When I had my cable modem installed (toshiba pcx1100u) the genius
installing it told me when and if I cancel service it's like a 10 dollar
fee if you "don't return the modem".  So if you're planning to move to a
state where you can buy your own modem, you could just "fortet to return
it" here first.  Not that I would do this; just heard a rumor.

---
H. P. Christianson
20 NE Second St. #1005
Minneapolis, MN 55413
(612) 327-6654
hans at friedchicken.org

On Sun, 30 Sep 2001, Brian wrote:

> On Sun, 30 Sep 2001, Nate Straz wrote:
>
> > So what are the good cable modems out there?  Are there any performance
> > differences between them?  It doesn't seem like the kind of thing you'd
> > see reviewed in computer rags.
>
> Circuit City sells the Surfboard modems for ~$200.  After going through 3
> RCAs, @Home gave me a Surfboard and my problems disappeared.  Couldn't
> convince them to give me a Cisco. :-(  I don't know if all cable modems
> are compatible with AT&T though.
>
> AFAIK, you won't see any performance hits from the modem.  Your line will
> max out likely around 300K/sec, the port is 10 Mbit so even if there was a
> hit I doubt you'd ever see it.  If I were buying, I'd go by (not
> kidding) the thickness of the plastic.  The RCAs use a flimsy cheap
> plastic, the Surfboard and Cisco use a tougher plastic.  To me, it shows
> less corner-cutting in manufacturing so you're more likely to get a good
> modem.  It also looks to me like cable modems are a cheap loss leader type
> product (kinda like getting a free phone when you sign up for a year of
> cell service) so I'd have to be pretty convinced before I dropped $200 on
> one.  I highly doubt they cost anywhere near that to make.
>
> -Brian
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Twin Cities Linux Users Group Mailing List - Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota
> http://www.mn-linux.org
> tclug-list at mn-linux.org
> https://mailman.mn-linux.org/mailman/listinfo/tclug-list
>