While Bell Internet mostly sells
digital subscriber line (DSL) service, they also offer
dial-up service to businesses and grandfathered residential customers. This legacy technology uses a
telephone modem to provide Internet access.
Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) Bell's
digital subscriber line (DSL) services are based on
ADSL,
ADSL2+ and
VDSL2 technology. The main differences in both equipments vary from the speed of signal, its length and its ability to overcome the noise of a phone line. Except for very few grandfathered customers, Bell has monthly data transfer limits for all of their tiered Internet services. Both downloads and uploads count towards the limit. The following Bell Internet services are only available in
Ontario and
Quebec, and availability varies by region. Fibe services can only be used where
fibre-to-the-neighbourhood (FTTN) technology is deployed. This currently includes urban
Hamilton,
Montreal,
Ottawa and
Toronto as well as most major cities around GTA. Non-FTTN regions offer two plans: Bell Internet and Bell Internet Plus. Bell has simplified its DSL lineup to offer only two traditional plans and five FTTN plans.
Dry DSL Naked DSL, commonly known as dry DSL in Canada, consists of a DSL service without a traditional home phone service. Bell does not charge any additional fees for dry DSL service; previously, there was a charge of $4 per month. Bell charges resellers a monthly fee ranging from $7.25 to $25.10 and a one-time activation fee for dry DSL service. Although Bell still attributes a phone number to a dry DSL line, it cannot be used for phone calls. When one attempts to call a dry DSL phone number, they receive the following message: "The number you are calling cannot receive incoming calls. This is a recording." The message is then repeated in French.
Fibre To The X (FTTX) Bell Fibe Internet (FTTH) services are offered by Bell in select regions of Ontario and Quebec. Bell guarantees that the FTTH download and upload speeds advertised will be delivered to the Bell equipment. Bell Fibe Internet is offered at the following speeds: 25/25 Mbit/s, 50/50 Mbit/s, 150/150 Mbit/s, 500/500 Mbit/s, 1.5/0.94 Gbit/s, 3/3 Gbit/s, and 8/8 Gbit/s.
Bell Aliant offers a similar but different
Fibe service under the same branding to certain areas in
Atlantic Canada.
Internet security Since April 11, 2013, Bell offers
McAfee Security on all of its current Internet plans.
Add-ons These are services offered by Bell Internet in addition to DSL or FTTH services, either for free or at additional costs: •
PC Care, an optional computer
technical support service with a monthly fee. •
Usage Insurance, which increases the monthly bandwidth cap with one or multiple blocks of 25 GB, or provides unlimited Internet usage for a fee. •
Unlimited Internet Usage •
Wireless Home Networking Legacy services Bell previously offered Portable Internet and Rural Internet services in select rural regions, similarly to what
Rogers Communications offered. These services used the
Inukshuk Wireless network. Bell has discontinued these offerings. Customers are encouraged to use
Bell Mobility Internet services instead, which generally offer a much lower bandwidth cap. Bell Entertainment was a bundle offer which included
Bell Fibe TV service and 25 Mbit/s "Fibe" DSL. It was only available in some parts of the GTA (Greater Toronto Area). Customers can now add any DSL Internet plan to their Fibe TV service. Despite being an
IPTV service, Bell does not charge usage-based billing for Bell Fibe TV.
Personal Vault was a
backup service, available nationwide both for customers and non-customers. While
inMusic remains available as a music news portal, both the
digital music store and subscription service were discontinued. == See also ==