After the posting announcing the FreeWWWeb service, geared to Linux users looking for a free ISP, I decided to try it. So far, it is working out for me. I have tried using that service in the following ways: -ThinkPad laptop, running Red Hat 6.2, with a Sprint PCS phone -same ThinkPad, using a PCMCIA card modem into a phone line at my parents' house -Win95 PC with an ISA modem card at my parents' house Other than the 39 cents/minute Sprint PCS charges for data use on their PCS net, that worked OK (14.4K). The PCMCIA modem is a 3Com/USR 56K V.90 type, but could get only 28.8K on the line at my parents' house (darn USWest), and same with the Win95 setup. It certainly is flexible, since you are not tied to a program that has to be installed in order to use the freebie service. After filling out the online form for my account, it was working in 3 minutes. FreeWWWeb asks the following of you when you use their service..... You get up to 80 hours per month free, up to 5 hours in any one dialup session, and you need to open your web browser to http://home.freewwweb.com after you have your connection established (thank goodness for Lynx to open that up and bypass the graphics - the URL redirects to http://freewwweb.snap.com). They want to see at least 10 hours' usage/month in order to keep the account active, and I guess you could do that easy enough if you have no other options for net access. The only minus I have to say about them is that when I use my laptop for e-mail (with Sendmail running locally for my SMTP), the service blocks me from accessing port 25 on any system I have tried except for smtp.freewwweb.com (their own SMTP server). A nuisance, but understandable in an effort to try to throttle spam. The local dialup port is through UUnet (now MCI WorldCom), so at least it isn't a fly-by-night using modems strung onto a cable-modem in someone's garage. In Arizona, they have access numbers in Phoenix, Tucson, Sierra Vista, Prescott, Sedona, and Flagstaff - and claim access from over 1200 points in the USA and Canada. Not bad for the traveler types. In general, this is not a bad option if you need a dialup ISP - at home or travelling. Since I don't already have my own ISP account from anyone else, I will use it for as long as the (free) ride lasts. At least there is a company that is looking for a different audience to offer free ISP service to - and no bloated proprietary programs to pollute your system's hard drive. BTW that URL for FreeWWWeb was: http://www.tedyn.com/products/FreeWWW/ C ya! Patrick __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Send online invitations with Yahoo! Invites. http://invites.yahoo.com