On Thu, 2003-12-04 at 07:46, Derek Neighbors wrote: > technomage said: > > better take a look at your logs. I see nothing after 5 november (save > > for the instances where your domain is down for maintenance). I had > > major problems when I first started using cox HSI (then it was under > > @home). after the bugs got worked out things mostly settled down.... > > I've had a total of 9 outages lasting longer than 30 minutes in the > > last 2 years. I'd say thats damned good uptime. > > It's all relative to your situation. I have not experienced more than one > 30 minute outage in the few months that I have had cox, but I know that > the service goes down several times a day in small 3 to 10 minute > increments. For me that is less than optimal and I don't consider it > "damned good uptime". > > It isn't bad mind you and I'm not complaining about it, but I don't think > it's fair to say it is rock solid uptime. > --- let's face it - it's a bang for the buck thing. If you want speed & guaranteed QOS, you can't beat a digital point connection like a T1 but that of course comes at a much higher price. Considering that the only policing of bandwidth that Cox bothers with is to stomp well known port traffic such as SMTP/HTTP/NETBIOS and it is port scanner paradise - the usually very fast download and the reasonable 256K upload BW is fairly priced at $ 39 per month. The original topic was about switching from Sprint Broadband to Cox - Sprint allows you to run port 25/80 stuff but the upload speed rarely got any better than 32Kbps Craig