Keep in mind that any other ISP will still be using Bell's lines for DSL so you
probably won't see much of a performance increase, although pricing and service
will probably be better.
On Jan 15, 2012, at 3:44 PM, Shawn H Corey wrote:
> I'm currently using Bell for my ISP but I thinking of chan
On Sun, Jan 15, 2012 at 06:38:58PM -0500, Woogie wrote:
> I'd like to second the recommendation for TekSavvy. If you get DSL
> through them, you can even get in on their IPv6 beta (that is, if it's
> still ongoing). Sadly not an option with their cable services, or else
> I'd have jumped right on b
On Sunday, January 15, 2012 06:33:51 PM Brenda J. Butler wrote:
> Teksavvy and/or NCF.
>
> http://teksavvy.com/en/default.asp
> http://www.ncf.ca/
I can second NCF, I was with them for dial up before going to Bell and I'm
back with them now. Static IP and a 300gb limit for a better price than
On Sun, 15 Jan 2012, Shawn H Corey wrote:
> I'm currently using Bell for my ISP but I thinking of changing; they are
> charging too much money for too little performance. I am looking for an
> ISP to provide DSL at home. Any suggestions?
I would also support Teksavvy from personal experience of 5
I'd like to second the recommendation for TekSavvy. If you get DSL
through them, you can even get in on their IPv6 beta (that is, if it's
still ongoing). Sadly not an option with their cable services, or else
I'd have jumped right on board.
On Sun, Jan 15, 2012 at 6:33 PM, Brenda J. Butler wrote:
Teksavvy and/or NCF.
http://teksavvy.com/en/default.asp
http://www.ncf.ca/
I tried out that search link canadianisp and searched for DSL
suppliers in Nepean, Ottawa, Stittsville and also Chatham (where
Teksavvy's head office is), and Teksavvy didn't show up. So I'm not
too sure how up to date t