Dealing With Dialup 588
An anonymous reader writes "It looks like my parents may end up stuck having to use dialup to access the Internet from their cottage inside the Cape Cod National Seashore. Neither Comcast nor Verizon want to bother upgrading the hardware required to get them faster service. They could put a satellite dish on their roof, but it's a 300-year-old house and they feel a dish would be as prohibitively ugly as running dedicated lines would be prohibitively expensive. I've suggested they get familiar with a text-only email client; I also suggested they talk with their senators and local political reps. , Are there other ways they can increase the functionality despite the pitiful bandwidth? Any other good ideas? Any success stories you can share where people have finally got the bandwidth they crave?"
pda? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:pda? (Score:5, Informative)
Maybe Edge or whatever is used in the US is better, although I believe the top theoretical speeds are lower even if they do deliver better speed in practice.
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As regards the OP question of how to cope with dial-up, I highly recommend NoScript for Firefox. Greatly reduces the load time for webpages (at least in my experience of seeing it on a browser using dual-channel ISDN). It by default blocks the worst web content - flash and javascript (e.g. loading graphics and animations from 3rd party ad servers). Simpler and more useful than Adblock, also fairer for website owners as you are not blocking ads specifically - just not handling certain types of content. You can easily whitelist javascript for domains for which it is essential.
For email, set up your email client (it doesn't need to be text only) to leave the emails on the email server - you can choose which ones to open up and download, and delete junk without downloading.
For downloading, it is useful to use a download client that can pause and resume downloads, or handle interruptions.
Two-way satellite works great except for the latency. You could always have the dish on the ground out in the garden if the house or shrubs etc. don't shadow the signal. Two-way sat has the advantage of being "always on" and you don't have the time-based billing of dial-up, also usable for downloading large amounts of data.
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Two-way satellite works great except for the latency. You could always have the dish on the ground out in the garden if the house or shrubs etc. don't shadow the signal.
Indeed, satellite is a great option here unless you're a user of interactive, gaming-type protocols. Shrubs, etc. *do* block the signal, but the allowable distance between the LNB (a.k.a. "antenna") and receiver/decoder (a.k.a. "box") can be pretty generous, so put the antenna behind a tree. Just be absolutely sure to use a very sturdy pole set in concrete, otherwise wind, etc. will move the dish enough to take down your link on environmentally-challenged days. A nearby shed that blocks the wind, snow,
Re:pda? (Score:4, Informative)
(2) Get Netscape ISP. It uses text & image compression to increase effective speeds upto 1000 kbit/s. While traveling I can load pages almost as fast with Netscape Dialup as with my home DSL.
(3) Another option is to select "don't load images" in Firefox or Internet Exploder.
As you can see from my signature, using dialup is not a tragedy. All of us had dialup from circa 1980 to 2000 and we survived. Your parents can too.
Re:pda? (Score:5, Insightful)
Times changes. Bandwidth inflation is a serious problem. Web pages don't clock in at under 10k anymore.
Re:pda? (Score:5, Informative)
I agree. In the article, it kind of joked about getting used to a 'text email' client. Why is this a joke? Email is SUPPOSED to be text only, and somehow along the way, we've bastardized it into all kinds of HTML, with images, fugly wallpaper, etc...
Geez...it is now taking a couple of 'K' to send a simple 2 line email these days.
I try to keep all my email clients set to text only...both for receiving and sending. Last time I was forced to use Outlook...I couldn't easily get it set to do text only both ways...
Why isn't this set by default?
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It's not set by default because most people like to have the options of using bold, italic, colors, etc.
Personally, I like having the option to read it on whatever device I have available without invoking a browser or OOffice. I'm not against attachments as such, just against sending a bunch of extra crap that has nothing to do with the information the email is meant to convey to me so it "looks nice". It DOESN'T look nice, it wastes my time and resources and that is certainly NOT nice.
