Amy, thread, pretty good article in today's San Jose Mercury News Computing section on internet access options today. One paragraph points out that your computer is another important factor in determining loading speed off the web. Good exposure because the Mercury News has a big distribution in the most important high tech area in the world. Boy, that sounds impressive, doesn't it?
One other important factor in determining speed is the user's computer. Your 3-year-old PC with an early version of the Intel Pentium processor won't load Web pages nearly as fast as this year's models, which can better take advantage of a high-speed connection.
sjmercury.com
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Personal Computing
A SPECIAL TELECOMMUNICATIONS REPORT
Posted at 9:34 p.m. PST Saturday, March 27, 1999
Cable, phone rivals heat up market for swift Net access
BY JON HEALEY Mercury News Staff Writer
THE World Wide Web is a well-stocked stream if you're fishing for information, but a common phone line and a dial-up modem make for slow trolling.
That's why avid computer users have longed for a way to cut the time spent idling, waiting for the CNN Web site to appear on their screens or the ''Star Wars'' movie trailer to download. Many were introduced to high-speed connections at the office, but couldn't afford such luxuries at home.
Thanks to a new rivalry between phone and cable TV companies, though, the price of ultra-fast connections has plummeted in a growing number of communities. In parts of the Bay Area, consumers can make a great leap forward in speed for $40 to $60 a month, or two to three times the price of a standard dial-up connection.
These services, known as ''cable modems'' and ''digital subscriber lines,'' aren't just faster. They open up a world where the Internet's treasure trove of news, information and entertainment is as handy as a phone book and as vivid as television.
The two approaches carry similar price tags, and both let users stay constantly connected to the Internet without tying up a phone line. The most noteworthy differences are in the way they deliver high speeds, the window they provide into the Internet and the restrictions they impose on users.
In the long run, though, their goal is the same: to sell not only a fast pipeline, but also a new and richer world of information.
Both the phone-line and cable services can be significantly faster than a dial-up modem, which can take minutes to display some of the more elaborate Web sites. But just how fast you'll go depends on a slew of variables, making it impossible to say definitively that cable modems are faster or slower than high-speed phone lines.
Speed
Which is fastest? Well, it depends
In a cable-modem system, the top speeds can be more than 45 times what the best dial-up connection can provide. Speeds fluctuate, however, because users
share capacity on the wires between them and the network's central point, or ''head end.'' It's like a corporate computer network in that sense, with speeds varying according to how many other people are using the network and what they're doing.
If it's just a bunch of people surfing the Web and reading e-mail, connection speeds should remain high. Speeds will drop, though, if half the neighborhood decides to download the latest version of Microsoft's Internet Explorer.
The high-speed phone service, by contrast, gives each user a dedicated connection to the network's central point that's seven to 29 times faster than the speediest dial-up modem. The connection speed shouldn't rise or fall with the number of users in the neighborhood; instead, it depends mainly on the distance between the subscriber and the central office and the amount of interference on his or her line.
Still, both types of ultra-fast connections hasten only a portion of your trip to and from the Internet. You'll still have to share the lines between the central phone or cable office and your Internet provider, from your provider to the Internet, and from the Internet to the Web site you're trying to view. In each of those places you can lose speed as the traffic lanes get crowded.
ISP options
You choose or they choose
An important factor here is your Internet provider.
With phone-line service, you can choose among several Internet providers whose rates range from $10 to $200 per month. The higher-priced offers, generally speaking, promise you less potential congestion and more features.
With the cable-modem service, however, all customers have to use the Internet provider chosen by the cable operator. For Tele-Communications Inc., which is changing its name to AT&T Broadband and Internet Services, that's @Home Corp. of Redwood City, and for other Bay Area cable companies it's ISP Channel of San Francisco. Customers can sign up for a second or third Internet provider, but their traffic still passes through the cable operator's hand-picked Internet company.
@Home has been criticized by some users for occasional slowdowns, problems that TCI and @Home have blamed on botched or ill-timed upgrades and users running unauthorized, capacity-hogging services out of their homes. The two companies' chief technologists, Tony Werner at AT&T Broadband and Milo Medin at @Home, insist that a properly managed cable network has more than enough capacity to keep customers going at high speed.
PC World magazine recently did a speed test that matched TCI's $40-per-month @Home service in Antioch against one of Pacific Bell's more expensive, business-oriented services -- an ultra-fast line that costs $199 per month -- and a similar, $345-per-month service from Covad Communications of San Jose and Direct Network Access of Berkeley. The cable modem outperformed the high-speed phone lines in every test, although the difference was usually minute. For example, downloading a 2 megabyte file (about 74 pages of text) took 38 seconds via cable modem, 39 seconds via Pac Bell and 49 seconds via Covad.
The results would almost certainly be different on other cable systems, as the number of users varies from community to community. Also, Pac Bell's $199 service comes with a higher guaranteed connection speed than its $49 consumer-oriented service -- about four times as fast for most customers.
Cable-modem customers served by the ISP Channel's consumer-oriented service probably would not fare as well in the tests because its maximum downloading speed is capped at 500 kilobits per second, or about 10 times the rate of the fastest dial-up connection.
