadband market for a new supplier. My main goal was to find a reliable service offering reasonable bandwidth at an attractive price. My existing deal from Prodigy Networks cost £14.99 a month in return for an 8Mb service with a 2GB download limit (with each extra gigabyte charged at £1.50).

Three or four years ago, most users had a 2Mb connection, and 8Mb broadband was considered a luxury. Today, three in five households (60%) have an 8Mb connection. In fact, this should read 'up to 8Mb', because various technical issues will affect your 'true' connection speed.

Your actual connection speed will be affected by where you live (for best results, live in a big city), your distance from your local exchange (the shorter, the better), the time of day, and the number of connections to your service.

According to telecoms watchdog Ofcom, the average speed users get from an 8Mb service is around 3.6Mb, or less than half (45%) of the theoretical maximum. Check your actual speed with this broadband speed test.

Super-fast broadband for 10p a day

I was confident that I could find an 8Mb service with a much higher download limit for far less than I was paying before. Sure enough, after about 30 minutes of trawling through offers, I came across a great deal from award-winning ISP PlusNet. (Amusingly, PlusNet was bought by BT in January 2007 and thus competes with its new owner for customers.)

PlusNet Value offers 8Mb broadband with a 10GB download limit for £5.99 a month for the first three months. This includes a free wireless router (add £6.99 for postage and packing) and free connection, but you must have a BT landline to apply. After three months, if you live in a low-cost area (known as a 'market 3' exchange), then you continue to pay £5.99 a month, otherwise the price jumps to £11.99 a month.

In common with about four-fifths (80%) of the UK population, I live in a market 3 area, so my PlusNet broadband is £5.99 a month, or £71.88 a year. This is a saving of at least £108 a year, so I'm one happy customer. Even better, I applied via cashback website Quidco and got £36 cashback (reduced to £28), cutting the first-year cost to a mere £35.88, or under 10p a day!

All's well that ends well

I've found that my PlusNet connection is more than enough for web browsing, email and watching the odd programme on BBC iPlayer. What's more, my connection is very reliable -- an essential requirement, as both my wife and I work from home.

Note that PlusNet uses 'speed throttling' to control its traffic, which slows you down at busy times if your usage gets too heavy. Many ISPs apply this as part of their 'fair-usage policies'. Thankfully, I don't download lots of large files or stream a lot of television, so my 10GB monthly limit is way more than I need. However, anyone who does lots of downloading or P2P file-sharing may need a higher download limit.

Finally, when shopping around for broadband, do look into the bundled home phone, web and digital TV packages on offer from the likes of BT, Sky and Virgin Media. Although I'm not a fan of bundling in general, there are some cracking deals on offer for those willing and able to move their line rental to a new provider.

More: Search for cheaper broadband | Slash your energy bills | 35 things you can get for £5 or less

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Comments (34)

  • p2white
    Love rating 2
    p2white said

    I use PlusNet...but as soon as my contract with them expires I shall be switching. The first 3 months with them was a catalogue of errors..first the broadband didn't 'switch' on in 7 days..apparently a computer problem so would have to wait a further 7 days...which then turned into 10 days.

    Then none of my phone facilities were switched on such as answerphone and caller ID. They took a further 4 phone calls over 2 weeks to be activated.

    They inform you of you bill by sending you an email. However, they send it to your plusnet email address. I asked them to send it to my own emai address as I check that daily. It tokk them 4 months to accomplish this.

    Then when I requested a call back from a manager to explain why all these 'non-actions' had taken place it never happened.

    And woe betide anyone why misses a payment. You will be bombarded with text messages and phone calls from the day the payment is due with no room for negotiation.

    Oh and to cap it all I don't live in one of these low cost areas so have to pay £11.99 a month for barely a 1meg service..

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  • smealor
    Love rating 2
    smealor said

    I suspect your 'kind' neighbours were breaking their contract terms by allowing you to use their connections.

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  • hsymonds
    Love rating 2
    hsymonds said

    I am on plusnet value package. Only go over limits if children from first marriage stay?

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  • LateDeveloper
    Love rating 22
    LateDeveloper said

    When comparing these services, you should include the line rental, to make a fair comparison, since there are other services on offer, which do not need a land line.

    Firstly, VM has there own land line, so unless you want to pay for 2 landlines BT and VM,, you loose or limit the ability to choose which service you want to go with, since a lot of services require a BT land line. Its one of the issues I have with BT, since it is a monopoly service.

