I’m in El Granada. I download orders of magnitude more than I upload, so I can’t speak too much to upload speeds. However, it is important to know that because of the cable internet’s architecture, and the way that cable companies allocate bandwidth in the local system (end user to local head-end), they must cap upload speeds to avoid having individuals swamp the system. There is much more bandwidth allocated to the download direction. I haven’t tried to figure out when this works and when it doesn’t, and it’s greatly influenced by problems at the site that I download from, but I have seen downloads start out at over 1MBps and then drift downwards, stabilizing at 750KBps. To my knowledge, you simply can’t get that on DSL without spending a huge amount of money.
That said, if reliability is a concern and you can get DSL, I suspect that you’ll be less unhappy with DSL. Comcast’s problem is that none of their outages which are longer than a minute are shorter than 2 hours. I.e., if it goes out and doesn’t come back pretty quick, it’s going to be down for 2 hours minimum. They may have 99.99% uptime, but that’s still abysmal by phone company standards.
I wish I could get DSL here in El Granada. I’d have both DSL and cable for redundancy. Probably download on the cable and upload on the DSL.
In 2004 PacBell was contacted (not through regular customer channels) about a time frame for installing the equipment in E.G. for DSL. They said they were planning on doing it in 2007. Well, in about 2006 or so I found out that in 2004, “planned for 2007” was PacBellSpeak code for “never gonna happen.”
As I’ve written repeatedly (find my “DSL in El Granada” or somesuch poll elsewhere in Town Hall), the #1 thing that people can do to pressure the phone company for DSL in E.G. is to call up and ask to put on their waiting list. And it’s probably necessary to call every 3 months and specifically ask “when is it going to be available?”. We need a few hundred people to do this, and then we may get DSL here. Uh oh, now that I think about they’ve stopped sending me the bimonthly “still not available” emails…
BTW, there *is* DSL in El Granada. But there are only a handful of circuits and to avoid having to allow competitors access to it per FCC regs, they insist there is no DSL in E.G. But I personally verified 2 DSL circuits which used to be installed in downtown El Granada. (At two separate locations people told me they had DSL, I didn’t believe them, I went into their offices and traced the route which proved to me that it was DSL.) I have not been able to track down the circuit numbers though after they were disconnected. I don’t know how one got installed, the other was because the business owner had a friend in the right place in the phone company.