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Ibrahim70
15-03-08, 08:55 PM
Asalaam Alikum

Help!! Im still on dial-up.

Is that sad? lol

Who would you recommend for a Broadband Provider down here in the south on England?

I see 3 have a good deal going with their dongle............anyone have this?

Salaams :coolbro:

ajnabee
15-03-08, 08:56 PM
Asalaam Alikum

Help!! Im still on dial-up.

Is that sad? lol

Who would you recommend for a Broadband Provider down here in the south on England?

I see 3 have a good deal going with their dongle............anyone have this?

Salaams :coolbro:


whats a dongle? :scratch:

Ibrahim70
15-03-08, 09:00 PM
whats a dongle? :scratch:

Basically its a USB pen that you stick into your PC/Laptop and it allows you to wirelessly connect to the 3 Mobile Broadband network :)

ajnabee
15-03-08, 09:02 PM
Basically its a USB pen that you stick into your PC/Laptop and it allows you to wirelessly connect to the 3 Mobile Broadband network :)

ohhhh ok thats what i have! :D

ajnabee
15-03-08, 09:05 PM
well actually, not to 3 mobile but we use talk talk and they provide us with free internet. alhamdulillah its quite good round our end but not round my uncles house. they keep getting disconnected!

Ibrahim70
15-03-08, 09:05 PM
ohhhh ok thats what i have! :D

From 3?
Any good?
Good reception?

Sorry for all the questions Sis!! :)

Ibrahim70
15-03-08, 09:09 PM
well actually, not to 3 mobile but we use talk talk and they provide us with free internet. alhamdulillah its quite good round our end but not round my uncles house. they keep getting disconnected!

Thanks for the info Sis :)

the_middle_road
15-03-08, 10:16 PM
well actually, not to 3 mobile but we use talk talk and they provide us with free internet. alhamdulillah its quite good round our end but not round my uncles house. they keep getting disconnected!

Wow free internet..........

I hate Telkom.

Loobna
15-03-08, 11:39 PM
We have Be broadband and its 99% ok :)

cyber_abdullah
16-03-08, 01:30 AM
Asalaam Alikum

Help!! Im still on dial-up.

Is that sad? lol

Who would you recommend for a Broadband Provider down here in the south on England?

I see 3 have a good deal going with their dongle............anyone have this?

Salaams :coolbro:


Whatever you do, do NOT get Tiscali or Orange broadband. I heard Be Broadband are the best.

Khuram_2k?
16-03-08, 05:32 AM
Virgin seems to be taking the market recently, i have it at 2 places, good stuff, they offer some good packages too. never had a problem with them.

Joha
16-03-08, 09:07 AM
We have Be broadband and its 99% ok :)

I heard Be Broadband are the best.

Yea! Be are the best, you can get them to do absolutely anything, bump up the speed, change line parameters, tweak your settings so everything goes faster....

adil786
16-03-08, 11:32 AM
whatever you choose, do NOT CHOOSE SKY!!!!!!!!

its terrible. :(:rubeyes:

cyber_abdullah
16-03-08, 05:04 PM
Yea! Be are the best, you can get them to do absolutely anything, bump up the speed, change line parameters, tweak your settings so everything goes faster....

Any torrent throttling? I need to know this. Any other types of hidden restrictions, like a low fair use policy?

Kal-El
16-03-08, 06:13 PM
Any torrent throttling? I need to know this. Any other types of hidden restrictions, like a low fair use policy?

I was downloading around 30GB per month sometimes and never did I have an issue with them.

Redmist
16-03-08, 10:13 PM
So what is this Be broadband.......and where can you sign up for it? anyone got a link?

Thanks :)

Dappodan1
16-03-08, 11:05 PM
Unlimited-broadband offers to go 'within a year'

Time is running out for so-called "unlimited broadband" packages, according to analysts and internet service providers.

For some time, many ISPs have been offering users what they call unlimited broadband, although it almost always comes with some kind of "fair usage" cap on downloads. PlusNet has been one of the few providers to buck this trend — preferring instead to offer packages based on fixed download caps — and is now warning that the emergence of IP television and the BBC's iPlayer will make it impossible for its rivals to continue marketing their packages as "unlimited".

"2008 will be the year of IPTV," said Neil Armstrong, PlusNet's product and marketing director, on Thursday. Speaking to ZDNet.co.uk, Armstrong said that the iPlayer service had "gone from zero percent of [UK traffic] to five percent in two months", and this explosion in high-bandwidth usage meant ISPs would have to either explicitly charge for the actual amount of data used by customers or operate at a loss.