    So for comparisons sake, I always ignore short term gains with these services, the illustrated charge is £17.98 a month or 59p per day.

    Now we look at BT Openzone, 500 minutes for just £5 a month, or a mobile phone with HSDPA 150 MB allowance over 90 days from 3 or on each top up, minimum £10 I think.

    In each and every case, land line charges must be included, for a good comparison. VM btw comes out as one of the most expensive, with a landline charge and Broadband of £30 + a month.

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  • LateDeveloper
    Love rating 22
    LateDeveloper said

    I will have to point out, that VM throw TV into the mix, to make it look as if you are getting more for your money, but with a BT landline, you at least have the choice to minimise costs by being able to get a cheaper broadband. :)

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  • ForbiddenFruit
    Love rating 0
    ForbiddenFruit said

    Super fast? Pah. 1 meg would be good.

    We live 7 1/2 miles from the exchange, on the absolute limit, and can't have cable run as we're in a conservation area.

    We were with a business provider through my partner's company but have just switched to BT having gone through nightmares of our broadband consistently failing, the ISP blaming it on the BT line (which, to be fair, it probably was) and BT blaming it on the ISP.

    I have to say it's all been very smooth and even seems faster now the whole service is with BT. Something worth bearing in mind if you have a problem service is that it's better to have both things in the same place and then they don't try to blame each other.

    FF

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  • i1189
    Love rating 0
    i1189 said

    I have the 8Meg service from PlusNet. I'm lucky if I get 0.7Meg. It used to be faster, but suddenly slowed, and nobody will take responsibility for this. Interestingly the house opposite me has BT 8Meg and they get 2Meg...

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  • Mike10613
    Love rating 599
    Mike10613 said

    Try optimising your TCP if you aren't getting the speed you need on ADSL. You can get a free program. I went from 2 Mb/s to around 7 Mb/s. My best speed recently was over 100 Mb/s which I am told is impossible! lol from: http://www.speedguide.net/downloads.php

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  • Mike10613
    Love rating 599
    Mike10613 said

    I just checked my speed, it's not so fast today! lol 

    http://www.speedtest.net/result/582588117.png

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  • old fan
    Love rating 0
    old fan said

    Tiscali has had a lot of bad press in the past but I think I get a really good deal:

    Up to 8 Meg broadband (I actually get 6 Meg)

    All 01 and 02 calls telephone calls at any time

    Line rental (this would cost over £11 on its own)

    ALL for £17.99 per month

    I have had this for a few years now with no problems.

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  • jaymie
    Love rating 18
    jaymie said

    @i1189: I'm with PlusNet and experienced a sudden transfer rate drop last year. Also, the connection would drop and then re-connect some minutes later.

    HOWEVER, it turned out not to be PlusNet's fault (I've been with them for a couple of years, payments get taken when they're meant to, service nothing short of excellent). The line drop was cause by my running a phone cable extension to my router. Some monitoring equipment in the exchange monitored these frequent line drops and got a bit over-zealous in scaling-back my transfer rate down to 512kbps.

    Contacting PlusNet sorted the problem out in a few hours. I plugged my router straight into the main phone socket directly. They did warn me it would take up to a few days for the monitoring equipment to realise the connection was now stable. I'm back running at full pace and have had no problems since.

    However, I hope this article doesn't generate scores of new PlusNet customers on my exchange. ;o)

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  • trustjmh
    Love rating 0
    trustjmh said

    First year; 5.99*12 + 6.99 - 28 + 5 = £55.87

    (£5 quilco anual fee)

    5587/365 = over 15p per day 50% more than you are stating.

    (Also others that go through quidco now may not even get £28 back.)

    Is quidco it a cooperative buisinness? (or owned by shareholders)

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  • gullarm
    Love rating 1
    gullarm said

    Im paying 5p per day.....read on.

    I recently changed from sky charging £10 for unlimited BB to 02. I was getting around 10mb down and 0.5 meg up with a ping of around 30ish, so was not too happy to leave these kind of speeds.

    02 were offering unlimited BB for £7.34 for existing 02 customer ( soon sorted with a free sim card ), plus 3 months free so that equals £5.50 per month on average.

    02 were also supplying a free modem/router as well ( the router is a bit pants though )

    My download is now running around 7meg and the upload is now 1meg, the ping floats around 20-25ms.

