Babydoll_, unlimited means you have no download cap
there's a difference.
most ISPs will claim "unlimited"
in their mindset, unlimited means "download all you want"
but customers wont be capped in a sense, but you will find that their bandwidth will be
shaped or limited according to how much they download.
You can have an unlimited plan, which lets you download "an infinite amount of data" -- but at a cost, and that cost is the download speed or speed of transmission (the bandwidth available at any one time).
What babydoll would be looking for, in an ideal world, is:
a) uncapped downstream traffic, ie maximum line throughput
b) unlimited downstream quota, ie download all you can
c) no shaping, see
A - download speeds remain the same throughout
d) upload data transfer being free (no charges for upstream traffic)
e) PIPE or similar peering, within the state and/or country, so data between users on the same ISP, or within the PIPE network, remains free and doesn't account for download data (eating up the monthly quota, presumably there is no quota LOL
)
Originally posted by -X-
http://www.bigblue.net.au/
$54 was like a september but it could still be the same price.
This offer is only valid until the 30th of september, and the prices have been adjusted (since it is the 5th of october).
if i recall, it's about $64.95 now, instead of the advertised $54.95
PS: "unlimited broadband" is always misleading, as there is
always a catch.
be it:
* 300MB or 550MB data allowance, with charges ontop (when you exceed the data quota)
* shaping or a reduction in download speed (downstream), as you will be severely 'capped' if you're constantly leeching or downloading away non-stop
So from
A to
E, that's what you'd be looking for in an ideal world (it's not australia... LOL)
free modem included would be nice, and no contracts, as well as the option to pay monthly, instead of in advance by 1 month, 3 months or even 4 months in advance.
and an ammended AUP (acceptable use policy) would be nice too
*keeps on dreaming*
http://www.iinet.net.au/ 512k $80 16Gb then you are capped at 72kbps which is faster than 56, and you dont pay for it!
yeah, iinet would be the best option at the moment, since you're getting a decent 64KB/s transfer, you're not paying through the nose, and a cap of 72kbps is far better than 56kbps (dialup).
Also, you've got peering and a tonne of newsgroups to leech from (or so I've heard... *shifty look*), which doesn't accumulate towards your overall 16GB monthly quota.
I want 1.5 unlimited
You mean to say, 1.5
limited
ADSL is only limited by the line (quality of the line, distance from the exchange, among other factors including pair-gain technologies)
usually, copper lines are
limited to 1.5Mbit, but I can understand what you're saying when you mean to say "1.5 unlimited" -- 1500kbps is far better than 256 or even 512kbps (by sheer numbers
)
in the future, most "developed" countries will be using 20mbit lines or higher for xDSL technologies (although Australia doesn't look like it's heading that way
)