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Choosing an Internet service provider is not an easy task. If you're new to the Internet, you'll encounter a whole new world of jargon and sales talk, while navigating a maze of pricing schemes and performance claims. And there are some 250 ISPs around the country! (See our Australian ISP Directory.)
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Type of use | Best pricing scheme |
Simple business use (send and receive e-mail, and perhaps reading a handful of newsgroups) | Set per-hour fee. Make sure it isn't levied with one hour as the minimum chargeable unit. And check the cost for the time you're mostly like to be using the Net. |
Average home use (regular Web surfing, e-mail, and more) | Set per-month fee but make sure it is flexible enough to match your (mostly likely changing) needs. Look for cheap after-hours rates. |
Confirmed Netaholics and enthusiastic beginners. | Flat `all you can surf' fee but the best bet is to choose an ISP offering several payment plans; you can always drop back to another plan after the initial buzz wears off. (Most Net newcomers rack up huge hours in their first weeks of discovering the Internet, after which things settle down to a less frantic pace.) |
A risk of stating the obvious, this is the most important pricing factor of all. Make sure you can dial into the ISP for the price of a local call. What's the point of saving on ISP fees only to rack up hundreds of dollars in STD phone charges?
What if there's no local ISP? Our advice is to hold off if you can -- chances are, a local ISP will be set up soon. If you're really desperate for a local connection, you've got plenty of time on your hands and a thorough knowledge of PC communications, you could always approach a national ISP to see if they're interested in setting you up as a local node. You could even make some money from it! Be warned, though -- this is not something you go into lightly.
A good level of support can be crucial to making your online experiences happy ones. The smarter ISPs realised that the market has shifted away from the propeller-heads and towards business and home users to whom the Internet is simply another computing application. These providers have adapted their support mechanisms accordingly.
The main two things two look for are:
It's a myth that small Internet service providers will always have lower prices or offer better support than the national outfits.
There are some very professional ISPs serving the local community where low-overhead operations translate into cheap rates and very personal attention. There are also some ISPs running on creaky old Unix machines sitting in the spare room with non-existent customer service. Some of the same observations can be made about the big Australia-wide players, too!
We recommend you investigate all the options and compare all the deals. What it comes down to is finding an ISP which has the right mix of pricing, support and performance for you.
Where locality does come into play is if you live some distance away from the larger cities, in which case calls to the nearest ISP may attract an STD surcharge: a double whammy of Telstra tariffs and Internet access charges every time you logon.
Even the cheapest form of long-distance pricing, the community call rate, can add $5 per hour during weekdays on top of any hourly fee levied by your service provider.
At those prices you don't surf the Net -- you quickly dive in and rush out, all the time looking over your shoulder at the clock.
If you're in a position to compare local ISPs with nearby city nodes you could find that community call rates make it more affordable to use a city-based ISP who charges a flat monthly rate, or offers a faster connection with fewer drop-outs.
You can further reduce STD costs by calling during the graveyard shift (10pm and 8am Monday to Friday, or 6pm Friday through the weekend) when phone rates fall to as little as a third of the peak daytime costs.
Investigate savings plans which can trim call costs or extend the off-peak period -- call Telstra (008 052 052) or Optus (1800 500 005) for more information.
Once you're online it's all about speed. Speed means that Web pages are drawn faster on your screen, especially ones laden with heavy graphics and multimedia gimmickry. Speed means you can zoom from one Web page to another in the click of a mouse and the blink -- well, a few blinks -- of the eye, which is what all that hyperlinking is about. Speed means you can download files faster and with less chance of drop-out. And speed means you can keep up with even the busiest newsgroups and Internet phone conversations actually work!
So how do you get this speed? The coolest 33.6Kbps modem is no guarantee of zippy performance.
During our testing for the national ISP comparison in the November PC User magazine, we saw some painfully slow connections which were difficult enough just to establish, and some which were lightning-fast almost beyond belief.
Here's why performance varies so much:
An area in which all ISPs need to improve is the connection process: you dial in, the modems shake hands and then, nothing. Maybe you get to enter your name and password, after which the screen fills with garbage. Not a single ISP was immune from this. Every failed connection is a phone call you have to pay, and even a few errors a day add up.
Some ISPs also provide a limited amount space for you to set up a simple World Wide Web homepage on the ISP's Web server. The domain name will be an extension of the service provider's, such as www.supernet.com.au/priscilla. You'll probably only have a few megabytes for text and graphics, but it's enough for a modest place in cyberspace. Some ISPs provide this small amount of disk space for free, while others charge.
To establish your own domain name and run a cutting-edge Web page, ask the ISP to quote on a `virtual Web server' -- see A Home of Your Own for more details.
ISPs have traditionally supplied newcomers with a grab-bag of free software for Web browsing, e-mail, newsgroups, IRC, FTP, Telnet and everything else under the sun. These days you're more likely to be handed a single Web browser -- either Netscape Navigator or Internet Explorer, depending on the ISP's affiliation -- with integrated e-mail and news, and getting the rest will be up to you.
Whatever programs you receive should be pre-configured for dialling into and connecting with your chosen ISP or accompanied by a clearly written instruction booklet to achieve the same end. If you're using Windows 95, request details on using dial-up scripting to simplify your logon.
All text © 1997 Australian Consolidated Press - PC User Magazine