    Not bad! I lost some download speed for better upload and ping. Id rather have it this way for my 360/PS3 online gaming.

     

    Going thru top cashback netted a return of £50 cash back.

    Heres the maths

    7.34 per month X 12 months = £88 per year

    less 3 months free 7.34 X 3 = 22.02

    Equals £65.98

    Less £50 from top cash back

    Equals £15.98 per year

     

    So for a years BB its costing me £16 or £1.33 per month or 30p per week or just under 5p per day.

     

    Line rental is still with sky which is still around £1 per month cheaper than BT.

    Why these things happen I just don't know.

     

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  • gullarm
    Love rating 1
    gullarm said

    Heres my speed for 02

    http://www.speedtest.net/result/582707944.png

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  • trustjmh
    Love rating 0
    trustjmh said

    Answering my own queston (for anyone interested)

    Quidco isn't a cooperative buisness

    http://www.robmanuel.com/2006/12/04/can-you-really-get-cash-back-for-everything-you-spend-online/

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  • GrahamT
    Love rating 1
    GrahamT said

    in my book Cheap NEVER = Reliable.

    I don't understand how someone who runs a Business from home can put their Livelyhood at risk by using a Cheap Broadband Service. Fair enough if it's just a "Toy" for "Little Jimmy (or Jane) to Surf the Web and Chatter to their school mates (who they'll probably see in a few hours time anyway), but NOT for a Business when a loss of connection could easily result in the loss of a Valuable Contract or Sale.

    When I ran my IT Business I used the expensive, but 100% reliable, ZEN Internet. But my company was using Computer to Computer Communication over the Phone Lines @ just 150bps via Acoustic Coupler, LONG before the Internet became available. Our first Modem was just 300 baud and we thought it was Fantastic ..... coz we didn't have to worry about the noise of someone shutting a drawer, being picked up by the Acoustic Coupler and Corrupting the signal !

    Only after I took Early Retirement (after an Industrial Injury) did I question the cost of ZEN's Service and switch to TalkTalk.

    I have to LAUGH when people in the UK talk about High Speed Internet, coz even the FASTEST of our PLANNED, but NOT Yet Available, Fibre Optic Services will offer LESS THAN HALF the speed that Consumers in Japan have been enjoying for over a year !   I believe Japan are now rolling out their 160MB Service !

    Something else that REALLY GETS UP MY NOSE are all the Adverts for "UNLIMITED" Broadband ..... which when you read the Small Print, actually ARE LIMITED .... by what the provider calls their "Fair Usage Policy".

    How does the Trades Description Act allow companies to advertise a LIMITED Service as being "UNLIMITED" ??? 

    Report on 05 October 2009  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • sandbar
    Love rating 3
    sandbar said

    Latedeveloper is wrong to say that with VM you need to have a phone line to take broadband so his price comparison is wrong. Theirs is the only service that requires no phone line from BT or them as it comes via fibre/coax and not a phone line. VM do seem to try to encourage you to take phone with tv and broadband bundle deals though but you can take broadband alone. In my experience it is also the best option for speed in cabled areas unless you are a very short distance from the BT exchange and generally delivers pretty much the advertised speed (10M in my case).

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  • tavistockdoc
    Love rating 0
    tavistockdoc said

    I signed up for O2 home bradband and have an excellent deal. My actual speed is 14mb and it very rarely varies (claimed 18-20mb). The first 3 months were free and thereafter £9.79 pm (also came with free wireless router). To continue recieving this I must top up my O2 mobile by £10 once every quarter. The service is utterly stable, no drop-outs and I (and teeenage son) listen to spotify, internet radio etc, all day long, while working from home on my computer.

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  • johncolescarr
    Love rating 7
    johncolescarr said

    A stupid question, please be kind!

    Does broadband speed and reliability really rely on the service provider or is it more due to physical assets, ie phone line quality, distance from exchange, exchange quality etc etc. What do service providers actually provide in terms of physical assets (apart from modem/router)

