Wireless Internet Service

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Anonymous
Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
edited June 2014 in Life After Breast Cancer

Hi

I'm contemplating signing up for a wireless internet service and I was hoping someone with experience with this type of service could give some input.  Which service is better?  Is Verizon dependable?  What are the pros and cons.  Is it dependable?  What about security?  Which company had the best access geographically and which has the best pricing plan?  Are you satisfied with your service?

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  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2008

    Not sure if this is what you mean, but we have cable via Time-Warner through a wireless router and have for about three years. It is extremely dependable and we only have issues when the power goes out (almost never a problem but it has happened three times this summer). It was $29.99 for six months and now costs $41.95 a month. Every computer in our house (we have three plus my laptop) can access the signal from every corner of our split-level ranch...

    As far as security, the signal is locked - meaning you can't stand outside the house and connect to it - which is cool. Never had any other security issues at all...

    I know nothing about Verizon accept that their DSL sucked and was not very Macintosh friendly. Kicked them to the curb, but Fios might be better...

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2008

    I also use Time Warner Cable and am happy with it, though I'm looking into enhancing my speed. For security and virus protection, I have downloaded a free program from RoadRunner and it's great.

    ~Marin

  • wishiwere
    wishiwere Member Posts: 3,793
    edited July 2008

    If you are looking at home stuff, we have charter Cable (with our TV service too) we love it.  It's fast, dependable and the wireless is protected through firewalls although we've used it on the patio and different areas of the yard, like the back fire pit (150 ft away from the house) and the workshop another 100 feet away in the other direction.  Never had any problems except when the stupid tree at the neighbors wiped out the lines for a block wide! :(  I think our total package runs $95/month for both cable and internet.

  • anneshirley
    anneshirley Member Posts: 1,110
    edited July 2008

    Hope--I've had lots of experience with various providers but I'm not sure if you're just asking about "wireless" or also about ways of delivering the service.  In Manhattan, I use Time Warner, but it's not wireless, as I never bothered to purchase a router. My computer is attached to a cable.  Cable delivery, in my experience, is the best in terms of speed of download and upload.  In Maine, I had a receiver on my roof and a router in the house. (My computer came with a wireless card.)  This service went down so often (weather) that I changed to Verizon DSL (still using my wireless card) and this weekend I set my husband up using the same DSL router.  It's working quite well and he's some 500 feet away from the router.  (A lot depends on the range of your wireless card, so check the range as well when deciding on your service and equipment.)

    I hesitated in the past to use DSL but I'm very happy with it, and I got it at a monthly discount, of 24.99 a month.  In New York, I pay $106 for Road Runner and Cable TV.  When I return in the fall, I plan to change from cable to DSL for the savings. DSL is a bit slower than cable but not so much that I won't welcome the savings. However, you can get a year's special, with Road Runner, of about $29.00 (thru Earthlink) but you lose it after a year.  I also much prefer moving my computer around and not using a cable attachment so even if you decide on cable, consider getting a wireless card and a router.  Don't forget you'll need a wireless card in your computer aside from the equipment provided by Verizon if you decide to go DSL. 

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    Thanks everyone.  I'm talking about the little usb/card thing you get from a wireless service like verizon where you can travel with a laptop and have wireless service away from home.  Has anyone done that yet? 

  • BethNY
    BethNY Member Posts: 2,710
    edited July 2008

    I think wireless USB cards are decent whether you go with verizon or sprint- I'm a verizon fan myself... however, the plans are expensive, and it depends on what you need it for.

    For example- so many places like airports, starbucks, libraries, hotels- have free WIFI or hot zones that you can get internet access from without paying for it.

    Some of the sprint plans I looked at were $70 a month, which I felt was a lot. 

    If you want it for a road trip, the service interuptions may get annoying. If this is a life change that you're making, where you would frequently be on the road, what about having a blackberry or treo phone type thing to get your emails on the road when you can't use your laptop?

  • anneshirley
    anneshirley Member Posts: 1,110
    edited July 2008

    I agree with Beth.  I investigated those plans about two years ago and found them to be very expensive and not really needed.  You can check the internet to find areas where you're travelling that have hot spots.  Lots of them in Manhattan and in many of the larger cities, for example.

    And then there's always piggybacking on those folks who've neglected to secure their routers! 

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    Thanks for your responses ladies.  I agree that that is way to expensive for me.  I guess I will just play it by ear and see how it goes with the free hotspots.

  • NoH8
    NoH8 Member Posts: 2,726
    edited July 2008

    I had free wireless in the hotel for 6 weeks and it was a lot slower than what I have with comcast. Still, it's nice to be able to go anywhere and be able to use itl The network wasn't secure, since it wasn't my network.

  • BethNY
    BethNY Member Posts: 2,710
    edited July 2008

    yes the security thing is an issue too.  I used to be a piggybacker- I won't lie.  I'd search for any router in close distance that wasn't secure, however, I quickly learned that there are some scammers out there, and you've got to be careful.

    If you are using a WIFI or in a hot spot, be safe-- don't do things like shop on line (unless you get a special credit card number to use online) bank online, or put in any information like your SSN or pins, and passwords.  If it's just to check your email, and read the news, etc, as long as you change your password often you shouldn't worry.  Also, if you have a wireless router in your house, you should always give it a name, and lock it so no one has access to your information.

    (although on the web, we all know nothing is really sacred)

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    Thanks Beth!  You've been a big help.  I will watch using passwords in those spots.

  • otter
    otter Member Posts: 6,099
    edited August 2008

    AlwaysHope, I am typing this from my parents' house in the upper midwestern U.S. using a Macintosh "MacBook Pro" laptop with a Verizon internet access card plugged into a slot on the side.

    This system is wireless and completely mobile--we used it all last summer when we were camping in the Rocky Mountain states.  It worked as we were driving down the highway (passenger use only, of course!), camped at a campsite, staying at a motel (if they don't provide WiFi), eating lunch in a park, visiting friends, etc.

    Anywhere we can get a halfway decent cellphone signal, we can get internet access with this card.  For instance, we sat in our lounge chairs at a campsite at Glacier National Park and read Forest Service updates about fires in the areas we were planning to travel later that week.  We made on-line campsite reservations at state parks.  We looked at tourist information about towns down the road.  We kept in touch with family members by email (in between postcards).  It was really handy.

    The speed is way faster than what we get with our HugesNet satellite internet system at home.  The Verizon access card is supposedly broadband speed, although that's not always true.  Ironically, we can't use it at home (southeastern U.S.), because we can't get a cellphone signal at our house.

    We pay $48 per month for the service, although that's a discounted price.

    Apparently, Sprint and AT&T also provide similar systems.   My dh says they all have good Mac support now.

    otter 

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    Yes, yes, Otter.  This is exactly what I want to do!!  Thank you so much.  It sounds like it works very well for you too.

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