Image you want me to look at? Go ahead and attach it with a quick note in text telling me what it is. Document I need to
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Personally, I like having the option to read it on whatever device I have available without invoking a browser or OOffice.
And sending html stops you from reading it? Usually email clients will send plain text and html. Besides, many newer mobile devices can read html email without having to go to OO.org or a browser. (OO.org??)
I'm not against attachments as such, just against sending a bunch of extra crap that has nothing to do with the information the email is meant to convey to me so it "looks nice". It DOESN'T look nice, it wastes my time and resources and that is certainly NOT nice.
Ok, again, that's great for you--nobody is making you send messages that way. I don't understand why you care if other people send messages the way they want to though? Look at your snail mail, people send pictures, elaborate formats, etc all the time...should that be banned too because it is "a bunch
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And sending html stops you from reading it? Usually email clients will send plain text and html. Besides, many newer mobile devices can read html email without having to go to OO.org or a browser. (OO.org??)
How many of them can read the MS Office files some clueless people send instead of email text? You say usually, but I find that too many people select html only.
I don't understand why you care if other people send messages the way they want to though? Look at your snail mail, people send pictures, elaborate formats, etc all the time...should that be banned too because it is "a bunch of extra crap that has nothing to do with the information" etc etc? Should books never be allowed to have chapterheads or bold or italic or illustrations etc because it is a bunch of extra crap?
I care because I'm the one who has it clogging up my inbox. If you can't tell the difference between a few snapshots in snail-mail from a friend or reletive (which actually ARE part of the message) and a 15MB email for less than 1 K worth of text, here's a comparison for you. You recieve a 27 cubic foot package stuffed full of old newspapers an
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No, not really. Attaching a very large file to an email is an act of desperation, borne out of a lack of appropriate mechanisms to transport the information at hand. I think you might want to rethink your procedures.
Re:pda? (Score:5, Insightful)
Alright. Well I'm using 56k right now in the year 2008, and I seem to be surviving just fine. (Read my sig now if you did not do it last time.) I also use S-VHS, audio cassette, listen to analog radio stations, and take notes with a pen and paper. They all work just fine for my needs.
I used to think I needed the best, but after seeing minidisc fail, digital cassette fail, laserdisc fail, and so on, I've grown a little more cynical about the "need" for the latest technology. I'm starting to suspect these new formats are pushed by corporations just so they can suck money out of our wallets. Pretty soon (circa 2020) they'll probably be announcing a new format that handles 10,000i video, and why we need to throw-out our old video collection.
BACK ON POINT: Dialup works just fine for surfing the net.
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To most people dial-up is just not acceptable. You seem to have made it a point to get by with decades-old technology--bully for you--but that isn't what most people want.
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1. No Script won't always make things faster. Small, compressible AJAX scripts often save me loading a whole page. The most recent version of /. for example is way, way easier for dialup users with scripts enabled. So yeah- bug whitelist if you go with no scripts. Adblock is probably more appropriate (thought I don't use it)
It's ridiculous to suggest text mode only unless it's less that say 24000kbps. 2. Email. Just use POP or IMAP in offline mode and have it ask before downloading big mes
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Broadband Wireless Card (Score:4, Informative)
I will point out that you are looking at spending around $50-$60 a month for unlimited access for speeds that hover around 200k-300k a second. Its fine for using HTML e-mail, and most websites. Even using VPN, having Outlook sync up with my RSS Feeds, Exchange Server, and GMail account, only takes about 45 seconds over 3G (I have a LOT of RSS Feeds), and that is only when you first launch the program, of course once launched, it constantly checks mail, so its not that big of an issue.
I should point out that VPN over a cellular modem is flaky at best, and practically useless if you are moving in a vehicle.
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Look on the brightside (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Look on the brightside (Score:5, Insightful)
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All I can say about your post is f-ing A-MEN. You wanna live a nice, cozy, secluded lifestyle, you have to deal with the drawbacks. Boo f-ing hoo.
