- Comparing these 6 ISP's....comments please?
- Posted by Atropos on October 12th, 2006
I'm about to move back to my flat, I'm currently signed up with F2S and have
their 50gb a month, 23.99 8mb product(MAX). Will be leaving Broadband behind
here, so will be a new setup. Have all my own equipment.
I can't really complain about them, I mean, for me, it works. I am aware of
appalling customer service though.
I basically want the same sort of thing. I don't want FUP's, as I download a
fair bit. I want around the same price and MAX product.
I've found these 5 contenders and include F2S for comparison. Please can you
comment on any of the providers mentioned:
ISP Download Price
Eclipse 40gb 24.99
Zen 50gb 34.99 (bit too expensive)
AOL Unlimited? 29.99
IDNET 30 24.99
Nildram 50(peak) 25.99
There are probably others. I haven't looked at setup fees yet.
So any comments please? Or would staying with F2S be adequate? The Nildram
package looks attractive.
cheers
- Posted by Atropos on October 12th, 2006
Found another one.....now including setup fees or not....
for 3 months
the looks of it.....
- Posted by Jim Crowther on October 13th, 2006
On Thu, 12 Oct 2006 20:03:25, Atropos wrote:
How much do you actually download per month on average between the hours
of 08:00 and 18:00 Mon-Fri, and what is your total (download and upload)
traffic per month? A wise(ish) choice of ISP might vary greatly
depending on those figures alone, let alone any other parameters.
--
Jim Crowther. "Life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of
arriving safely in a well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside,
thoroughly used up , totally worn out and loudly proclaiming;
WOW!!! What a ride." "It's MY computer!" (tm SMG)
- Posted by NoNeedToKnow on October 13th, 2006
On 12 Oct 2006, "Atropos" <none@yallahabibe.com> wrote:
Note that's in the "peak hours" of 1800-0000 so if you schedule traffic
flow to be outside those hours, you could go for a lower level anyway.
I'm on the 14.99/month account and whilst it gives lowest priority in
the scheme of things, I stream audio and video without problems and
do a fair bit of downloading too.
Possibly the "unlimited" will be changed... you know that AOL UK is a
service "in the news" right now, don't you?
Also worth remembering that on Zen only downloads count while for most it
would be traffic in both directions.
- Posted by [L.] on October 13th, 2006
On Thu, 12 Oct 2006 20:03:25 +0100, "Atropos" <none@yallahabibe.com>
wrote:
AOL is indeed unlimited. If you migrate with a MAC and an
AOL-supported modem/router you are not bound to their 12 months
contract and you don't get their wireless router.
http://info.aol.co.uk/broadband/swit...omoCode=228937
Their support phone line might be iffy.
You don't have to use their software if you don't want to
L
[L.]
- Posted by Atropos on October 13th, 2006
"Jim Crowther" <Don't_bother@blackhole.do-not-spam.me.uk> wrote in message
news:uq5xMmOfDuLFFwwA@nospam.at.my.choice.of.UID.i nvalid...
Jim,
Actually I generally work 8:00-18:00 - so not alot goes on during the day. I
reckon I'm averaging around 30gb down a month. Like I said, prob from
18:00 - 7:00am.
- Posted by Atropos on October 13th, 2006
I wanted to ask about this. I use Yahoo for my POP3 mail and I have my own
wireless router. So I wouldn't need AOL software?
- Posted by Jim Crowther on October 13th, 2006
On Fri, 13 Oct 2006 18:07:33, Atropos wrote:
I'd expect A&A might suit you very well then, I'm on their GBP26.99 3GB
per month tariff (only downloads count, and only between the hours of
08:00 to 18:00 Mon-Fri) - but have had total traffic well over 100GB
some months. You're allowed to carry forward 10GB over the limit
anyway.
http://aa.nu
Also take a look at uk.net.providers.aaisp for a flavour of the support.
--
Jim Crowther. "Life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of
arriving safely in a well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside,
thoroughly used up , totally worn out and loudly proclaiming;
WOW!!! What a ride." "It's MY computer!" (tm SMG)
- Posted by [L.] on October 14th, 2006
On Fri, 13 Oct 2006 18:08:17 +0100, "Atropos" <none@yallahabibe.com>
wrote:
instance the free McAfee firewall, or you want to take advantage of
their content, music, video streams, etc.
If you want to switch over without entering in a 12-months contract,
specifically tell them that you do have an AOL-supported router (look
at which ones they support on their site). Also it is convenient if
the "screenname" you choose (AOL-speak for user ID) is shortish,
because that makes it easier to set up the router.
They (sensibily) block unauthenticated SMTP mail, so if you don't want
to use their SMTP servers, you must connect to your SMTP provider
using the authenticated SMTP port (can't remember which offhand).
Caveat, their tech support phone line is indeed all that is reputed to
be (or worse) but the connection is just fine.
If you decide to switch over, I _think_ you can get a 25 pounds cheque
if an existing AOL member recommends you. If you don't have an
existing AOL member friend handy, I can do that for you (aol at lorenz
dot co dot uk).
Lorenz
[L.]
- Posted by [L.] on October 14th, 2006
On Sat, 14 Oct 2006 12:01:14 +0100, "[L.]" <null@null.dev> wrote:
Just checked. Yes they do that. Offer valid until the end of the month
http://info.aol.co.uk/soaf/
and btw _in case_ you 1) want to go to AOL (which is being bought by
CPW) and 2) want an extra 25 quid but 3) you don't have an aol friend
handy, just send me an email on
aol at lorenz dot clara dot co dot uk
and I'll post you an AOL CD suitable for the 25quid offer
L.
[L.]
- Posted by NoNeedToKnow on October 14th, 2006
On 14 Oct 2006 "[L.]" <null@null.dev> wrote:
which could be the "kiss of death". Though someone I know as a friend of a
friend is finding the service OK - her needs are probably quite limited so
she is perhaps atypical of a family's use or of many users under "silver
surfing" age - which describes her perfectly, so perhaps light on d/l
of audio/video/software... In fact, probably light use altogether!
- Posted by Loz on October 14th, 2006
NoNeedToKnow wrote:
This is true, though using AOL here and it's OK at the moment. Not had
any downtime since provisioned on the line over 6 months at all.
No complaints.
- Posted by [L.] on October 14th, 2006
On Sat, 14 Oct 2006 14:23:08 +0100, NoNeedToKnow <me@privacy.net>
wrote:
Possible. The deal is not to go through until December. We'll wait and
see what'll transpire after that.
AOL is unlimited. No ifs and buts.
Your friend's friend is partly subsidizing the usage of people with
different needs.
IMO, thinking about the business model, AOL must remain unlimited. AOL
is selling content. Videos, music, stuff. If the delivery section of
the business was limited it would be like a supermarket selling large
boxes which don't fit through their doors.
So, either they stop selling content (and that is apparently not the
deal made with CPW) or they keep subsidizing the pipes with the
content.
But then, if I was running AOL I'd provide their customer support
personnel with scripts which made at least _some_ sense.
Lorenz
[L.]