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(fwd) Netcom adds access in Denver area
In article <[email protected]> [email protected] writes:
> The best things about it: flat monthly fee ($17.50), unlimited connect
> time, full range of services (much better than most universities have,
> folks tell me), and--best of all--your Netcom account won't change
> when you change jobs! And posting with Netcom presumably won't run the
> risk of angering your employer.
Unfortunately, your netcom account also won't change when you change
internet vendors. What everyone should have is their own domain name;
netcom offers this service (a la [email protected]) for, I think,
$45/month.
Anyone who's interested in a better deal might like to check out
internet.com who offer your own domain (and a single user id) for
$75/year. You get your mail rewritten by them to your ordinary
account elsewhere (eg [email protected]) and can move the domain with
you should you ever be dissatisfied with internet.com's service.
Apologies, btw, for not talking about code, but I guess if Perry
hasn't flamed Tim yet he's not going to flame me for posting this
either :)
> I'm thrilled that Netcom is expanding so rapidly.
I'd be more thrilled if they were doing what demon do and putting
people's own sites on the net under SLIP for a flat rate (with demon
it's 10 pounds per month - call it 15 bucks) and just ordinary phone-
call costs on top. [If netcom now does this, apologies - it's been
some time since I looked into the US slip culture]
This *is* a cypherpunks related goal IMHO, because everyone having
their own site at home rather than just using their PCs as terminals
to systems like netcom means they can *much* more easily integrate
pgp into their routine mailing life. (Uploading and downloading
pgp mail is such a hassle for some people - like prz himself - that
they just don't do it...)
G