Re:Look on the brightside (Score:5, Informative)
The $200 Billion Broadband Scandal [newnetworks.com]
Here's a summary of the relevant points:
Wouldn't you like your $2000 back?
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I love hearing the "we have too low population density for broad
Re:Look on the brightside (Score:5, Informative)
Get a USB Modem (Score:2, Informative)
Speed isn't super fast, about 750MBS, but it does the job.
We're Mac users and have one in each room. We put the USB modem on an iMac, configure it to share its internet connection via airport, and we're happy.
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Wireless broadband (Score:4, Informative)
I'm guessing they're not able to get DSL.
There's also the possibility of using WiFi access points and directional antennas to create a point-to-point link with someone who has broadband. I did this for my brother and it works well, just need that person willing to share their broadband connection.
Re:Wireless broadband (Score:5, Interesting)
I used to live just out of range for ADSL, so i found someone down the street who could get it and offered to pay for it and give them use of it in exchange for wireless access to it.
Re:Wireless broadband (Score:5, Insightful)
There is a solution no one has yet mentioned, ISDN. All POTS companies are required to offer it, and provide it at a decent rate. It won't compare to DSL or Cable, but it is a hell of a lot better than dial up. (Up to 128Kbps)
Rates for a Basic Rate Interface (BRI) should be similar to a standard phone connection, and with modern dial-up modem banks, just about any company that offers dial-up should offer ISDN access. From there, you would have to purchase an ISDN modem for your parents - I personally like 3Com's Office Connect ISDN LAN Modem for the features it provides. The upshot to this solution is that like DSL your parents can use the internet and receive phone calls simultaneously.
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Take a realistic approach (Score:5, Interesting)
The benefit is that as the community grows and more benefits appear for each user, the cumulative benefits become attractive to those who were at first unwilling or wary of such a mesh. When they start joining, they provide their own routers which in turn makes the mesh stronger, more resilient to single-point failures, and simply more stable for everyone.
There are plenty of companies providing this type of solution, but the best that I've found (and seen implemented in various small towns across the US) have been home-grown. Good luck to your parents!
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Ordinary email clients, such as Thunderbird work well at dialup speeds.
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There was a big effort to do something similar in Western Australia with wafreenet [wafreenet.org]. They've put together a massive wireless resource collection at E3 [e3.com.au]. It'd be worth having a good browse around there.
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German "Freifunk" (literally: "Free Wireless") initiative has made a complete firmware package [1] that integrates mesh routing (they use OLSR [2]) into it's web interface and also allows for remote administration per SSH. Installation is cake.
To see what's possible with that technology, just look at the maps of the Berlin [3] or Leipzig [4] networks; these cities had DSL white spots, just like parts of the US (or rural areas, for that matter).
[1] http://wiki.freifunk.net/Freifunk_Firmware_(English)#Ov [freifunk.net]
Uh, get the dish or quit crying. (Score:5, Insightful)
Look, there may be wireless solutions in the future. I also do just fine with my email over dial up when necessary (just don't let it download anything with attachments).
DIAL UP IS NOT THE END OF THE WORLD.
Your parents have an open solution by a provider. (satellite) Obviously the looks of their house is more important than high speed internet.
Whats next on
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Re:Uh, get the dish or quit crying. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Uh, get the dish or quit crying. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Uh, get the dish or quit crying. (Score:4, Funny)
I have dual core processor. Apparently means that each processor contains two processors. With a little recursion, there's no limit to the computing power at my disposal.
Unfortunately, the setup is only useful for computations so embarrassingly parallel that they're afraid to come out and actually meet the processors interface to interface.
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For email? Sure, even though the spam could be annoying if the provider doesn't have a good filter..
