Vince Hoang wrote:
On Wed, Apr 23, 2003 at 10:41:26AM -1000, Michael_Bishop/FARRINCS/[EMAIL 
PROTECTED] wrote:

From my research and my experience. DSL is slower, but has a
consistent download/upload time. Road Runner is faster on the
download, but it has lag which can be horrible is your gaming
or doing realtime things like webcams and voice over net.


Be aware that cable modems can vary by area. And I do mean by area (as in, service quality may be completely different 2 blocks down the street). Lots of things come into play, but mostly the load on the segment. In my area, there are two (yes, two, according to a tech) cable subnets in my subdivision alone. Needless to say, my cable modem is capped at 2Mb/512kb, and I get...2Mb/512kb, all the time. If it's going slow, it's either a very occassional problem (like 3 times in the past year, always fixed within 48 hours, usually less), or the other end can't keep up (far more likely for me).

However, another thing you may want to look at is the Serms Of Service (ToS). What you can and can't do with the line can be very important. My ToS was recently changed to allow just about anything not illegal (see http://www.indy.rr.com/CompanyInfo.asp?ProductID=2&InfoTypeID=3 if you really want to see them, though it won't apply locally). This is a very nice plus. Cable modems rarely have this on their home-user class lines, while it's a bit more common on DSL.

Really, you almost have to try both and see what's better. There are parts of Indianapolis where cable modems just plain suck (though mostly in the Comcast areas), and DSL is AWESOME. While up here, DSL is very limited as the POP is far away, and cable modems are really quite nice (and they recently change our requirements to not include basic cable as well).

Sometimes, if you want good service, you'll just have to bit the bullet and get a "real line" (Frame Relay is quite popular for low-cost "real lines" as you can get them burstable, but with varying CIRs, and you don't have to pay the dedicated line fee to drag a T1 all the way to your ISP of choice). Usually with these, it's best to go with a small, local provider, rather than a big, teir 1 provider, as they'll be more likely to actually care about you as a small customer in terms of providing service (such as null routing, BGP peering if you multihome, IP space, etc).

Hope this helps.

--MonMotha

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