Marco,
If your customers will be mostly Hotmailers or surfers, dial-up could be
practical. I've seen as many as 10 stations sharing one dial-up
connection without problems... when everyone is emailing or surfing.
(UNAH computer lab, Tegucigalpa, Honduras.) If someone tries to do
something more bandwidth intensive, however, users begin to suffer.
I have a dial-up connection serving two stations. My customers are
almost exclusively emailers, so bandwidth is no problem. I could easily
add more stations should demand ever warrant it.
Given your tutopia email address, are you in Central America, too?
Warren Post
The Cybercaf� at Pizza Pizza
Santa Rosa de Cop�n, Honduras
http://sites.netscape.net/srcopan/cybercafe.htm
Marco Huerta wrote:
> Hi Earl:
>
> Thanks for your advice. Answering your questions, i am planning to
> offer in addtion a connecting to internet:
> Gaming for LAN (not for Internet).
> About videoconferencing, would be a service not common and then, is
> not a important factor to make a decision.
>
> Marco H.
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