Inernet help, please.

   / Inernet help, please. #1  

MarkV

Super Member
Joined
Apr 7, 2000
Messages
5,636
Location
Cedartown, Ga and N. Ga mountains
Tractor
1998 Kubota B21, 2005 Kubota L39
We have made our final move to the country and just love it except for our Internet connection. The step back to a dial up connection after having DSL seems painfully slow. We signed up for Joi Internet hoping their ads of "DSL like speeds" would be somewhat true. Well it isn't much like my DSL was. We also put in a new US Robotics 56k v.92 modem hoping that would help. It looks like our old rural phone lines just are not going to give us much more than 28,800 bps though. /forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif

So my question for you computer savvy members is should I buy a new computer? Ours is an older Pentium II with as much RAM as it will hold and is running Windows 98. I know a new machine can not fix the phone lines but don't know if a new machine would maximize what I have and make a noticeable difference.

By the way, cable and DSL are not options here and I don't see it happening for a long time. Satellite is available but seems kind of pricey for our needs.

MarkV
 
   / Inernet help, please. #2  
<font color="blue">Ours is an older Pentium II with as much RAM as it will hold and is running Windows 98. So my question for you computer savvy members is should I buy a new computer?</font>
Yes. /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif That's an ancient PC.

<font color="blue"> if a new machine would maximize what I have and make a noticeable difference.
</font>
Sorry, wont make a noticeable difference in your Internet speed. /forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif
 
   / Inernet help, please. #3  
I agree with MikePA. You may, or may not, want a new computer, but I wouldn't expect it to help with your Internet speed. When I was living in the country with dial up service, 28.8k was the best I could ever do, and usually no more than 26.4k, even with a new Pentium 4 machine.
 
   / Inernet help, please. #4  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( should I buy a new ...... ? )</font>

Absolutely. It should be orange, and don't even think about getting one without a FEL. A toothbar will be helpful as well, and if you can swing it - a backhoe. /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif

On a somewhat more serious note, I do believe that an XP computer will run a little faster, but it's not DSL. /forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif
 
   / Inernet help, please. #5  
I'll take a 28,800 connection in the country over a broadband connection in the city any day. I'm not a city person and I will never live in the city under any cirumstances. Right now I'm connected to a 37,333. As was said, a new computer won't increase the connection speeds much, if at all. Dial up is just an old, slow way to get on the Internet. How much would it cost to get that satellite DSL or whatever the connection is? Would it be cheaper than a new computer? Around here there is a satellite DSL available, but I think it costs about $200.
 
   / Inernet help, please. #6  
Our situation is much like yours with very slow dialup and no DSL, etc. available. I've been using DirecWay 1-way satellite for a couple of years with much faster downloads. This system uses your dial-up modem for transmission from your computer and everything incoming is via satellite and USB satellite modem. Cost is $39.99 per month and I have a dedicated phone line for about $23.00 monthly. I couldn't see the value for me in the 2-way satellite system. Also don't know if the 1-way systems are available new but they can be found used occasionally. You might find something at this site: http://www.dslreports.com/forum/sat
 
   / Inernet help, please. #7  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( ....Right now I'm connected to a 37,333. As was said, a new computer won't increase the connection speeds much, if at all.)</font>

That is what I'm usually connected at (37,333). Low 30's on occasion and rarely at 40 other times. I have NetZero which is $9.95/month. My 13th month (extra month when you pay yearly) is due this month and I think I'll try their Hi-speed for $14.95 a month. I'll let you know if it is worth the extra $5.00. G
 
   / Inernet help, please. #8  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( I'll let you know if it is worth the extra $5.00. )</font>

It won't be. They send highly compressed images -- which gives the illusion of higher speed, yet the photo you will see online will be horrible.

Dialup is dialup -- it can't be Energized, Maximized, Exercised to make it any faster.
 
   / Inernet help, please. #9  
One time, on an ultra-rare occasion, I got a 42,000. It was a shocker. lol
 
   / Inernet help, please. #10  
In town with 1.5 mb DSL and this Athlon 750, TBN screens are instantaneous except peak hours may have a second or two delay. I'm also running Ad-Subtract which eliminates the delay for fetching off-site banner ads.

Over at the ranch, access is via wireless mini-lan from the ranch house to the 'rural DSL' (384k maximum) in my tenant's cabin. Their phone line tested 200k maximum DSL capability.

I use an old Dell portable there, Pentium 166 with 48 k ram. When I ran 40k dialup there the delay was unacceptable, often 20 seconds for a TBN page to appear. When I set up the wireless lan I observed something strange - my connection software indicates the TBN page arrives rather quickly, then with no more data coming through the wireless link, the old Dell waits 5 seconds or more to display the page. I think the delay is in the pentium 166's ability to rearrange the received data into a presentable page, rather than data transmission through the 200k dsl or the 11 mbs wireless connection. (I have a similar ad-blocker ther to avoid banner ads.)

In summary, the speed of the receiving pc might be a factor you can improve. 'NetPerSec' from PC magazine is the free software I use to see how fast, and when, data is arriving. If you see a delay between arrival and presentation, that delay can be improved with a faster pc.

Also - several years ago dialup speed in town was slow. I finally persuaded PacBell to replace the 'drop' from their pole to the house and that greatly improved dialup speed. This was back in the 33.6k era, and allowed the full 33.6.
 

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