<< I took advantage of this free, 3 month offer a couple of weeks ago.
What I found was a dial-up isp with about the same quality as AOL. I almost never get connected with the first try. Usually it takes two to three tries before I am connected. I also get disconnected at about the same rate as AOL........which is once or twice a day.
But, hey! its free for three months........whats the matter with that?
I probably will wind up with AT&T. If you sign up for their long distance at 7 cents a minute, you get unlimited internet access for just $7 a month. There is, however, a small ad window that they put up. If you go to their website they show you a picture of it. It would not bother me in the least. The ads on Anandtech and others are much bigger.
I havent called AT&T about this offer so I am not positive..........but, I could find no reference to any "monthly $$$$" charges for their long distance .............I DONT BELIEVE IT.......RIGHT AT THIS POINT, I WAS DISCONNECTED FROM MSN - AMAZING!!!.........
If anyone is using this AT&T 7/7 plan and really knows the details of it, howz about a post about what you think? I am sure it would be helpful for not only me, but a lot of others. Thanks! >>
You guys do realize that MSN, AOL, and most other national providers use the same backbone provider. It's usually MegaPOP, Broadwing, Sprint, Telia, UUNet, Infonet, or Corecom (there might be a couple of others). What MSN (and other providers) do it buy an account from these provders for $7.95-$11.95 a month, then provide their own radius authentication.
For instance, the ISP I work for uses all the same numbers on most of the west coast as MSN, but we charge $15.95/month and MSN charges $21.95/month (even though it's the same connection). Each account on that backbone costs $9.95, so MSN is making around $12 a person per month.
Just wanted to educate you guys a little bit on how selling the internet works 🙂