Daily Hong Kong

The first thing I did when I settled down in Hong Kong was plugging me to the net. As I haven’t had any local friends who were familiar with internet at that moment, I had to spend some time visiting computer malls and checking several ISP (Internet Service Provider) advertisements on the street.

Very soon, as I was quite desperate, I signed in the contract with I-CABLE to use their broadband (internet) service for a year as it was the cheapest-99 HK$ a month for 10Mbps(local)/2Mbps(oversea). Their service just met my expectation and I was just satisfied with their service.

My tragedy starts after a few months.

On the way back to home from work, I found an attractive advertisement on the street. HKBN (Hong Kong Broadband Network) –which I haven’t heard before-was offering 100Mbps for 238 HK$! 100Mbps local and 20Mbps for overseas! I was so excited and happy that I could experience 10 times faster speed that I-CABLE paying only 2.5 times more money. I didn’t hesitate to sign up another contract even my contract with I-CABLE wasn’t over.
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HKBN Ad


However, HKBN service didn’t meet my expectation at all. The local speed of they had guaranteed was fine but overseas connection speed was terrible. I felt stupid paying 2.5 times more money to HKBN for the same services from I-CABLE so I complained and complained to resolve it however, I never got satisfied. Sometimes when I tried to access any oversea-server-located-website I had felt as if I’m using a dial-up modem. I even tried contacting Consumer Council of Hong Kong and explained my situation and asked if I could terminate the contract without paying penalty. Eventually, it worked and HKBN actually called me and they seemed that they were willing to resolve my issue so I revoked my complaint case in Consumer Council and tried to wait and see what HKBN can do for me.

Few weeks later, On 26 Dec 2006, Taiwan earthquake damaged the undersea internet cables and I was just… dead in cyber space and HKBN got a perfect excuse for my complaint.


This tragedy isn’t over yet. It’s May 23, 2007 and I’m still using HKBN waiting the contract period is over. I’m still not happy with this service. I don’t need 100Mbps local speed. I want HKBN to keep their promise 20Mbps oversea speed which was never been kept.

I recommend PCCW NETVIGATOR according to my local friends’ testimonials. Their price is average and the oversea speed is stable and fast. Their local speed is not more than 10M but unless you are planning to download a bunch of BitTorrent files, it doesn’t matter. I will definitely change my ISP to NETVIGATOR right after my contract with HKBN is over.

Hong Kong newbies who need stable and fast oversea connections, keep in mind and don’t be seduced by the HKBN advertisement on the street like stupid Larry!
(Recently their fishy slogan is 200Mbps)
Posted by 쫌메아

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  1. I had the same experience signing up for HGC 100MBPs service.
    I discovered that the PCCW normal service is on average about 2 x faster then the HGC 100M service!
    HGC was so slow that I couldn't even stream internet radio at all!!!!!!!!!
    Yes it was lightning fast to log into HSBC local website.
    But since the point of the World Wide Web (www) is to access pages of companies etc that you cant just walk down the street to visit, ...
    It took me about 5 months to get them to cancel my contract! In the end what worked was the fact that the service was too slow to connect at all to streaming radio sites. So I had a specific bug that they could not solve and thus they were in breach of contract!
    Especially if you are first language english, dont sign up for anything that advertises fast 'local' internet ...
    To date PCCW seems to be by really really far the best!!!