broadband access
jc at trillian.mit.edu
jc at trillian.mit.edu
Tue Sep 19 09:25:36 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.
One of the better (and funnier) stories about "tie-in" sales from
cable companies can be read at:
http://www.geocities.com/flutocracy/cablemodem.htm
This is the story of a woman who ordered cable modem service without
getting the cable TV service, and found herself the defendent in a
criminal fraud case as a result.
There have been numerous suggestions that this was a wakeup call to
the cable industry, who have widely responded by making the TV
service a mandatory part of getting a cable modem. When I looked into
RCN a few months ago, they made it clear that to get cable modem
service, we would have to also switch our cable TV service from
Mediaone to RCN. This was stated clearly on one of their web pages,
in fact. Maybe they've changed this policy since then.
| Hope this helps, I like RCN.
It's useful to hear both good and bad stories. Keep 'em coming ...
We're seriously considering another try at a real Internet connection
and we'd like to learn what we can from people other than the
companies themselves. In particular, I'd be interested in getting
lots of info from people who want home "professional" service (i.e.,
not just web browsing) for systems other than Windows.
One of the very real problems with Mediaone's "no servers" policy was
that they objected to my running telnetd and sshd. Several people I
talked to made it clear that their service was only for running a web
browser, and any other use was at best a violation of their service
contract. I'd like my home machine to be accessible from the Net, so
that I can occasionally grab programs and copy them to a machine at
work. This is clearly outside Mediaone's model of what the Internet
is for, and with only a dial-out connection, it isn't possible. It's
also impossible if you can't (legally) run a server like sshd.
The basis of all this is the fact that the cable companies tend to
see the Internet as a new form of (low quality) TV. It's just a new
form of entertainment. Their management tends not to be aware of any
other use, or if they hear about it, they don't approve. This isn't
surprising, of course. It'll probably be a decade or more until they
change this attitude (unless the gummint decides to step in and force
them to sell real Internet connections), so the rest of the comm
industry has a while to try to get the market away from them.
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