    Regards

    John

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  • sandbar
    Love rating 3
    sandbar said

    johncolescarr, as well at the modem the broadband provider provides the connection from your house to their own network and the wider internet. All wired services use BT's phone wiring from your house to the BT exchange (ADSL) except for Virgin's cable service which is quite separate from BT. The ADSL provider may have rented the entire line from BT and connected it to its own equipement at the exchange (local loop unbundling - LLU) or just pay BT to use the line for broadband while BT still provides the phone service and possibly broadband as well. (www.samknows.com can tell you which suppliers are in which exchanges.) At the BT exchange the provider can either connect to their own network if they have presence there or pay BT for using its services to connect to their network at some remote point. The length of the phone line to the exchange and to some extent its quality determines the maximum speed you are likely to achieve with ADSL though this may also vary somewhat with providers as some may use later, higher spec exchange equipment. The performance at busy times may also depend on the quality of the provider's own backbone network or the level of service they have paid BT for. The Virgin cable service comes over a high bandwidth fibre/coax local network (also used for tv) so can deliver the stated speeds wherever you are on the network and connects via their own backbone network to the wider internet. Some comparisons can be seen in the report at at http://www.ofcom.org.uk/research/telecoms/reports/broadband_speeds/broadband_speeds/

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  • LateDeveloper
    Love rating 22
    LateDeveloper said

    sandbar said

    Latedeveloper is wrong to say that with VM you need to have a phone line to take broadband so his price comparison is wrong. Theirs is the only service that requires no phone line from BT or them as it comes via fibre/coax

    What do you think the fibre/coax is for then ?

    It carries both Video and Phone, + your broadband, how else do you think broadband gets into your house ? There is still aline rental charge applied.

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  • ProProductions
    Love rating 1
    ProProductions said

    LateDeveloper I have to correct you on your assumption that with Virgin Media you need to take a phone line as you don't.

    Also you also say that the phone line runs down fibre/coax to a home, which it does not.

    Here is how Virgin Media actually wires to your home from their kit.

     From their kit it runs over fibre optic links to the large green boxes in the street,

     From the green boxes its split into two cables, Coax (for TV and Broadband) and Copper (For Phone)

    If your outside of a cable area then both broadband and phone is run down BT Copper wires.

    So all in all, if your in a cable area, you can get Virgin Media Broadband without TV or Phone,

    If your outside of a cable area you can get Virgin Media Broadband ONLY with a phone, but TV is not an option.

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  • sandbar
    Love rating 3
    sandbar said

    Latedeveloper, as ProProductions says the fibre/coax carries cable tv and broadband only. Phone does not use the coax but comes via fibre to the street cabinet then into house on a short twisted pair and is powered from the line just like a BT phone.

    This applies where Virgin connects you directly (in its cabled areas).

    Where it supplies service outside its cabled area it works like other

    suppliers over a BT phone line.

    In cabled areas you don't need to take the phone service. My neighbour has had just broadband from Virgin (and previously ntl) for over 5 years and this is still an option.

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  • rarcher100
    Love rating 0
    rarcher100 said

    I am also with o2. Although the free router is a little naf at times, everything else is great: about 6 meg download and 1.2meg upload with good ping times. I am also on £7.34 a month with o2 phone deal. All I hear are negative comments about most of the other isp's. o2 offer one of the highest upload speeds of all and the service is reliable. The help lie has always been free and is excellent. (No, I don't work for O2!!!!!!!!)

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  • madfraggle
    Love rating 4
    madfraggle said

    Slightly off topic - "unlimited" is an interesting definition. If you are a Virgin Mobile customer, for example, "unlimited" texts = 3000 per month, and "unlimited" calls to other Virgin mobiles = 3000 minutes/month.

    Now I realise that I, personally, am never going to reach these limits, but 3000 minutes = approx 100 minutes/day or less than 2 hours per day, which in my book is hardly "unlimited"

    Has trading standards looked at these definitions at all?

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  • sheff-spud
    Love rating 2
    sheff-spud said

    I use a small co-operative ISP called the Phone Co-op.

    Service is spot on. Connection great. No technical problems at all.

    For £23 per month I get my line rental (LLU), 8MB broadband and evening/weekend calls. Works like a dream and just the one bill. No seperate BT line rental bill.

    Also as the ISP is a co-operative it is member owned. Customers can become a member by investing £1. In return you get a share of the profits so reducing what the package costs.

    Plus if you're a member of the Co-operative Group (if you have one of those cards with the bee and honeycomb picture on) the Phone Co-op will give you a futher 8% discount off your phone/internet package cost with them.

    Report on 06 October 2009  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • angussb
    Love rating 1
    angussb said

    Disclosure: I'm a distributor for Utility Warehouse Discount Club.

    First of all, the title is misleading. In LLU areas, BT offer speeds of up to 20Mb in suitable exchanges- Utility Warehouse offer up to 24Mb in suitable exchanges. 8Mb is therefore not 'super fast'.