For web browsing, it must be a real pain in the ass though: I switched to broadband around 2000 and it was already a big relief back then and now the average web page size has tripled since 2003! [slashdot.org]
I agree with you for the dish, it doesn't have to be on the house, it could be setup at the back of the garden on a pole, that said I've heard that webbrowsing with satel
fake rock (Score:5, Informative)
Potentially crazy suggestion: (Score:5, Interesting)
Mount it on the ground.
Cover it with a fibreglass imitation rock, or some other feature that's microwave-transparent but blends in with the local scenery.
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Re:Potentially crazy suggestion: (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Potentially crazy suggestion: (Score:5, Funny)
Re:And I'll tell you exactly how crazy (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Potentially crazy suggestion: (Score:4, Interesting)
Local ordinances don't amount to a hill of beans if the dish can also be used for satellite television.
FCC trumps local ordinances. And they are reportedly quite aggressive about it.
Re:Potentially crazy suggestion: (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Potentially crazy suggestion: (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Potentially crazy suggestion: (Score:4, Interesting)
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Could there be any sort of fire risk with something like that ?
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Re:Potentially crazy suggestion: (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Potentially crazy suggestion: (Score:4, Funny)
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Get a satellite dish.
Beat it up, hammer some areas
Make it look weatherworn (paint, spray cobweb)
to make it look 300 years old
hide the dish (Score:2)
Googling a bit gives the option of "hiding" the satellite dish, some exist in the UK at least, not sure how well it looks in reality: sqish [sqish.co.uk]
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300 year old dish. (Score:2)
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Parabolic / Directional Antenna (Score:3, Informative)
Closest neighbour who can have a fast connection, arrange with them to setup a WiFi, but not with regular uni-directional antennae, use directional, big one.
More precise you can align the antennaes, the further you can reach with better bandwidth. To avoid the bad looks, you could hook it up in a tree too.
If you are DIY type, there's lots of DIY tutorials to make one yourself on the cheap, which is just as good or better than some which costs insane high bucks. Just google "DIY WiFi Directional Antenna"
Picture: http://img237.imageshack.us/my.php?image=smalllabattstilt2nr.jpg [imageshack.us]
Used: Beer can, some copper wiring, and some household items.
You actually can get quite damn good distances with this kind of setup, alternatively, you guys might want to ask if you could use signal boosters to amplify the strength of signal, but beware, there's very good reasons why by default the output is weak, but that's mostly directed towards to areas where there is other users.
Also, get the best hardware you can find on sane prices, using some cheap D-Link crap or something like that, is plain shooting yourself on the foot, they don't even work for 10 feets, nevermind 10miles no matter what kind of antenna you use.
Also, by nature WiFi is not very reliable, but setup well, it should work fine most of the time.
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Not saying your suggestion is a bad idea, just saying I don't think they'd go for it.
Personally, if internet was that important to me, I'd stick with the dish, or sell up and move somewhere else.
Look towards Siena (Score:3, Interesting)
Dishes can be painted to match with the existing surrounds - making them blend in fairly easily.
I was in Siena, Italy - a city that didn't develop during the Renaissance after losing a war to Florence - and there were dishes all over that were painted to match the stone and brick work of that city.
If a city that old can have dishes without looking bad or distracting, I think a house in New York will be okay.
Never give up on the easy solution - it's probably the best one.
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Granted it's overrun with f'ing New Yorkers in the summer, but just for the record any cottage at the Cape Cod National Seashore is most definitely in Massachusetts.
Deal with it? (Score:4, Funny)
np: Kettel - Afwezig (My Dogan)
Coop? (Score:2)
Mirror (Score:3, Funny)
They might even be able to use their browser cache for that, I would think. I have mine set at 50Mb and I never get complaints from my browser that it needs more, so I would say 50Mb is enough. Maybe set it to 100Mb of you also want a backup.
I hope this helps. And if not, I still have a 14k4 modem somewhere of you want to speed up the caching process.
Re:Mirror (Score:4, Funny)
P.S. FIRST POST!!!!!
