Picking your brains...
Dec. 9th, 2004 11:57 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
mmmm... braaaains...
Your challenge, should you choose to accept it: recommend a broadband ISP to me :)
We'll be living in North Melbourne, and have a budget of about $60 per month. At the moment (in Carlton) we're on a 512/128 connection, with a 6GB quota (through Netspace, who seem to have nice friendly customer service people). Despite some signs to the contrary‡, I have a fairly minimal knowledge of how these black boxes actually work - so quoting lots of jargon at me might provoke blank looks...
‡: I've been repeatedly misidentified as a computer science student for the last seven years. Why this is, I do not know...
Your challenge, should you choose to accept it: recommend a broadband ISP to me :)
We'll be living in North Melbourne, and have a budget of about $60 per month. At the moment (in Carlton) we're on a 512/128 connection, with a 6GB quota (through Netspace, who seem to have nice friendly customer service people). Despite some signs to the contrary‡, I have a fairly minimal knowledge of how these black boxes actually work - so quoting lots of jargon at me might provoke blank looks...
‡: I've been repeatedly misidentified as a computer science student for the last seven years. Why this is, I do not know...
no subject
Date: 2004-12-10 04:49 am (UTC)They are pretty good on the few occasions that we've had issue, including paying bills. Which I appreciate greatly.
I can find out more details if you would like.
*When I say limit, what I mean is the amount that you're allowed to download before the drop your speed down to dial-up range.
no subject
Date: 2004-12-10 05:10 am (UTC)iinet's $60 plan is better than Netspace's $60 one, but iinet doesn't have anything cheaper without dropping to 256/64. I doubt we'll use 10GB in a month, so we don't need to pay for the more expensive iinet plan :)
Still looking, though - thanks for the suggestions.