I am using this service now. Since it is limited to 80 hours per month, is there a way to find out the total time used so far? On Sun, 16 Apr 2000, you wrote: > 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 > > _______________________________________________ > Plug-discuss mailing list - Plug-discuss@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss -- Rick Rosinski http://rickrosinski.com rick@rickrosinski.com