What am I missing here? (Score:2)
The WildBlue [mybluedish.com] dish is 28x26 inches.
Mounting this jet black dish inconspicuously would not seem to present any particular problem.
Authentic (Score:5, Insightful)
Cooperative approach (Score:2)
lots of ideas (Score:2, Insightful)
- Faster Web browsing using Lynx
- No, there's nothing (seriously) wrong with Lynx
- You can also use W3M or Links or Elinks if you like
- IRC chatting with EPIC4 or Irssi
- I know IRC doesn't use a lot of bandwidth, but every little bit helps
- Instant messaging with TTY clients
- Centericq d
Consider and easy-to-use iPhone? (Score:2)
I've had mine in Europe nearly 2 months now and find it great to keep in touch with photos, email, web etc. Lately, found I
don't even need a SIM card as fring.com provides WIFI phone as well as easy to use Skype. Better yet perhaps they both would like one.
google "dry pair" (Score:2, Interesting)
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Quitcherbitchen (Score:5, Insightful)
They could put a satellite dish on their roof, but it's a 300-year-old house and they feel a dish would be as prohibitively ugly as running dedicated lines would be prohibitively expensive. I've suggested they get familiar with a text-only email client; I also suggested they talk with their senators and local political reps.
(translated) My rich parents can't get broadband in their summer home in Cape Cod because they're too pretentious to use a dish and the mean old phone company doesn't want to spend millions to run DSL out to bumblefuck. Mr. Senator, can you make the taxpayer foot the bill so my parents can have *broadband* in their *summer home*???
Gimme a break. Talk about spoiled. You know, there are people who still use dial-up. Does it suck? A little. But talking about political action so rich people can get broadband in the middle of nowhere where they chose their vacation home? Get out of here.
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What makes you think they're rich, and that it's their summer home?
A lot of properties in now prime areas were cheap before the housing boom, you know.
That's your interpretation (Score:4, Insightful)
Secondly, politicians can do more that spend money to pay for the infrastructure. Telcos require permission from the government to do all sorts of things and as a condition of putting in service to more profitable areas, they could be forced to service other areas as well. Everybody wins. Unless you think spending an extra 25c a month on your subscription to fund it is the slippery slope to socialism and before you know it we'll all be working for the state and need permission to visit a department store, of course.
You may be right, I don't know, but you should not jump to conclusions until you know all the facts.
Re:Quitcherbitchen (Score:5, Insightful)
"Dear Senator, please destroy a wildlife habitat and sanctuary so that I can get broadband..."
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Some of my family members had to foot the bill for the last thousand feet, but they were able to get Comcrap to drag their signal a mile from the main drag once they saw 8 houses that were interested.
Hold on. I call bullshit.
If someone "can barely afford to live there", where are they getting the money "to foot the bill for the last thousand feet"?
It sounds to me like we've got a bunch of dumbfucks that are going to spend their lives in poverty because of their piss poor choices ("we're broke, but we got broadband!") or we've got a bunch of spoiled fucks that want the world to wipe their asses and smile about it.
Which is it?
If you choose to live in the middle of nowhere, don't expect the latest-and-gre
oh the horror... (Score:2, Insightful)
One of the things I love about our cottage is that there is no power, no running water and hardly any cellphone coverage.
If it is dead important I can read mail on my phone down the road.
Wireless, if you've got the money (Score:2)
The customer had a site at the top of a hill, some sites at the bottom of the hill, and a location 10km away where they could get broadband *and* line-of-sight to the hill. So what they did was use a 5.8GHz fixed wireless point-to-point link (Orthogon Gemini Lite) to get a 10MBps link to the top of the h
set up a terminal server (Score:2)
Preferrable over a VPN.
You might want to look into which protocols are the most bandwidth efficient.
