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Wing Commander Fowler
25th Oct 2003, 20:36
Has anyone tried the Tiscali service advertised at 15:99 per month? Phoned them the other day and the "Catch" is that the connection speed is only 156K so not true broadband in the popular sense. Still you get to keep the thing on 24/7 uninterupted and can use the phone at the same time. It seems attractive to me as someone who's still coughing up 14:99 for the old freeserve 52K connection.

Anyone any experience of it and any knowledge of catches?

InFinRetirement
28th Oct 2003, 01:26
I wouldn't want it at that speed. Certainly not for that money. I am with Pipex and it costs £23.44 per month inc VAT. It is very good value for money and always connects at 576kbps. That is quick and entirely adequate. The best bit is that I have never once had to call Pipex since the first day I installed it.

Tartan Giant
28th Oct 2003, 02:01
I have to agree with IFR.

Never had a problem (touch wood) and always 576.

For another £8/m you will wonder why you are still farting around with 52k.

Cheers

TG

Keef
28th Oct 2003, 04:47
Absolutely! With one slight proviso - Pipex mail servers had a bad day on Saturday, and refused to deliver mail to one of my addresses. It would be the primary one, of course.

But I've never regretted switching to Pipex Xtreme, and would never go back to 56k (ha! Never got more than 32k here).

flyergirl10
28th Oct 2003, 07:07
I'll second (third?) IFR's recommendation- you can't go wrong with Pipex

Evo
28th Oct 2003, 14:12
I'm a happy Pipex user too, but had the same problem as Keef on Saturday. It wasn't the address you use for the flyer list, was it? That's the one I lost, it isn't really my main address but certainly gets the most traffic. For some reason that is always the one I lose... :confused:

BEagle
28th Oct 2003, 15:29
I'm happily using Virgin.net broadband. It costs £24.99 per month for unmetered 24/7 access with no restrictions or session limits. I use a BT Voyager 2000 wireless modem (£149.99 from PC World) and routinely get Internet connection rates of 576 Kbps down, 288 Kbps up with my laptop - anywhere in range of the WLAN/ASDL modem. Simply brilliant!

YYZ
28th Oct 2003, 15:42
Ive got These (http://www.giointernet.com/) , cheaper than most & no problems thus far:8

Wing Commander Fowler
2nd Nov 2003, 19:58
Thanx chaps - yyz's gio suggestion seems the closer comparison to the tiscali offering tho' it seems you have to pay for the modem which comes as part of the tiscali package........ more thinking to be dun!

spekesoftly
3rd Nov 2003, 01:43
I'm always a little dubious about these 'cheapest ever ISP' offers, like YYZ's suggestion (no disrespect intended). The experience of another PPRuNer here (http://www.pprune.org/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=89669), using the same ISP, albeit for dial-up and not ADSL, ended in tears.

mainfrog2
4th Nov 2003, 00:16
Well having read such glowing comments of Pipex I've finally bitten the bullet and ordered it. Here's hoping it's everything people say it is.

WeatherJinx
4th Nov 2003, 02:04
I sometimes think it's best to pay a little more if you can - there's usually a catch with so-called 'low-cost' ISPs (crippled speed, limited access times, long contracts, high contention).

I use Zen Internet (http://www.zenadsl.com/) - small company based 'oop North - always up, always quick, with good quality customer service and friendly support. Price for 512k is £23+VAT per month, modem self-supplied and installed.

They provide one-month contracts and (when I signed up at least) didn't charge a connection fee.

For anyone thinking about switching to broadband, I'd recommend looking at this site (http://adslguide.org.uk/) first.

Jx

mainfrog2
16th Nov 2003, 00:03
Well just got Pipex Broadband connected a few days ago. What a massive improvement in every way. All the hardware plugged in and started working straight away with no wierd and wonderful setup procedures. The only bit was they said they'd email me to let me know when it was up and running but didn't. I got fed up in the middle of the afternoon and tried the connection anyway and there it was working perfectly. Probably only going to see the sun down route now.

Just under £18 for the equipment, free activation (you are tied to them for a year) and £23.50 per month for 512k. (Connects at 576k perhaps someone can explain that)

PPRuNe Pop
16th Nov 2003, 00:14
Don't know about that. But didn't you tell 'em I recommended you? :eek: I would get a free month! :{ :{ :{ ;)

It's great and I NEVER have a problem. Cept' just the occasional glitch on the mail server but they are so quick to put it right I never think about.

Have fun.

PPP

stillin1
16th Nov 2003, 19:43
Got Pipex 2 months ago, set up easy, works great.:ok:

OzPax1
16th Nov 2003, 21:25
Got pipex too. If you get your own ADSL modem, the contract minimum is one month with solo extreme. There is £50 charge if you quit before 12 months, this is to cover the cost of the administration involved , but this is FAR less then most other ISP's will charge you if you quit before the end of their 12 month contract with you.

Pipex in my opinion sems to have the best ADSL packages at the moment. They seem have the right balence between cost, products and service. This is bourne out I think by the number of statisfied UK PPRuner's using the service.

fobotcso
17th Nov 2003, 02:33
Personal Computer World for January 2004 just crashed onto the door mat with its "Annual Awards" feature. Awards are voted by UK readers through a survey.

Best Broadband provider was BT Broadband with 25% of the votes in this category. NTL came next with 18%. Then Telewest (both very regional). Followed by Freeserve and Tiscali.

For 512 kbps they all fall within the range £25-£30 pm. They all have free installation offers at times.

Pipex showed a serious flaw in their admin for one of my clients.

Personally, I try to look behind the froth of the various free offers and differences of £1 per month on contract. BT have the resources and own the copper wire my Broadband arrives on. I have no plans to change - particularly if I lose my e-mail addresses! :{

Chaffers
17th Nov 2003, 09:05
If you want permanent email then just register a domain name. Only £10 for two years with pop3 included.

Its the only way to really guarantee your address and for 1/50 of what you're spending on broadband a year it makes sense.

spekesoftly
19th Nov 2003, 17:22
So which 'Annual Award' (http://www.broadband-help.com/newsitem.asp?id=283&total=4&today=0) should we believe? :confused:

fobotcso
19th Nov 2003, 23:24
None of them. In spite of what TINSTAAFL might say, it probably depends on the number and size of the lunches provided in the last three months.

onehunga
20th Nov 2003, 00:19
Looks like the original poster is sorted but for what it is worth I use freedom 2 surf. Costs £22.50 a month (incl), free connection at the moment and they also throw in 50mb of free web hosting. Never had any problems that I can remember.

PPRuNe Towers
20th Nov 2003, 23:15
Now I know none of our UK contingent could ever be lured from sensible, well researched decisions:O :O but I've had a promo shot from Tiscali offering two seats to New York for new sign ups.

I'm iron willed, unswayed and err, on cable............:} :} :}

Regards
rob