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BlitzenZeus
Burnt Out Cynic
Premium
join:2000-01-13
kudos:2
Reviews:
·Frontier FiOS

reply to Matt

Re: Goodbye AOHell

Well the prices at the end for unlimited dial-up internet were $10-20 at the most to try to keep their customers from broadband, some of the cheaper ones trying to show you additional adds while you browsed, hence my hatred for carriers like this.

Broadband started to be around dial-up prices plus the additional cost of a phone line so those were the first people to change to broadband since it was faster, and cost the same as having to pay for the second line also.

Then broadband became cheaper, some only held out due to forced packaging with tv services, or the felt they didn't want to pay more, however still had to deal with the annoying part of not being able to talk on the phone at the same time. If they paid for a second line, and dial-up at this point there was no help for them.

I have a feeling that the majority of dial-up users left are stuck with poor broadband coverage, they just haven't looked into the real cost of getting anything faster, or can't depend on a wireless cellular provider.

I helped somebody recently who was still using juno dial-up, and I ended up saving them money since they no longer had to pay for dial-up, along with their phone provider had a non-contract dsl/phone package for 1mbit/128kbit for the same price he was already for his single phone line. They would of had to buy a modem, but we had an old dsl modem laying around which worked perfectly for them, however this wasn't without a fight from the sales agents trying to push their faster services, we actually had to hang up as the first guy was being a jerk about it. The second guy actually gave us the package he wanted. It wasn't amazingly fast, we told him he could go must faster if he really wanted, but all he did was e-mail and browse the web anyway. I was honestly amazed they still used dial-up.
--
My hourly rates:
$25 per hour.
$35 per hour if you want to watch.
$45 per hour if you want to help.
$75 per hour if you tried to fix it, and failed.
$125 per hour if you called tech support, and didn't fix the issue while making things worse

Rob_
Premium
join:2008-07-16
Mary Esther, FL

AOL was unique back in their hayday. Now, watch the masses go back to dial up once metered billing takes the stage and the average cable/dsl bill goes from $60 to $600 dollars a month.

-Rob


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