One other important factor in determining speed is the user's computer. Your 3-year-old PC with an early version of the Intel Pentium processor won't load Web pages nearly as fast as this year's models, which can better take advantage of a high-speed connection.
Data services
Web gateways rich in video, animation
The clearest difference between the high-speed services is the introduction they provide to the Web.
@Home has constructed an elaborate Web gateway site that's a one-stop source for news, Web searching, local events and schedules, productivity tools, financial and entertainment information, online games, kids' programming and sports highlights.
Other sites aim for this kind of breadth, but none yet matches @Home in showing off the advantages of a high-speed connection.
The @Home site is awash in video clips, animation, streaming audio and large color graphics. For example, there are news and sports video clips from CNN and financial headlines on video from the Bloomberg news service, as well as a wide selection of Internet radio stations. That's a sharp contrast to the text-dominated sites offered by such popular Web sites as Yahoo, Excite and Lycos.
Pac Bell's Internet arm recently started offering its high-speed customers a new site from Snap.com, an affiliate of NBC, that's geared to fast connections. It's mainly a directory to the Web, leading users to other sites -- particularly those that offer video or audio clips. It offers a limited amount of video on its own site, much of it coming from affiliate MSNBC.
@Home, on the other hand, provides more of this material on its own site. And to help subscribers download this and other popular Web sites at top speed, it puts copies in regional data centers near each cable system. That way, visitors to these sites can avoid the congestion on the public Internet.
It also goes further than other sites in providing a guided tour of the Web. There are about five dozen ''How do I'' segments showing how to find phone numbers on the Web, for instance, or how to buy a book online.
Neither @Home's nor Snap's site gives users much ability to tailor its features to their needs and tastes. @Home is buying Excite, however, and plans to incorporate Excite's personalization technology into the next version of its software, said Richard Gingras, an @Home vice president. Gingras acts as editor-in-chief to the 30 to 35 people who produce and edit material for @Home's site.
The ISP Channel relies on Excite for its ''portal,'' and Excite has yet to come up with a version tailored to high-speed users.
The initial customers for cable modems and high-speed phone lines have largely been veteran Web surfers who don't need much help finding their way around the Internet or changing the first site they visit when they fire up their browser. But Gingras predicted that the packaged content provided by companies like his will become increasingly important as more inexperienced users sign up for high-speed service.
Restrictions
Services put limits on subscriber usage
Both @Home and Pac Bell stress that their lowest-cost services are for residential users, not businesses. @Home puts more detailed restrictions on subscribers, though, in an effort to keep its network unclogged.
For example, it bars subscribers from providing services to third parties, such as hosting an electronic discussion group or making data files available remotely. Jerry Gardner, a longtime, satisfied @Home customer from San Ramon, said the restrictions are a good indication of the company's attitude.
''In my view, @Home is striving to become the AOL (America Online) of the cable business,'' Gardner said. ''They do not, and do not desire to, cater to the more advanced users who want to set up servers and custom domain names. They're catering to Joe Sixpack, who's only interest is surfing the Web.''
Pac Bell is more inviting to telecommuters, but its lowest-price service doesn't allow users to transmit data very fast -- the limit is 128 kilobits per second, about four times the fastest dial-up connection. To limit congestion, @Home has started imposing the same cap on customers, beginning in Fremont.
Both TCI and Pac Bell require customers to pay an extra monthly fee and obtain additional Internet addresses if they wish to hook up more than one computer to their modems. But according to several users, Pac Bell has taken a see-no-evil approach to customers who run a small home computer network behind a single Internet address.
The catch is, consumers who set their computers to allow file-sharing on the home networks could be giving the rest of the Internet an open look into their hard drives. @Home cautions its customers about this problem, but Pac Bell doesn't in every case.
Some users say that people with continuous, high-speed connections to the Internet ought to go further and use a firewall -- an electronic barrier, provided by either software or a separate PC, between the user's computer and the Internet. That's because many hackers focus on computers with high-speed connections, and those with a fixed Internet address may be easier targets for attack.
David Goldman, a telecommunications consultant in Redwood City, said the average user probably isn't a prime target because ''there's really nothing juicy or worthwhile on most single machines that people have at home.'' The key question, he said, is whether your data is valuable enough to justify the extra expense of a firewall, which costs upward of $40.
Customer care
Solving a problem can take a while
Because high-speed phone lines and cable modems are relatively new, users may feel like they're on the bleeding edge of technology.
A number of TCI @Home subscribers have complained about spending 30 minutes or longer on hold when they call customer service. And Pac Bell's new service has given rise to numerous horror stories about botched installations that take days, not hours, to complete.
Both companies are bulking up their staff of installers and customer-service agents. They're also trying to make it easier for people to solve technical problems on their own, rather than having to call for help.
Mike McLeland, vice president of business service operations at Pac Bell, said the vast majority of problems reported by high-speed customers stem from breakdowns within their computers, not the network. What the company wants to do, he said, is develop software for customers' PCs that will help them identify and fix such problems themselves.
@Home officials say they are pursuing a similar self-help strategy. But the company is still learning how people use -- and abuse -- the network and the kinds of problems they encounter, Gingras said.
''We're guinea pigs, too,'' he added. ''No one's created a network like this.''
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