broadband access
Evan Sarmiento
kaworu at bu.edu
Tue Sep 19 06:13:44 EDT 2000
This is the first time I've heard of this. I've had a lan behind a gateway
for atleast three months now, nothing's happened to me.
I don't have a VPN, so, it doesn't really affect me. You should take that
up with RCN yourself :)
Anyways. You can choose which stuff you want from RCN. You can get just
the cable modem, just the cable tv, just the phone, or cable modem + phone
(which is what I have), etc, etc.
Hope this helps, I like RCN.
- Evan S. | http://sekt7.tripod.com
On Mon, 18 Sep 2000 jc at trillian.mit.edu wrote:
> --------
>
> | The website for RCN is www.rcn.com
> | Your IP address will always stay the same if there is some traffic coming
> | from your box. That's why I always have IRC running in the background.
> | You can get cable TV from RCN.
>
> Do they still require that you get the TV if you want just the modem
> connection? A few months ago, they did. This would be extra. We
> currently have a Mediaone cable connection, and the wife would
> probably grumble about having to reprogram her three (count 'em)
> remote controls and the VCR. OTOH, we had a Medaone cable modem for a
> few months last year, and they kicked me off because I was a
> "hacker". Actually, they wouldn't tell me anything at all specific
> about what they didn't like; they just terminated the service and
> said (verbally) that if I didn't like it, I could take them to court.
> So I wouldn't mind switching the TV to RCN if they really support
> linux ...
>
> I have kept one bit of email in which the Mediaone folks made it
> clear that servers, even email and time servers, are forbidden. It
> did strike me as curious that Mediaone objected to my getting my
> email delivered directly to my home machine. They insisted that email
> had to be delivered to their machine and then picked up from there.
> This doubles the packet count and uses space on their disks, so their
> motive is a bit of a puzzle. I can't imagine that they ever found
> anything in my email that was sufficiently exciting that they wanted
> to read it all. But what else could be their motive? And if they
> wanted a copy of my email, why didn't they just intercept the traffic
> to port 25, so I wouldn't know they were doing it?
>
> | They allow servers if they're non commercial.
>
> I bet they'd like you even better if you applied for a commercial
> modem connection. ;-)
>
> | $70 for cable modem, one local phone line, non-listed & non-published
> | number. Plus two free options. I have caller id and anonymous call
> | blocking.
> |
> | $120 for EVERYTHING. Cable modem, two phones, and cable tv.
>
> How much per month? Maybe I should check out their web site again.
>
> Hmmm ... I just tried, and I've managed to get all of three pages in
> 10 minutes. The silly browser sits there for the longest time before
> it shows anything at all, and the text appears on the screen a few
> chars at a time. It shows a transfer rate of below 100 bytes/sec. I
> wonder what the problem is? Other sites seem to work fine.
>
> I did find the following in their FAQ:
>
> What Operating Systems do you support?
> RCN offers PC support for Windows 3.11, Windows 95, Windows 98, NT
> 3.51 and NT 4.0. Macintosh support is also available for OS 8 and up.
>
> No mention of linux here. I wonder if their linux "support" is like
> Mediaone, who require that you be running Windows when they install
> it. My current machine doesn't have Windows. I did have the usual
> involuntary Windows installation, but the disk went flakey, and I saw
> no reason to waste space on the second disk.
>
> -
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