T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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572.1 | Not a direct answer, but info about highway1 | SMURF::GAF | Jerry Feldman, Unix Dev. Environment, DTN:381-2970 | Mon Jan 27 1997 16:22 | 23 |
| I am a Highway1 subscriber. Basically, they use DHCP to assign the IP
address. The cable modem has an AUI connector and may be connected
either to 10baseT or thin wire. They also have a way to verify the Mac
address on your ethernet card.
I found that the customer service people who take your order do not
know very much. When I ordered the service, I was told they only do
10baseT eventhough their Director of Broadband Communications told me
they could do either. Since I already had a thin-wire network in my
house, I was told that the only way they could install the system was
to sell me another ethernet card. When the installer arrived, looked at
my system, told me he would cancel the charge for the ehternet card
(actually $49.95 for a 3Comm PCI card). So, in this case, you have the
order takers who don't have a clue about what they are doing.
I did have occasion to contact customer service when I apparently lost
service. They are very good at following up. The first service outage
simply required rebooting the cable modem. The second was an actual
cable outage. In this latter case, customer service called me back and
sent email to see if I had my service restored.
|
572.2 | | CFSCTC::SMITH | Tom Smith MRO1-3/D12 dtn 297-4751 | Mon Jan 27 1997 18:14 | 10 |
| That's very helpful. Thanks!
I'm curious about how you have that connected to your local LAN. Did I
understand correctly that you have all of your machines _and_ the cable
modem connected as peers on the same thinwire circuit?
I did manage to find the dhcpcd package and it _looks_ like it shouldn't
be a problem on Linux.
-Tom
|
572.3 | More dhcp reponse | SMURF::GAF | Jerry Feldman, Unix Dev. Environment, DTN:381-2970 | Mon Jan 27 1997 20:28 | 19 |
| >I'm curious about how you have that connected to your local LAN. Did I
>understand correctly that you have all of your machines _and_ the
>cable modem connected as peers on the same thinwire circuit?
Yes. Currently I have 3 nodes on my network, my Windows 95 system, my
wife's system, and the Cable Modem. The Alpha Linux system will
occasionally sit on the lan. One of the security issues is that I
use print and file sharing so my wife and I can share the printer and
that I can download software for her.
Here is a response I received to my query on the BLU discussion list:
>Subject: Re: Does Linux support DHCP
>Date: Mon, 27 Jan 1997 12:47:57 -0500
>From: Adam Holt <[email protected]>
>yes, when Continental Cablevision first started its highway1.com cable
>modem rollout 4-6 months ago, there was some USENET talk about a
>successful and easy Linux implementation. Look in www.dejanews.com and
>you should find it.
|
572.4 | | CFSCTC::SMITH | Tom Smith MRO1-3/D12 dtn 297-4751 | Mon Jan 27 1997 20:36 | 2 |
| Great! Sounds easier than I thought. Thanks again, Jerry.
|
572.5 | cost per month? | SUBSYS::MSOUCY | MentalmETALMike | Wed Jun 04 1997 15:59 | 5 |
|
What's the cost of this from them? I heard it was like $50/month just
for the Highway1 connection.
|
572.6 | | HYDRA::SMITH | Tom Smith ZKO1-3/H42 +1 603 881-6329 | Fri Jun 06 1997 04:16 | 21 |
| RE: .-1
It's $60/month. If you also have cable TV service, it's $50/month (in
addition to your normal cable fees). Compared to $30-$50/month for a
second phone line and a 28.8K connection with busy signals, line noise,
and disconnects, that's not bad for a permanent 1500K line. A lot
cheaper and faster than ISDN. It's shared bandwidth, but it's unlikely
that 50 or more people in your neighborhood are also going to be using
that bandwidth at the same time.
I decided not to do it right away because they wouldn't even talk about
installing it unless it was on Windows 95. The rep I talked to said
that their field people only knew how to deal with that and they
weren't satisfied with just laying the wire and letting me do the OS
setup myself. I guess they didn't have enough technical support in
place to handle the customers who didn't RTFM.
That was a few months ago, though. Your mileage may vary.
-Tom
|