Tech Support > Computers & Technology > Internet & Broadband > charging for wirless broadband access
charging for wirless broadband access
Posted by Craig on November 8th, 2005


Hi,

I am looking for some ideas on charging for wirless internet access. Maybe
charging is not the best way to go but I want to see what options are
available.

Does anyone know of any off the shelf products available, e.g. software to
deal with payments, timing access, etc.

What hardware would you need apart from wireless router? Would one central
server be be able to cope with access for many sites?

I have had a quick google but have not come across anything suitable.

Any suggestions welcome.


Cheers,
Craig



Posted by Gizmo on November 8th, 2005



"Craig" <craig1122@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:4371153f@212.67.96.135...
Mark set up www.essexbroadband.com (based in Basildon) about 18 months or
so ago, drop him a message and pick his brains.

Do your math first. It'll cost more than a few quid to set up, but how long
will it take to recoup the monies ?
If you're in a far flung settlement not serviced by cable / adsl you might
get a grant to help.

Just be careful - it'll take a lot of time and money.

Best of luck.





Posted by Craig on November 8th, 2005


Hi,

Thanks for that.

Should have mentioned we have adsl access in our area and was thinking of
wireless access through adsl connections, e.g. user with a laptop in a
cafe/hotel.

I know of a few companies interested in providing wireless access and know
it would be simple enough to do with a wireless router, I am just looking at
the costs and what is needed if you were to charge for access. I was
thinking of customer buying a ticket and puting in a code, like in some
internet cafes or possibly asking for credit card details.

Cheers


"Gizmo" <Gizmo@home.now> wrote in message
news:W9udnS0NzPfvhuzeRVnyrg@giganews.com...


Posted by Peter Watson on November 8th, 2005


Craig wrote:


http://www.solwise.co.uk/wireless-hotspot-wsr-3800.htm perhaps?

Peter

Posted by Ben Fitzgerald on November 9th, 2005


On Tue, 8 Nov 2005 21:14:40 -0000, Craig <craig1122@gmail.com> wrote:
What restrictions are there on this with regard to connection sharing /
selling on bandwitdth? e.g. if I have a 2M adsl over a residential line
can I legally sell on 1M of that to my neighbour? I appreciate that BT
would never know and I could just do this on the sly, but I'm curious on
the official position.

Thanks,

ben.

--
Registered Linux user number 339435

Posted by Phil Thompson on November 9th, 2005


On 09 Nov 2005 16:18:45 GMT, Ben Fitzgerald
<bmf1DELETE@ukonline.co.uk> wrote:

depends on the ISP. Demon for one have an explicit "no sharing,
including by wireless" clause in their terms & conditions.

It would be easy for an ISP to spot unusual use patterns.

Phil
--
Tiscali - dialup speeds at Broadband prices, see
http://bbs.adslguide.org.uk/postlist...&Board=tiscali

AOL - the unlimited ISP of choice for heavy downloaders.

Posted by Kraftee on November 9th, 2005


Phil Thompson wrote:
But how? What would be the difference of a diverse family usage, over a
network, to that of your next door neighbours. The main problem
against, as far as I'm concerned, is that whoever actually rents the
connection will ultimately have to take responcibility for the usage on
that connection (kiddy porn, warez, etc) & also have to deal with all
the wannabe hackers trying to break into the network, with nothing else
in mind other than to break it...

It happened quite recently in an area quite close to me, a person paid
for a 2 meg connection & put up a highgain external co-linear & let it
be known to his 'friends'. Within a month he had to give up on it as to
many people where just trying to break it.

If you're going to share, make sure you can trust who ever you're going
to share with or else you may end up very sorry...




Posted by Phil Thompson on November 9th, 2005


On Wed, 9 Nov 2005 21:36:40 -0000, "Kraftee"
<kraftee@kraftee.plus.nospamming please we're bristish.com> wrote:

volume and numbers probably, not many families with 20 PCs for
example. May not be definitive but enough to narrow down the field of
investigation.

Phil
--
Tiscali - dialup speeds at Broadband prices, see
http://bbs.adslguide.org.uk/postlist...&Board=tiscali

AOL - the unlimited ISP of choice for heavy downloaders.

Posted by Kraftee on November 10th, 2005



"Phil Thompson" <phil.thompson@spamcop.net> wrote in message
news:1r05n1hck50dmd9rkeqrrd64iutk5kmpj9@4ax.com...
Phil I very much doubt if anybody would even think of bandwidth sharing
with a cyber cafe ;-)