The popular video site YouTube is also believed to provide around 10 percent of all traffic on the internet — and if it goes "high-quality", as it is expected to do soon, this figure is likely to go up.

"Where it's going to be a big problem is ISPs selling unlimited broadband with a 'fair-use' policy," said Armstrong. "[Users on such packages will] hit that figure and [their] line will slow down, and [they] are going to get a nasty surprise. This is happening right now."

Asked whether this meant those who consider themselves to be "light users" of the internet but now use services such as iPlayer will have to pay more, Armstrong agreed. "Somebody somewhere is going to have to pay, which is why we are very clear about what our products [involve]," he said. "It's not just a single-price, all-you-can-eat market any more." He said he hoped there would be no "unlimited broadband" offers being advertised in a year's time, because they are, in his view, "dishonest".

Armstrong added that, while business customers "don't fall for advertising as easily" as consumers might, the increasing prevalence of home-working using home broadband connections meant a change in tariffing could affect some businesses. He also said that increasing consolidation in the broadband market, together with the massive increase in data traffic brought about by consumer video services, would force many small ISPs to go business-only or be swallowed up by larger rivals.

Michael Philpott, principal analyst at Ovum, agreed with PlusNet's views on "unlimited broadband". "[Such offers are likely to disappear] quite soon actually — I would say within 12 months, simply because you hear it more and more," he told ZDNet.co.uk on Friday. "At conferences where the likes of Tiscali and BT are present, you hear them say these things — 'We must move to a new tariffing scheme' — and that tells me they're working hard on this. The challenge for them is doing it in a way that keeps them competitive — there is a first-mover problem."

Philpott said business models for ISPs would have to change as a result of increasing traffic. "It is up to you as an ISP to make the business case work by designing your network around that [leased or owned] pipe," he said. "It only makes sense if you can split the pipe across as many customers as you possibly can — if end customers increase in terms of bandwidth, you can fit less customers in a pipe and you are therefore paying more per customer. If you're charging £15 [per month] fixed then eventually your costs outweigh [your income]."

Those operators who owned their own network, rather than leasing connectivity from BT Wholesale, would find themselves in the same boat, Philpott suggested. "You're buying Cisco or Juniper routers or whatever, which have a certain amount of capacity, so you are having to purchase more and more hardware to be able to keep control of your customers," he said.

"You will start to see new tariff schemes come out onto the market," said Philpott. "The market will try to not look like they're punishing people — they will try to spin it as 'You want to be a homeworker, upgrade to this package and pay extra'. If you're not willing to pay, then you unfortunately get put to the bottom of the pile. ISPs are heading towards segmenting their customers."

A spokesperson for Orange, one of the UK broadband providers that offers "unlimited broadband", told ZDNet.co.uk on Friday that "consumers are becoming increasingly sophisticated in their broadband use and multimedia services are driving increased demand and consumption".

"Orange continually reviews and refreshes its packages to meet consumer needs," the spokesperson added.

Loobna
17-03-08, 05:23 PM
So what is this Be broadband.......and where can you sign up for it? anyone got a link?

Thanks :)

https://www.bethere.co.uk/

:)

I have Limewire or BitTorrent on pretty much all the time the comp is on and I've never had any issues.

mohakem
17-03-08, 11:09 PM
Don't laugh, but we've been with AOL for about 7-8 years and there are no download caps, always on, fast broadband. Currently on 8 megabytes which was upgraded free from 2 megabytes about a year ago. Free modem was provided, and i don't need to use their software either. Can't complain really...

adn4n
21-03-08, 08:51 AM
whatever you choose, do NOT CHOOSE SKY!!!!!!!!

its terrible. :(:rubeyes:

and i was thinking its TALKTALK.

plusnet is good ISP i have used them before no problems.
http://www.plus.net/

Salman Al-Farsi
22-03-08, 03:13 AM
Don't laugh, but we've been with AOL for about 7-8 years and there are no download caps, always on, fast broadband. Currently on 8 megabytes which was upgraded free from 2 megabytes about a year ago. Free modem was provided, and i don't need to use their software either. Can't complain really...

dont feel alone, I've been with aol from days of free 1 month trials on 33.6k analogue modem dialling 0171 local number. AOL rocks (not that I've tried anything else to know the difference) and never had any probs with aol except it dc and rc at midnight everyday. :p

Ibrahim70
22-03-08, 08:17 PM
Asalaam Alikum

Thanks for all the replies :hidban:

Im checking out some of your recommendations on the net right now :)