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Broadband, High Speed Internet in Vermont, Part 2

Filed under: Vermont Services — info at 12:27 pm on Monday, July 31, 2006

In my search for the holy grail of broadband Internet access, I thought I’d share some of my experiences along the way. If you’re considering the tranquility of northern Vermont real estate and need high-speed Internet for your work, beware! Many rural Vermonters do not have access to broadband services, where dial-up and/or reduced speed wi-fi may be the only choice.

What about satellite Internet?
When it comes to advice, the following people may not be your best source:
1. Your real estate agent may anxiously offer this wondrous solution in order to close the sale but be careful. He may offer to put you in touch with someone he or she knows who “has satellite Internet and really loves it!”. Unless the person he recommends uses Internet services for their work and spends a lot of time working on the web, their advice isn’t worth a grain of salt. Browsing the web and checking email are a world apart from working via your Internet connection.
2. The satellite installation company. Many of these companies are very familiar with satellite TV services but not very knowledgable about the Internet, Widlblue or HughesNet (formerly Direcway) satellite Internet. While they may do a great job of installing, some know little or nothing about bandwidth, latency or most importantly, the Fair Access Policy. Ask them what the Fair Access Policy is. If they can’t tell you, call someone else.

What is the Fair Access Policy and why is it so important?
Did you know that the amount of files you upload/download via satellite Internet are restricted by usage levels? Most people don’t and neither the satellite providers or installers are anxious to let you know about it either. In other words, if you upload or download a lot of MP3’s, videos, etc. the satellite provider will slow you down to a dial-up (or less) crawl. Usually, you will not be told about this until after you sign the contract and/or discover one day that your satellite speed has slowed to the rate of molasses on a cold, winter day.

Contract? What contract?
You’ll love this. You try out the service for 30 days, purchase the equipment from anywhere between $300 to $1000, depending on which satellite provider/service level you prefer. Then, you pay anywhere between $49 to $150 per month for the wondeful opportunity to access these services. However, according to the terms of the contract, you are locked into a 12 month (Wildblue) or 15 month (HughesNet) commitment. Decide to quit and you pay the full amount anyway. Same rip-off as cell phone and other Internet access contracts. The worst part is that if you get crappy upload/download speeds below what you sign on for, you have no recourse. So BEWARE and take advantage of the 30-day trial before you end up in a less than ideal year long (or more) commitment. Also, you should know now that the 30 day FREE TRIAL is NOT!!! You will have to pay Wildblue a $79 “uninstallation” fee and HughesNet will not refund 100% of your equipment fee either.

Educate yourself before taking the plunge into satellite Internet
Do a Google search on ‘Wildblue’, ‘Wildblue complaints’, etc. and see what others have to say. Visit the satellite provider’s websites and take a look at what is posted on their support forums. You’ll be surprised at what you see. A particularly informative website is Wildblue Uncensored! at http://www.wildblue.cc/. If you live (or plan to live) in northern Vermont, go to their message board and read about the many problems with Laredo: Beam 29 outages. This is the satellite that provides service to northern Vermont. Quite an eye opener!

360 Virtual Tours in Vermont

Filed under: Vermont Services — info at 6:58 am on Saturday, April 29, 2006

Vermont360.com is now up and running. This is a website that features those fancy 360 virtual tours where you can go in and literally look around someone’s house from the comfort of your mouse and keyboard. Sure beats web cams of the house cat running around!

Although 360 virtual tours are best suited to real estate home listings, they also work great for industrial locations, museums and lodging. Go take a look and spin the rooms from side to side and top to bottom. It’s fun…really. (Now you nosy neighbors can see what’s going on in that mysterious house next door).

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