Pages

CANADIAN INTERNET PROVIDER WE HIGHLY RECOMMEND

After many reviews of internet provider.  It is basic who to join.  

Many will read feedback post on the internet about internet providers from website with "AGENDAS".


However for this webiste that is basic in our reviews and with no AGENDA !!!   

 

Reviews of Canada's Internet Providers  ::   

Bell Internet,  Rogers Internet, CarryTel Internet,  Teksavvy Internet,   Distributel.

 

WE HIGHLY RECOMMEND AS A INTERNET PROVIDER ::   distributel


Internet Services Provider - Home Phone, TV | Distributel.ca

www.distributel.ca

 

THE WORST INTERNET PROVIDER :

carrytel   -   Carry Telecom


NOT affiliate to any of the listed company,  no income is received for the opinion


Internet 2019 Review

Review for 2019 of Teksavvy

Okay many years ago when this company was new  I was very pleased with TEKSAVVY.com, however many years have passed and a recently receiving the comments listed below and felt the comments summarize many viewers and readers response/comments.

So after 8 years of DSL service from Teksavvy and now 2 years with Cable Internet from Teksavvy my feelings and 'YOU' the readers comments are as follow;
Quality:   Teksavvy is a leach to ROGER internet and Bell Internet with "NO" distinction in quality, Teksavvy is simply a reseller to the service from other ISP (internet providers Bell/Rogers)
Support:   With the support they now offer,  TEKSAVVY is a Cancer.  Extremely long delay when dialing into support "every time".
The repeated message "we are receiving high call volumes ever day for the last 4 years".  Wake up owner of TEKSAVVY, wake up Rocky !!!!

Canada Internet Service Review Discussion Group


Canada Internet Service Review Discussion Group

InternetCanada@groups.io
Canada 🇨🇦 Internet Service Review
https://groups.io/g/InternetCanada

 

CARRYTEL NETWORK STATUS - Current Unsolved Outages


CARRYTEL NETWORK STATUS - Current Unsolved Outages
Date : April 1, 2020
Location impacted:  ON

CANCEL SERVICE WITH THIS PROVIDER
 
 
NEVER JOIN  CARRYTEL AS AN INTERNET PROVIDER






Feds help provide high speed Internet

Feds help provide high speed Internet

The federal government will help provide high-speed internet access to nearly 2,600 homes in the Sault and area over the next few years, Sault Ste. Marie and area MP Brian Hayes announced Tuesday.

The enhanced service is an effort by Ottawa to connect an addition 280,000 households across the country, in rural and remote regions, to internet service at minimum speeds of five megabits per second.

“Today’s broadband infrastructure announcement is great news for the Sault area,” Hayes said in a prepared statement.

“The Harper Government understands the importance of high-speed Internet access for communities like ours. Connecting Canadians demonstrates the government’s commitment to delivering for rural Canadians,” said the local member of Parliament.

Ottawa is partnering with dozens of internet service providers to construct the infrastructure necessary to provide new or improved services to help Canadians perform what have become daily tasks online, such as banking, education and communication, the press release states.

Access to new services will improve economic opportunities and lead to the creation of new jobs, products and services.

The government initiative is an effort to help more Canadians take advantage of opportunities offered in the digital age.

“Today’s announcement marks the next important phase in our plan to bring the benefits of high-speed internet to 280,000 Canadian households,” said Minister of Industry, James Moore.

“Providing Canadians with access to high-speed internet for learning, business opportunities and so much more is key to creating a more connected, digital Canada.”

In its 2013 throne speech, the Stephen Harper Government earmarked $305 million over five years to extend and enhance broadband service.

If you already have an account on this newspaper, you can login to the newspaper to add your comments.

Are internet service providers keeping tabs on your browsing?

The Toronto Star contacted Bell, Rogers and TekSavvy to see what kind of information the companies keep about the websites their customers visit

What does your internet service providers know about your internet browsing habits?
The Toronto Star contacted three popular internet service providers (ISPs) in Toronto — Bell, Rogers and TekSavvy — to see what kind of information the companies keep that can track the websites their customers visit.
But first, some background. Customers are assigned a new IP address, or Internet Protocol address, whenever their modem connects to the internet. The IP address is a series of numbers that acts as an address online, telling a website where to deliver its data. If, for example, a Hollywood studio wants to find out who downloaded a TV episode illegally, they would try to acquire the user’s IP address then ask an ISP for the name associated with that number.
When asked whether the companies log such information, the responses from the internet services providers varied considerably.

TEKSAVVY - Greater Toronto Area was with the Rogers Express and Extreme packages

Ottawa,ON
 $45 per month
 about 5 days
 Bell Canada
 "Truly Unlimited Package, Amazing Customer Service and No Hidden Fees"
 "Package speeds (same with all DSL resellers)"
 "Great ISP, Can't recommend them enough!

After having been with Rogers for 8 years in the Greater Toronto Area (and being used to the Rogers "Express" & "Extreme" packages), I moved to a non-Rogers serviced area west of Ottawa in 2006. For 2 years, I fought with serious line quality issues, amplification via load-coils, a ~24,000-foot copper loop length (copper to this CO and then copper from this CO to the next town CO 6 KM away) and MultiLink PPP via 4x 56K modems.

Over the last 18 months, I've been through the fixed wireless gamut, first with Storm Wireless (which worked well minus the occasional disconnect and an antenna failure), but was subsequently bought out by Barrett Xplornet (who replaced all the customer premise equipment with Motorola 3.5 GHz gear).

Best Internet Provider In Ontario Canada


London, ON
$30 per month
"Fast and stable"
"None so far"
"This is one of the best, same as Golden.net used to be."

Since I don't use that much bandwidth I joined the one with 200GB cap...transfered from Execulink on 31/12/2009 was smooth....I started with Teksavvy in the New Year

Will soon switch my land line to them soon, since I already uses their internet and LongDistance service.

Why I Cancelled with Rogers and Sympatico


York,ON
30$ per month
about 5 days
"Friendly, incredibly helpful, and extremely knowledgeable staff."
"By far the best ISP I've ever dealt with for both business and home service."

I've been using a 6 mb line at home for about 3 years now (less than $40 month for Dry DSL) and 2 years at work where we have 4 lines with static IPs in place for $75 per line- less than the cost of a single 3 mb line with our old provider. Unbelievable value. I'm using Speedtouch 516's in on all lines.

They let you use the lines however you see fit with whatever geeky services you want to run, such as running a web server over the line. We've never had unscheduled downtime at my workplace, unlike our previous 'big league' ISP where we were down about 1 day per quarter. Same goes for my home service.