Getting the most out of your dialup.
This just covers alternatives for newbies I can goto more indepth if their are any replies requesting more information. Most of this information from was within my head through experience and reading manuals. Some of this information is dated because most people have DSL or Cable now, this is for the minority :) Have fun reading let me know if was helpful.
DSL cheapest in the rural area I live in is $45 i use to have the best spoeed which was $76 but the $45 speed is fine too.
The best thing to do is get high quality phone wires, usually gold plated to maximize the communitcation, make sure phone jacks are do not have any corrosion on them, and that they are no longer than 4 years old, have the phone company install new ones, Also have wires firmly secured into your pc to make sure there is no physical packet loss.. The less wires the better, from your PC to your phone jack, andthe less people ONLINE in your area, the better, because if you live in rural areas it will slow you down, with phone line static.
Rural areas multiplex their phone lines which means 2 or 3 or even up to 8 people could share the same phone line to save money, because phone companies want to maximiaxe profits, so they make the end users suffer by multiplexing their lines, this is fine for voice communications - phones - but extremely bad for modems, and online use.
I did understand that once I got a second phone line, the inferance was less this line than my original phone line, I had 2 phone lines so I would be on the net and use phone at the same time.
With the second phone line I connected at 53,333 bps which was standard, then with my original line was 28.8 which was about half the speed.
Their are two alterantives to DSL and Cable tho.
Their is ISDN, Integrated Services Digital Network, which is about twice as fast as the normal modem, 56k and ISDN is 128k single, the bad thing to ISDN is that it is very expensive and you still need to use a phone line for uploads. However there is dual ISDN which can in theory double your internet speed.
Also there is a "Shot Gun" modem, which never hit main stream but a few people have used it, the bad side is, 1) it isn't really accepted I will explain why... in second. 2)It is very costly.
Shotgunning a modem is where you have two modems. Then you need an ISP that supports "multiple connections" which most ISPs will not accept, if they do 90% of the ones that do accept will charge extra for it.(To connect both modems to the internet service provider probally around )
Then you will need two phone lines, one connects to the other and the other modem to the second phone line. Then you will need to "multiulink" you modems in the Internet Configuration, which is another article by itself
In theory shotgunning a modem will double your speed, I have never done this but a friend has done this with excellent results.
I hope this tutorial covers the basics, I will go more indepth in later articles if anyone wants to know anything more about the selected articles.