You people have seriously misunderstood something.
First off, broadband is NOT DSL. Broadband is fiber optic cables running 10 or 100 megabit per second (12.5MB/s on the 100-one).
DSL uses the copper wires in your phone plug and has a maximum speed of 4 megabit per second (4-5, depending on the amount of copper in your plug).
Broadband is available, and cheap, in major parts of Sweden and Denmark (and most likely other places as well, I just don\'t know where because I haven\'t done research on it), with a setup price of roughly $300 US, and a monthly fee of ~$30 US and that is for Internet, Cable TV and Phone. No, I\'m not lying. The 100mbps lines however are usually shared by 50-100 apartments in apartment complexes, and so on, which cuts the price by a bit, so the price may vary.
Just to make an example, I have the prices from jay.net, a danish high-speed company. You can get a 100 mbps with a creation cost of 10,000dkk (1,647USD), and with a monthly cost of 15,000dkk (2,470USD) shared by... let\'s just say 100 apartments, giving 150dkk (24.70USD) per month, per apartment.
The 100mbps DSL thing made me laugh Partly because I know that speed of DSL doesn\'t exist, and also partly because a 100mbps connection would be VERY expensive
I\'m sorry, but first of all, 100mbps DSL does not exist. What you are talking about is a 100mbps broadband line, using fiber optic cables and no company in the U.S. offers that to private customers, mainly because it is too expensive in the US as they would need to dig out new holes, whereas in Scandinavia, they have space for it in the underground cylinders holding power-cables. There, it\'s simply a matter of pulling the line. Very little digging has to be done. So yes, a 100mbps line is VERY expensive in the US, but not over here.
And now we\'re at it, I can just as well say that the fastest documented connection to the internet that you can get is a 1 tbps (Terabit per second - that\'s 1000 Gigabit, or 1,000,000 Megabit per second - that\'s 22,222 T3 lines), however no company has that at this time. However, there is a company in New Zealand (can\'t remember the name) that has a line that on about 1/3 of a 1 tbps. That\'s pretty fast, you know.
Anyway, to get back on topic. Don\'t worry. You\'ll be able to run PS on a 56k for a long time.
