couple of questions if I may...

Marvin [GodfatherofSoul] Bellamy mbellamy at kc.rr.com
Fri Nov 1 00:18:08 CST 2002


The DA should be at their office door with a court summons for rape and 
sodomy.  That's even worse than the last time I looked at business 
rates.  The only reason I'd consider DSL would be for the much cheaper 
static IP prices.  But, with services like dyndns.com, you can probably 
get away with it.  Are similar services reliable enough to use in a 
business setting?

Paul Taylor wrote:

>>From http://www.twckc.com/go/rrfaq.html#3 Residential service is 2,000
>kbps download and 384 kbps for upload.
>
>How fast is Road Runner?
>Road Runner provides download of up to 2,000 kilobits per second. That
>compares with the maximum dial-up speed of 56 kilobits per second. For
>instance, a file download, say a movie trailer, that would take roughly
>30 minutes on a 14.4 dial-up modem will take about 30 sec. on Road
>Runner. This is true for downloading all types of files such as videos,
>pictures, software and so on. And up loading files happens at a swift
>384 kilobits per second.
>
>How Much Speed Do You Need:
>Here's an animation from broadbandweek.com comparing different broadband
>speeds, and what it can mean in saving your business!
>http://www.broadbandweek.com/analyzer/index.htm
>
>Check out their rip off business rates.
>
>http://www.twckc.com/business/rates.asp
>
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: owner-kclug at marauder.illiana.net
>[mailto:owner-kclug at marauder.illiana.net] On Behalf Of Leonard, Phil
>Sent: Thursday, October 31, 2002 1:35 PM
>To: kclug at kclug.org
>Subject: RE: couple of questions if I may...
>
>What cable provider has 1mbit upstream rates?
><snip>
>
>Normal residential service is 3mbit down / 1 mbit up.
>
></snip>
>
>
>
>




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