Usually we would define broadband by the speed tiers, and we would start with 1.5 megabits. That's what we would consider the minimum, and then it would go up from there into what you consider next-generation networks. With a next-generation network you'd be looking at 25 to 50 megabits and beyond.
What it basically means is that you could do your applications a lot faster, and in a household setting, you could do multiple applications at the same time. I think the “always on” is a component where if you have the types of network availability, for example, with your mobile device, you expect it to be readily available and accessible. In general, the definition of broadband, as I said, usually goes by the speed of the technology.