On Sun, 06 Mar 2005 21:10:27 GMT, "Goo Goo" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>"Andrew Norman" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
>news:(E-Mail Removed).. .
>> That is not a correct understanding of how ADSL contention works I'm
>> afraid.
>
>Well he's not on ADSL, he's on cable, which is how it works.
Er, no I don't think he is on cable, unless the contents of his post
are incorrect.
He says:
"At certain parts of the day my broadband is getting very slow. Would
this be the fault of the broadband supplier (NTL) or the local BT
exchange"
From this we know that:
a) his ISP is ntl
b) he thinks he is connected to ntl via the local BT exchange
You are probably thinking "ntl only provide broadband via cable", but
I'm afraid you are wrong. If you go to
http://www.ntlfreedom.com/ you
will find that ntl do indeed provide a broadband service that uses the
BT wholesale ADSL product.
So either the original poster was wrong in his understanding that he
is connected via BT, in which case he has cable OR he was right and he
has ADSL with ntl as an ISP.
And yes, contention on cable does occur in a different way to ADSL.
--
Andy Norman
(E-Mail Removed)
http://www.norman.cx/
Replace the fish with my first name to reply