Am 12. Jun, 2006 schwätzte Dennis Kibbe so: > On Mon, 12 Jun 2006, Bill Earl wrote: > >> I suppose this is off topic for this list, but it is important to us >> that any provider we go with have a good relationship with Linux, so >> perhaps it's not so unrelated. The subject seems to come up pretty >> regularly anyway, but it's been a while so I thought I'd ask the group... >> >> We're near the Deer Valley airport and have used CyberTrails to provide >> a nice 1mb connection that we've used as a backup to our regular data >> connection. We're moving to a new building this fall and CyberTrails >> is having trouble getting line of sight to this new building, but I'd >> like to keep a wireless connection available as backhoe insurance. :-) >> >> Does anyone have any recommendations for a company that can provide high >> speed wireless Internet access in the northern part of the valley? The >> connection needs to be at least 1mb inbound and outbound. Thanks for any >> info you have! >> >> Bill > > Bill, > > We've used Sprint Broadband for years out here near Fountain Hill with great > service. Whether you use MAC, Win or Linux shouldn't matter, as the > provider's resposibility stops when the signal reaches your router, usually. Unless Sprint has changed policies it hasn't sold new accounts for years. I started with People's Choice before Sprint bought them and was happy to move away from Sprint when I could. EMR used to support PLUG. Kyle left, so I don't know if they still do GNU/Linux. I also don't know if they do wireless. They're near Deer Valley airport. www.EMR.net I don't know if RNI is still on the air. The web page still comes up. www.rni.net Red Seven is providing wireless access points, but I don't think they feed any location wirelessly. Check with them to find out for certain. Red Seven definitely supports GNU/Linux and PLUG. www.RedSevenUSA.com Depending on your bandwidth needs you might also just look at getting a wireless card from one of the cell phone providers. Someone told me altel even leaves ports open and gives you a real IP addy, so you can run services off the card. Hmm, probably not 1 Mb off the cell phones. ciao, der.hans -- # https://www.LuftHans.com/ http://www.CiscoLearning.org/ # Join the League of Professional System Administrators! https://LOPSA.org/ # Dissent is patriotic.