Johnwiss,
There is no practical limit to the numbert of users who can be served by the DSLAM. The major restriction on DSL is crosstalk, which increases with both frequency and number of DSL transmissions in a connecting cable bundle. One would think that the range would also affect the level of crosstalk, but, due to some interesting physics in the line, this is not true for far end crosstalk (FEXT), although it is true for near end crosstalk (NEXT).
My comnpany has been working for some time on a definitive solution to the crosstalk problem and this will be available in the very near future. At this point DSL will be capable of delivering 8 Mb/s doenstream and 1 Mb/s upstream.
I agree that the telephone companies have been very tardy and inefficient in their deployment of DSL in North America. In the rest of the world the story is very different, with DSL holding 60% of the market in Eurpope and increasing its lead, while the developed Pacific Rim countries have even greater penetration of DSL. America is at risk of becoming a DSL backwater.
What's the answer to the deployment problem? Well, we're working on that too, but it's a bit like pushing damp string uphill! The C-LECs want new technologies and new methods so they can compete against the cable companies, but the majors seem incapable of grasping the nettle and changing.
However, it would be a mistake to write DSL off in North America. The cable companies have invested huge quantities of borrowed or equity money in their infrastructure and they must service that debt. They can't raise their prices much further without driving their customers to DSL so they are in a bit of a cleft stick. DSL, on the other hand, uses already installed infrastructure, the majority of which is free from financial encumberance, so the telcos have a significant advantage, if they will sieze it.
Cable suffers from its own restrictions. For example, the spectral bandwidth of a co-ax is relatively limited, and only so many customers can be fitted into that bandwidth, along with the usual cable transmissions, which are broadcast and take up a fixed and significant portion of bandwidth. The only way for cable companies to overcome this problem is to increase the number of cable Optical Terminating Units in the field and the number of cables connected to them, which is a further investment which they will be hard pressed to finance.
Oh, and Tomatge; I'd just as soon not be lectured on DSL, it's a subject about which I am not too inexpert.
Regards
John