Chris on 22 Apr 2004 20:38:02 -0000 |
I am probably in the very small minority here but I have Time Warner for all my cable/internet needs and I have had no outages (minus some PECO problems) for the better part of two years. I hear some bad things about Comcast but I suppose that can be due to Comcast having a larger network and more customers in the area. I wish for the glory days of DSL with a static IP and a free wheeling TOS. God I miss my DirecTV DSL (telocity). -----Original Message----- From: plug-admin@lists.phillylinux.org [mailto:plug-admin@lists.phillylinux.org] On Behalf Of MJH Sent: Thursday, April 22, 2004 4:32 PM To: plug@lists.phillylinux.org Subject: Re: [PLUG] Switching from Cable to DSL On Thursday 22 April 2004 3:53 pm, Paul wrote: > Free wireless router, after rebate. I think it's a Linksys. > 1st month free, although I will have to pay shipping of the install kit. > Since I have a Verizon calling plan the cost after the first month will > remain at $30 per month. > Comcast cable connection. The question is, what should I expect when > switching to Verizon DSL? Will I need wacky PPPoE software? Verizon is PPPoE. There's a couple of linux PPPoE tools that work fine with it (or did last I had a direct Verizon line). > I'm just wondering, other than being less stable and > not as fast as cable, is there anything else that I should be aware of > before switching? Less stable? Admittedly I'm not on direct Verizon anymore, but the only outage I've had in the last year was when some idiot tech switched the phone lines (there's two to my apartment, one was live the other wasn't as I hadn't bothered paying for a second line). That wasn't a DSL problem, the phone was out too. I had more outages from Comcast (cable line would drop for up to an hour every few weeks at one point, once for over a week). Slower depends on who's on your local loop and what they are doing. Whilst I don't get 3Mb/s downloads anymore, I also don't get 28k crawls when the neighbours are online. (Both of which I saw when I had cable). I'm currently using a Verizon provisioned line through dca.net, which gives me static IPs (which verizon does not), linux friendly and clueful tech support (verizon will, last I heard, insist you boot into windows before they'll provide support), but they are more expensive ($50/month). -- "My cat is multiple, there's duck cat, kitten, lazy adult cat, psycho-kitty." ... Nora got a static shock trying to pet her ... "That would be electro-kitty - cat 5". ___________________________________________________________________________ Philadelphia Linux Users Group -- http://www.phillylinux.org Announcements - http://lists.phillylinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-announce General Discussion -- http://lists.phillylinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug ___________________________________________________________________________ Philadelphia Linux Users Group -- http://www.phillylinux.org Announcements - http://lists.phillylinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-announce General Discussion -- http://lists.phillylinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
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