But why the obsession with HS or Super or fast?
I think most people just want a stable decent speed as I posted above, not super, ultra, lightspeed, why do we need to categorise it at all apart from in terms of Mbps?
I think a lot of this debate is about the so-called final third, which I would describe as most people who live more than 3km from their exchange resulting in line lengths of 5km+ though thanks to line routing and quality issues, it's perfectly possible to be nearer than that and still not be able to get broadband. Here, for instance.
The other debate is about "what is broadband". If we, well, actually, OFCOM, defined that - I'd suggest 4Mbps down 1Mpbs up is not really some pie in the sky target set by a tech with an interest but perfectly reasonable - and escalating by 1Mbps per year, then we have a basis to start from.
Nothing below that can be sold as broadband. Narrowband, internet access, whatever it's called, but it isn't broadband. Note I do not advocate that price controls go along with that. I think enough people would be annoyed at paying the ever increasing line rental and the same as others for the internet access for a sufficient mass of voices to gather.
I do think it's fair enough that if you want superfast broadband, you might have to adjust your expectations of where you can live. Not just the UK.
Basically, it has to be a cabled area. That's easy enough to check on and you can influence this yourself. There's no such thing as a FTTC area, only FTTC streets and specific addresses, it's as hit and miss as ADSL was and is. Perhaps the availability checker will improve over time.
My random spot check on our nearest town (enabled 09/2010) gives FTTC availability to residentials only and has coverage of about 40%. I'm sure BT have the figures, but I doubt they will be released. All I've heard from them is "We aim for 85% of an exchange area to be covered". I aim to go to the Maldives, Mauritius and Antigua in my lifetime but there's no guarantee that's going to happen.
Personally, I suspect businesses get skipped because a) they have leased lines and b) it's an easier case to plead with the begging bowl later on for taxpayer's money. Maybe I'm too cynical.
I still don't think it's acceptable that such a large percentage of the country can't get broadband (a basic 4Mbps down). It's called the final third, you might argue it's the final quarter, it's not splitting hairs, but only BT really know how many of their customers can get broadband (and I suspect the true percentage would shock quite a few).
For those who live within 3km of the exchange: that portion is served to an acceptable degree by xDSL now. It "will do" in the short term. Those are also the people likely to have access to cable.
It's the rest of the country which is the issue. Personally, I'd love to be able to choose where I live based on where I want to live and not be restricted to a narrow strip of land next to phone exchanges, or a cabled area. There's no way I would move anywhere that isn't cabled again, the risk is just far too high. Not that I won't get superfast broadband. The risk is that I won't get broadband.
So what this thread seems to agree is that the final third will remain the final third to a great degree. And that needs to be tackled. Not because those people need 100Mbps down. They just need broadband. And in this respect, absolutely no progress whatsoever beyond the take up of 3G has been made in the last decade; ADSL2+ was about the <3km customers only. If we leave things as they are, I suspect the next decade will repeat the last one.