As many longtime LEM readers are aware, I spent my first dozen years
of Netizenship on a dialup connection - slow dialup at that. The best
throughput the antiquated rural copper telephone lines and elderly
switching equipment could deliver to this neck of the woods is 26,400
bps - barely more than half of even dialup's speed
potential.
For newcomers, here's a brief recap.
I live in the outer boonies - 50 miles from the nearest town on Nova
Scotia's thinly-populated Eastern Shore. We get one channel of
off-the-air broadcast television, and there's no cable, no GSM mobile
service, and, until last September, the only option for high-speed
Internet was astronomically expensive satellite service. Consequently,
it was a major - in some respects life-changing - breakthrough when
more affordable broadband Internet service finally arrived here last
September in the form of wireless distribution, providing decent speed
and the luxuries of not being obliged to go through the dialup
rigmarole a dozen or so times a day over our sole telephone line to the
outside world, and not tying up voice communication while online.
Moore lives in the "outer boonies" of Nova Scotia.
Having broadband after such a long stretch of pent-up frustration
has been a delight. I'd used high-speed Internet elsewhere enough times
to know what we'd been missing, but having it available any time I like
still seems almost too good to be true.
I certainly don't want to badmouth the dialup service that
faithfully served us for twelve years. It had been extremely reliable,
with only a half-day of downtime over the years that I can recall, and
it was caused by a fluky accident when a Department of Highways
roadside weed whacker unintentionally severed the main fiber optics
cable connecting this isolated rural district to the outside world.
However, dialup got increasingly frustrating as Internet content
became more bandwidth-greedy and Web developers evidently started
taking it for granted that their audience would be equipped with
high-speed access. That is actually far from reality for a lot of folks
yet around the globe. According to
Strategy Analytics' Global Broadband Household Penetration June 2009
Rankings report (based on 2008 data), broadband penetration in the
US was just 60% (in 20th place worldwide, although I recently read that
it's since risen to 63%), in Canada 76%, the UK 67%, and Australia 72%,
while in Mexico it was just 28%.
Wherever, there are an awful lot of Internet users out there without
broadband service, and the presumption of high-speed access by many
website designers and the practical limitations on delivering certain
types of content over dialup lines has created essentially two classes
of Internet citizenry.
Off soapbox.
Our wireless broadband service had been flawlessly reliable since it
was installed on September 10, 2009, with no glitches or outages to
report as we closed on the four-month mark - so much so that I finally
mustered the confidence to discontinue our dialup Internet service the
week after Christmas.
Ironically, four days later a deep low-pressure system that had
formed off the United States east coast was bearing down on Nova
Scotia, with Environment Canada warning that barometric pressure would
fall extremely rapidly, creating conditions for what meteorologists
call a "weather bomb". Indeed, this storm would pack more than twice
the power needed to qualify as a weather bomb, which by definition
requires a drop in barometric pressure of 24 millibars in 24 hours.
With this brute, barometers would drop by up to 50 millibars in that
period. Yikes!
I had been curious about how the wireless signal would fare in harsh
winter weather. Since it uses a directional dipole antenna rather than
a dish, I didn't anticipate snow buildup would be a major problem, as
it is for some folks I know who have dish-based satellite service.
However, weather bombs are another matter.
This one was a doozy. We didn't get a tremendous amount of
precipitation with the storm, and what fell here was rain, but even
when hurricanes have brushed us here I don't think I've experienced
many, if any, stronger winds. We were fortunate that damage to the
house was limited to nine roof shingles being blown off along with the
rain gutters off the front of the building, which took the brunt of the
seven-hour Northeasterly blast, starting in the late afternoon of
January 2 and finally easing off around midnight to just very strong
winds from a vector we're more sheltered from by topography.
Our electric power managed to hold on for a couple of hours, but it
flickered and died at around 7:00 p.m., taking our wireless Internet
with it.
However, our landline phone kept working, as it has through every
other storm I recall, and happily, a dialup holdout friend took pity
and permitted me to log on to her account. Good thing too. Our power at
the house came back on around 11:30 a.m. the next day, but it was not
restored at the wireless tower, which is located about three miles
away, until 8:30 that evening.
This incident answered the question of whether there would be some
sort of backup power supply at the wireless tower - there isn't.
Consequently, running the receiver antenna modem and router from a
power inverter, power pack, or even an auxiliary generator would be
pointless during power interruptions, whereas good old dialup Internet
still works just fine - so long as you have a laptop with a charged
battery or a backup power supply that can run a desktop computer for
more than a short interval (many UPS units give you as little as five
minutes to get things gracefully shut down - for a recent roundup of
UPS strategies, see
Battery Keeps Computer Running When Lights Go by Computer America's
Craig Crossman.
This makes having some sort of access to dialup for backup pretty
vital if your livelihood is conducted over the Internet. On the other
hand, the most bare bones dialup plan offered by the only hardwired ISP
serving this area is C$18.95 plus tax per month for 15 hours of access,
a bit much to swallow for a backup strategy, having already been
obliged to eat a roughly 80% hike in the monthly cost of our basic
Internet service with the switch to high speed wireless.
One potential solution for folks still on dialup service is Budget Dialup, a prepaid Internet
service that works like a prepaid calling card - you buy some time up
front and use it up whenever you need it, with no monthly service fee
to pay, making it an excellent alternative for a power blackout backup
ISP.
Plans start from $5.95 for 10 hours (used within one year) and
include a free 5x Web Accelerator. Budget Dialup is a full featured ISP
offering:
- 56k, V.90, V.92 support
- A free email account
- No busy signals
- No advertisements
- No spam
The downside for me here is that the nearest of only two Budget
Dialup access numbers in Nova Scotia is on an exchange some 150 miles
away, so there would be long distance charges involved in order to use
it. The company says its access
numbers cover 93% of the US population.
Budget Dialup offers its own toll-free (so to speak) access numbers
over two redundant toll-free networks provided by MCI and Level3. These
can be used for under 5¢/minute from anywhere in the United States
and Canada, but you have to pay for usage (6¢ per minute) when you
need the access, which I would 100% of the time. Since one of my
regular long distance plans only charges C6¢ per minute and the
other gives me up to an hour for a C$1.00 flat rate, that would be the
marginally cheaper option.
At least this service provides a reasonably inexpensive alternative.