This is going to sound odd, but I have a friend who lives in the boonies
who only has an analog phone line for internet access and word has it
they won't have broadband (or most cell signals) for a couple more years.
I was wondering if anyone here might know of an affordable, stand-alone
device
On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 5:03 AM, Brian Chabot br...@datasquire.net wrote:
This is going to sound odd, but I have a friend who lives in the boonies
who only has an analog phone line for internet access and word has it
they won't have broadband (or most cell signals) for a couple more years.
I
On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 5:03 AM, Brian Chabotbr...@datasquire.net wrote:
I have a friend who lives in the boonies ...
You spelled New Hampshire wrong. ;-)
... who only has an analog phone line for internet access ...
Have you looked into fixed-wireless ISPs? If they're on a hill that
The only solutions that I know of are:
1. Satellite. I have not looked at satellite for a number of years. At
one time, there was a satellite company that was pretty decent and had
an agreement with Dish Network, but that agreement ended in litigation,
and the 2 people I knew with their service
On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 7:45 AM, Jerry Feldmang...@blu.org wrote:
The only solutions that I know of are:
Well, there's also analog modems. ;-)
Hey, I know, he can borrow that circa 1964 acoustic coupler from the
YouTube video! ;-)
1. Satellite.
Anyone considering satellite should
before cable, I used a hawking analog modem router teamed with a Courier modem.
It worked very well
Here's a link to the old product page:
http://www.hawkingtech.com/products/productlist.php?CatID=33FamID=79ProdID=85
joe
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On June 22, 2009, Brian Chabot sent me the following:
I was wondering if anyone here might know of an affordable, stand-
alone device which would server as an analog modem on one side
and ethernet or wifi on the other?
Used to this sort of thing all the time back when I was at JLC. For the
On 06/22/2009 05:03 AM, Brian Chabot wrote:
I was wondering if anyone here might know of an affordable, stand-alone
device which would server as an analog modem on one side and ethernet or
wifi on the other?
The original Apple Airport did this, with decent dial-on-demand. There
might be a
On 06/22/2009 01:08 PM, Bill McGonigle wrote:
The original Apple Airport did this, with decent dial-on-demand. There
might be a decent volume in surplus. 802.11b only, though.
There used to be howtos on setting this up with a generic linux box;
some of the WRT* line had serial ports or