Friday, May 02, 2008

T1 Line

T1 Line or DSL?

With a T1 Line you get faster speed and a dedicated ip. The prices are more expensive than DSL service. If you can afford a t1 line, this would be the better choice.

The best providers for business internet service are Telnes for data t1, Nuvox for mpls, T1 voice service and Time Warner Telecom for Metro Ethernet services.

If you go to Ethernetservice.net you can check for "lit buildings" in you area for gigabit ethernet availability!

Of course the large metro areas have the cheapest pricing for integrated and dedicated t1 service such as NYC T1, Los Angeles T1 Service and Chicago T1 Providers.

Check for T1 Line Availability today in your city!

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

T1 Line

Verizon Introduces Broadband Video Call Center Link for Deaf

Customers in the Mid-Atlantic region who are deaf or hard of hearing can now communicate directly with Verizon about their services, using videophones and American Sign Language.

The new option for engaging Verizon's Center for Customers with Disabilities is available here and in Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia. Customers can communicate directly via videophone with representatives in the Verizon center who are proficient in using American Sign Language (ASL) to handle orders, change services or answer questions.


Continued

Friday, December 08, 2006

T1 Line

Global broadband speeds soar

Global broadband speeds have increased by an average of more than 1Mbps over the past two years, while prices have fallen sharply.

The latest Internet Telecommunications Union (ITU) 'digital.life' report noted that the median speed has risen from 256Kbps to 1.4Mbps since its last survey 22 months ago. Meanwhile, the last 10 months have seen prices halved, although there remain huge differences in the cost of broadband in different countries.

In the UK, the price has fallen by just over 50 per cent, bringing the cost per 100Kbps index down to 0.63. That is more expensive than Germany (0.52), the US (0.49), France (0.36) and, but even they look expensive compared to the Netherlands (0.14), South Korea (0.08) and, cheapest of all, Japan (0.07). However, before anyone shouts 'rip off Britain' it should be noted that it has no state subsidy for broadband services, which is not necessarily true of other countries.

Of those mentioned above, only Germany and the US offer a slower speed than the UK's 8Mbps; in Japan and Korea the norm is 51.2Mbps. A small number of UK ISPs do offer ADSL2+ services up to 22Mbps and that will increase as BT rolls out its 21st Century Network.

In the interim, UK Net users should be consoled by the fact that they do not live in Australia, Mexico, Spain or Turkey, where the relative per-100Kbps costs are 3.45, 6.25, 4.84 and 10.52 respectively.

Source: pcpro.co.uk