    Secondly, if Cliff used the link in the article to 'search the whole broadband market',  then he missed a company ranked as a best buy by a leading independent magazine. Not his fault, as many sites don't list Utility Warehouse.

    Third, for the last 2 months, my cost of line rental, calls and LLU broadband of 'up to 24Mb, unlimited' has actually been negative, due to Utility Warehouse's 5% cashback card.

    While there is the standard 'fair usage' policy, this is quite generous- as I don't subscribe to Sky, and my house gets lousy terrestrial reception, I regularly watch streaming television by broadband with good quality, where 10Gb or even 40Gb packages would result on over the limit fees.

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  • MrsTrellisOfNorthWales
    Love rating 18
    MrsTrellisOfNorthWales said

    O2's helpline "has always been free and is excellent".

    Does anyone know where it's located?

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  • Hitman
    Love rating 0
    Hitman said

    This article does not appear to take into consideration the costs assosciated with the phone line that is contractually mandatory, but is not technologically mandatory.

    I find it appalling regulators have not taken action against BT and Virgin Media to compel these primary networks and all the other service providers to DE-LINK Telephone services from ADSL/ADSL2 services.

    Performance of ADSL/ADSL2 connections might perform more reliably if there is no interference from telephones

    It seems to me that removing the cost of line rental for an antiquated telephone service using telephone line cables which may be 50+ years old and the associated voice service in favour of a data only service would prove to be a massive insentive for people to take advantage of such a service.

    A similar approach might be taken by Virgin media who similarly compel customers to take phone lines in order to get discounts to make other services more affordable.

    Those precious voice services have largely been replaced by mobile services, however a VOIP service can easily be offered over a data connection for those who really want a landline.

    I'd suggest that the charge for ADSL/Cable Data services might include a token charge for the modem equipment for each connection - say for example £4 and then a charge for bandwidth based not on the maximum speed, but on a fixed measurement of the actual average potential bandwidth (taking into consideration any deliberate throttling of the speed of port/service(s) such as video streaming or the entire connection) with option to cap the speed of the connection below this maximum for those not wanting or needing the higher speeds.

    Perhaps a reasonable charge might be 25p per 0.5Gbps resulting in a maxium charge of £4 for an 8Gbps ADSL line (£8 inc equipment charge) and £10 for a 20Gbps ADSL2 line (£14 inc equipment charge)

    Fair Usage should perhaps be contextualised, in terms of performance data. For example, most data services feature something called a Contention Ratio.

    A Contention Ratio is akin to the old party line feature of yester-year telephone services where two or more phones with unique numbers shared a single connection to the switch. In this case there might be anywhere from 10 or 20 up to 50 customer 8Mbps ADSL or 20Mbps ADSL2 lines shared a single ADSL/ADSL2 connection from the exchange to the internet. The number 10/20-50 depends largely on the company/exchange and customers with business users (Synchronous rather than Asynchronous Services) benefiting from smaller rations than residential users.

    The net effect of Contention Ratios is similar to Bandwidth Throttling in that customers compete for bandwidth, particularly at peak times.

    Another Context for Fair Usage might be in terms of performance, perhaps specifying QOS or Quality Of Service - a minimum quantity or percentage general and port/service specific bandwidth at peak times.

    All in All the approach to these services has to change and ditching old anteqated services is the first step.

    The UK has an opportunity to make such changes and to take a bold and unique new approach to providing services.

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  • hfc53
    Love rating 0
    hfc53 said

    Hi, 

    I'm with Utility Warehouse (for my sins!) 

    They promised the LLU 24mb.

    I get 0.4meg on a good day!

    After 4 months of problems which are still not resolved. I feel that I could never recommend the Utility Warehouse to anyone.

    I have to admit I have had a lot of free calls though. Over 8 hours so far on the phone to the Utility Warehouse trying to get someone to sort out my account.

    I keep being promised call backs which 'surprisingly' never happen so I have to chase them again. Irrelevant of what anyone selling something says always FULLY check reviews and feedback about a company.

    I wish I had read more about the Utility Warehouse before being mis-sold and signed up to a twelve month contract which has already seemed like an eternity!!!

