I've got a few things going, all from Teksavvy:
1) A 60 Mbps down, 3 Mbps up cable line. I was the guinea pig for one of if not the first cable install (they launched in Quebec before Ontario), so this was the test line. They still don't sell 60 megs, so this line is sitting around waiting for them to ask me to do testing or whatever. I still sometimes use it when I'm having problems with the DSL, or need to download something really fast. My expectation is that they'll cancel it once they finally offer 60 meg service.
2) A 50 Mbps down, 14 Mbps up VDSL2 bundle. This is comprised of two 25/7 VDSL2 connections bonded together with MLPPP (virtual layer 2 bonding), but acts as a single logical connection as far as anything past PPP daemon can tell.
I'm not paying anything for the cable line, and I have a discount on the DSL stuff for the work we've done on MLPPP stuff, but I'll probably be cancelling one of my VDSL2 connections at some point. My monthly internet bill is just too damned high, even with discounts.
So I've got an aggregate of 110 Mbps down, 17 Mbps up, coming into my apartment... I'm tempted to try using Caneris' asymmetrical bonding to get this all into one logical bundle, at least once before I cancel or lose some of this stuff, just to be able to produce a speed test showing me pulling over 100Mbps down in my apartment
