The mention of ten years got me thinking.
Same here. I've posted this previously on the Be forums:
"I moved into my house in mid '99.
*My first connection was a modem using CompuServe Classic as my ISP. I think that would have been k56 connecting at 44kb but might only have been 33kb.
*Sometime the next year I got Home Highway and connected at either 64kb or if I felt that I could justify the cost 128kb.
*2002 ADSL arrived in Brackley so I got a 2Mb connection. I remember paying for an engineer install because it was the only way to get a free downgrade back to HH if my line couldn't support ADSL. In hindsight that was daft paranoia but at least it left me with a filtered faceplate
*2006 ADSL max arrived and I got the full 8Mb that IPStream could provide.
*2007 Be chucked some kit into my exchange and now I have 13.5Mb during the summer and 12.5Mb during the winter.
Not a bad progression really. Ten years to go from 33k to 13.5Mb. I suppose the next leap will be FTTC and by my estimates that ought to get me at least 30Mb/s maybe closer to 40Mb/s. As to when..hmmm. Probably sometime in the next three years. I hope that since we're a market 3 exchange we will be on the list. On the other hand I remember that we were on the third ADSL rollout list which got canned and became a general roll out."
That was posted December 2009. Shortly afterward I found that my line would support their standard profile so now my speeds are 13.5 winter, 14.2 summer. Brackley has been announced as getting FTTC in December 2011.
So there we have it. 44kb/s to 30Mb/s in 12 years. Not bad for a small rural town 
My experiences will probably give some context to my comments, dates are approx
1999 - Harlow - 45kbps dialup
1999 - Harlow - ntl 512kbps cable then 1Mbps cable (256kbps ADSL possible)
2001 - Welwyn Garden City - back to 28.8kbps dialup - no cable, no ADSL (poor quality lines)
2001 - Welwyn Garden City - 1Mbps cable then 2Mbps cable (moved a mile from the above)
2003 - Harlow (godawful estate called Church Langley) - 2Mbps cable, no ADSL
2004 - Blackpool: home 7150kbps ADSL (300m from exchange) office 4Mbps Telewest cable (no ADSL - poor quality lines)
2006 - near Alton, Hampshire - 1.7Mbps ADSL (3680m line length, poor quality line) or 2.5Mbps to 3Mbps 3G
Back in 1999 I thought "it won't be long before the whole country has cable and can get broadband" and 12 years later, we're up to, what, half the country.
It's still the case that if you want to be guaranteed broadband where you're going, it's not 100% possible, but the only way is to make sure as best you can is to check where you're moving is cabled; everything else is a punt.
And I mean "get broadband", not "get ADSL".
The place in Harlow still can only get 256kbps.
The place in Welwyn might just get 256kbps ADSL if they're lucky (wouldn't activate for me, but on a good day..)
The second place in Harlow can now get ADSL, but it's all cabled anyway
Progress? It depends on where you look. The final third has seen little or no progress in 10 years. All except one urban, perfectly simple to reach, perfectly deployable. Just not with xDSL. That "stop gap" is still being used to supply internet connectivity in 2011.
The entire country cannot live within 1.5km of BT's exchanges. Technology is meant to work for people, not the other way around.