-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Thu, Jun 20, 2002 at 11:44:21PM -0700, Vineet Kumar wrote:
> [CPU]--serial-cable--[modem]--phone-line--wall > | | > | power cord > | | > +-[surge protector]---wall [CPU]--serial cable--[modem]--phone---wall | | | | | | +-power cord-----[surge protector]---wall > Where's the misunderstanding? The line noise isn't worth it on the phone line. Yeah, it cleans up the power lines pretty well, but it takes a bit more to keep a phone line noise-free and [external] modems a bit more tollerant to phone line voltage changes from my experiance. You can go with a surge suppressor on the phone line, but you won't get quite the same speed, especially past 28.8kbps. Cable modems and televisions are a different story: surge suppressors with coax cable hookups are pure evil. If they decide to go flaky, it'll start throwing line noise back onto the cable line, and you'll slow everybody in your neighborhood down and give them bad TV reception on 2 and 3, and in extreme cases, as high as channel 10 or 12. The cable company will roll trucks when there's complaints of bad signal, and if they can't find it on thier line, they'll start trying to trace it back to the house. If it turns out to be your equipment doing it, the cable company will charge you for thier inconvienence, expect an extra $100 or so on your bill if you were the cause. Cable surge suppressors were a pet peeve of mine when I worked the phones for @Home. Don't bother with them at all, especially if you lease a cable convertor or cable modem from them. Those will eat it and die without passing voltage on to your network or other AV equipment, and the cable company will send someone out to replace them free of charge (this is a compelling reason not to buy your own cable modem. That, and if something breaks, you won't get modem support from your cable operator if you own your own modem, beyond getting it configured (which is thier problem). Furthermore, AT&TBI is reducing lease prices on thier cable modems by $7 and raising service prices by $7, so you'll only save $3 with your own modem, not $10. The increase was to cover a reduced demand for broadband and increased costs associated dealing with flaky, cheapass modems the cheapskates tended to buy to avoid lease fees) - -- Baloo -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.7 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQE9EtL2NtWkM9Ny9xURAlc8AJ9zkdcFap8zLhsWN322TRwCarsiMACgm2D3 GMW1KZNocL+Uo2P7vMP21fA= =1nZP -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]