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http://www.telemedia.ch/publ/freenx-setup-howto.html [telemedia.ch]
v.92 and a good ad filter (Score:2)
Some ISPs also offer a "web accelerator [iinet.net.au]" service that'll repack images and compress HTML for you.
aircard and router... (Score:2)
I work for the federal gummint and am routinely required to provide connectivity in solutions like this. I issue the user with the requriement a cellular aircard and if necessary an aircard router. Several companies make them and right now I'm particularly happy with NexAira's hardware as most other aircard routers are carrier- and hardware-specific.
You still have to check the manufacturer's compatibility list but NexAira's router can move with y
VT52 Terminal Emulation! (Score:2)
Why don't you host a VT52 terminal emulator for them and provide their text e-mail interface. They can surf mobile sites for their internet access.
If it worked at 300 baud...several suggestions (Score:2)
You can bond multiple telephone lines; 112kbps is a bit better than 56kbps.
No matter what you do, you should probably set up servers, since modern interactive applications try to do too many things in real time: E-mail servers that retrieve and send stuff in the background, aggressive web caching, and RSS readers plus downloaders for the web.
Cell Tower Internet (Score:4, Insightful)
Both services offer speeds that are roughly equivalent to consumer DSL lines. While it is more expensive than DSL in most locations, if they're not going to run DSL, FiOS or digital cable lines out to you, then you don't have a lot of choices.
text only and offline browsing (Score:2)
stay with it (Score:4, Insightful)
There is tonnes of cable and wireless coverage (Score:4, Funny)
Otherwise, what about ISDN ? or possibly a wireless directional antenna ? (a can) if there is anything tourist related near them
Go ahead and mod me down (Score:5, Insightful)
My heart bleeds.
"Neither Comcast nor Verizon want to bother upgrading the hardware required to get them faster service."
Surprising, since I'm sure that Comcast and Verizon execs as well as major stockholders are among their neighbors.
"They could put a satellite dish on their roof, but it's a 300-year-old house and they feel a dish would be as prohibitively ugly as running dedicated lines would be prohibitively expensive."
Uh-huh. Guess what: they didn't have cable television, central air, electricity, gas or probably even running water 300 years ago either (let alone the telephone lines used for dial-up). But I'm going to guess that since you're asking about internet access, you've already got all these modern amenities duck taped into a structure that wasn't built to accept it. I'd bet the precious aesthetics were lost about the time that flush toilets were installed.
"I've suggested they get familiar with a text-only email client"
I'd suggest their pretentious rich asses get used to doing without for a while if they insist on deliberately spending their summers away from civilization.
"I also suggested they talk with their senators and local political reps."
i. e. their next door neighbors...
"Are there other ways they can increase the functionality despite the pitiful bandwidth?"
Yeah, get over yourselves. After having all the latest Nineteenth and Twentieth Century amenities stapled onto the outside and inside of your "summer cottage," a one-meter satellite dish isn't going to be the end of the world. It won't be as bad as, say, the windmills your parents refuse to allow to be built anywhere near their precious cottage for fear of ruining the view.
"Any other good ideas? Any success stories you can share where people have finally got the bandwidth they crave?"
Crave bandwidth? Summer in a modern condominium instead.
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Re:what about EVDO? (Score:5, Informative)
And at 60 Dollars a month you have nothing to complain about.
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EVDO isn't great for some broadband applications (video, gaming, VOIP), but it's a helluva lot better than dialup for routine email and webwork.
EVOO? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Why is "turn to government" the first solution? (Score:4, Informative)
That said, Cape Cod is already whipping up solutions. Put the folks in contact with Open Cape, and they will probably be able to find a wifi provider that has or plans to provide service to their area. http://www.opencape.com/ [opencape.com]
Worse case scenario, they can buy a laptop and access broadband in the city. You don't HAVE to have broadband at home. It's ok to sit in a cafe once in a while, and you could call them instead of emailing.
I wouldn't know myself, but I understand that there are still some people actually communicating in analog. Sounds primitive, I know. I understand ROTFL is actually considered rude, but apparently LOL is still ok in person.