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  • MrPound
    Love rating 11
    MrPound said

    I think I'm the winner (for once). I too am with o2 and think that their deal is cracking. Having never had any broadband at home before (we were using a PAYG dial up service and paying around £5/month) I signed up with o2 via Quidco as others above have. Here's the maths:

    o2 broadband @ £7.34/month x 9 (1st 3 months free) = £66.06

    Joined via Quidco and got £70 cashback after 3 months so by the first month I started to pay I was already up. This year's broadband bill will be -£3.94 for the year i.e. just under FREE!

    However as long as the price stays the same I think I'll stick with o2 next year. £7.34/month for a 8mb service (every time I've checked it's been at 7mb or more) with a free wireless router, which was delivered in 3 days and working in 4 is fantastic even without the offer or cashback. The service has been excellent for what I use (mainly web surfing plus online shopping and some 4OD and BBCi now and again) and (touch wood) they have never let me down. Hat's off to em' (and like rarcher100 I have nothing to do with o2 or BT)!

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  • angussb
    Love rating 1
    angussb said

    hfc53,

    "I'm with Utility Warehouse (for my sins!) 

    They promised the LLU 24mb.

    I get 0.4meg on a good day!"

    I'm sorry that you were promised 24mb. I don't promise customers 24mb- there are some exchanges which are set up for faster speeds, but most areas are not set up for that, even when LLU enabled. However, I have a faster connection than neighbours, and there was a significant increase in speed the day that I was unbundled, despite being on an 'up to 8mb' service before.

    With a speed of only 0.4mb, I would have to say that the chances are that you would get a very slow connection from any provider. One analogy that I have heard is that broadband is a bit like a leaky pipe with regular holes. the longer pipe that water has to go through, the more holes there are to lose water, so the lower the pressure comes out of the end. If a pipe has a greater number of holes per meter, the pressure drops even more. Similarly, the further you are from the exchange and the worse the line between you and the exchange, the lower the broadband speed.

    " Irrelevant of what anyone selling something says always FULLY check reviews and feedback about a company."

    OK, try reading leading independent consumer magazines that have no ways to make money from companies that they review- not many out there, but there is one household name.

    You mentioned getting lots of free calls, with the comment about the calls to UW. First of all, I would contact the distributor who signed you up in the first place, and get them to talk to head office on your behalf. I have always been happy to do this for my own customers, partly so that I know that any issues have been resolved (both issues for me have been on starting up energy, as meter readings have been problematical when the previous suppliers had not updated records when changing meters.) I'm new to the site, so I don't know if there is any way for you to contact me direct if I want me to try to help- obviously, there is no benefit to myself, as I cannot benefit from you as a customer if you are already a customer with UW.

    Secondly, an increasing number of my customers are getting a lot of free calls, often in excess of 15 hours a month. I get particularly good feedback from customers who come from countries not covered by free calls from any provider (usually the Philippines) who can get free calls from there to any UK landline with their package for a fixed fee.

    By the way, I'll be trying to report this post, so that moderators can decide whether it needs to be removed as potentially advertising my business.

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  • Olipro
    Love rating 3
    Olipro said

    Mike10613 said

    Try optimising your TCP if you aren't getting the speed you need on ADSL. You can get a free program. I went from 2 Mb/s to around 7 Mb/s. My best speed recently was over 100 Mb/s which I am told is impossible! lol from: http://www.speedguide.net/downloads.php

    Mike,

    What you have linked to there is basically something that applies compression to your connection; it is essentially useless for boosting the speeds of real downloads as they are usually already compressed in some way or another.

    The reason it makes your speedtest seem to be so fast is because the speedtest works by sending a few MB of the same data down the line (say, 5MB worth of 0xFF bytes) - the compression results in you getting the instruction to simply "create" 5MB worth of 0xFF since they're all the same, and this causes your false reading.

    if you were to download a real file, clearly it won't be comprised of all 0xFF, and so, your compression wouldn't be able to give such a stunning result.

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  • Mike10613
    Love rating 599
    Mike10613 said

    I know I get a false reading at over 100 MB/s I just tried the speed test. That is linked from the article it still gave me 7Mb/s which is about right. My local exchange is rated at 10 Mb/s. Incidentally 10p a day works out to £3.10 a month. I was just connected to a server in China and have to admit the video kept stopping. But normally I have no problems. I stream music and video from across the Atlantic and from Poland. TalkTalk has a bad reputation and their server is a shambles but it works most of the time. According to the server when I log in I have 1 email account and no web space! lol I have had a website on for years and I access 4 email accounts using POP3. 

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