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#1
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Can anyone recommend an ISP which can give a service at normal
domestic rates, or special low rates. I was hoping to use Plusnet £14.99 as the intended use will be for no more than 3 hours per day three days a week. Unfortunately this isn't available as Charities are deemed to be businesses. KM km |
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#2
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km wrote:
> Can anyone recommend an ISP which can give a service at normal > domestic rates, or special low rates. I was hoping to use Plusnet > £14.99 as the intended use will be for no more than 3 hours per day > three days a week. Unfortunately this isn't available as Charities are > deemed to be businesses. > > KM A few providers suit your requirements: * Zen (http://www.zenbroadband.com) will give you a "Home" service for use whether your a charity or a business. * AAISP (http://www.aaisp.net.uk) have a charity tarriff on their 512k product (see the tarriffs page). There is a requirement that you must be a registered charity though. * Metronet (http://www.metronet.co.uk/adsl/paygo) appare to allow their unique "Pay and Go" service to be used by business users too. I've probably missed quite a few other providers out, so I'd advise taking a look at ADSLGuide (http://www.adslguide.org.uk) for a definative answer (they have forums that you can post on too, and most of the ISP's have staff who read / post there). hth. |
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#3
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On Mon, 14 Mar 2005 10:42:34 +0000, Martyn Dewar
<martyn._nospam-remove_dewar@_nospam-remove_zen.co.uk> wrote: >km wrote: >> Can anyone recommend an ISP which can give a service at normal >> domestic rates, or special low rates. I was hoping to use Plusnet >> £14.99 as the intended use will be for no more than 3 hours per day >> three days a week. Unfortunately this isn't available as Charities are >> deemed to be businesses. >> >> KM > >A few providers suit your requirements: > >* Zen (http://www.zenbroadband.com) will give you a "Home" service for >use whether your a charity or a business. > >* AAISP (http://www.aaisp.net.uk) have a charity tarriff on their 512k >product (see the tarriffs page). There is a requirement that you must be >a registered charity though. > >* Metronet (http://www.metronet.co.uk/adsl/paygo) appare to allow their >unique "Pay and Go" service to be used by business users too. > >I've probably missed quite a few other providers out, so I'd advise >taking a look at ADSLGuide (http://www.adslguide.org.uk) for a >definative answer (they have forums that you can post on too, and most >of the ISP's have staff who read / post there). > >hth. Thanks Martyn - I will follow these up. KM |
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#4
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I don't know if http://www.charitydays.net/ will be of any use with you.
There are certain similarities with other portals ;0) Incidentally, if your phone line is a home phone line - you can order any home account on it anyway (just play dumb if queried). If the phone line is registered as a business then you aren't supposed to be able to order home ADSL. -- Colin *Drop DEAD from the email address to reply* |
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#5
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On 14 Mar 2005 19:01:54 GMT, cw <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>Incidentally, if your phone line is a home phone line - you can order any >home account on it anyway (just play dumb if queried). If the phone line is >registered as a business then you aren't supposed to be able to order home >ADSL. That isn't true. As far as BT Wholesale (lets assume we are taking about a line provisioned via BT Wholesale) are concerned there isn't any such thing as "home ADSL". They provision 20:1 services which many ISPs advertise as "business" services and 50:1 which is sometimes advertised by ISPs as "home ADSL", but there is nothing to stop an ISP ordering a 50:1 "home" service on a business phone line. -- Andy Norman (E-Mail Removed) http://www.norman.cx/ Replace the fish with my first name to reply |
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#6
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cw wrote:
> I don't know if http://www.charitydays.net/ will be of any use with > you. There are certain similarities with other portals ;0) It is hosted by Plusnet. -- Old Codger e-mail use reply to field What matters in politics is not what happens, but what you can make people believe has happened. [Janet Daley 27/8/2003] |
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#7
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On Mon, 14 Mar 2005 22:00:22 +0000, Andrew Norman <(E-Mail Removed)>
wrote: >On 14 Mar 2005 19:01:54 GMT, cw <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote: > >>Incidentally, if your phone line is a home phone line - you can order any >>home account on it anyway (just play dumb if queried). If the phone line is >>registered as a business then you aren't supposed to be able to order home >>ADSL. I've just realised that you may well have been referring specifically to the distinction between the CharityDays business/non-business products. In which case, please ignore my other post. -- Andy Norman (E-Mail Removed) http://www.norman.cx/ Replace the fish with my first name to reply |
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#8
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Old Codger wrote:
> cw wrote: > >>I don't know if http://www.charitydays.net/ will be of any use with >>you. There are certain similarities with other portals ;0) > > > It is hosted by Plusnet. > More specifically, it's a plusnet provided vISP. (Note: It isn't owned by Plusnet). Interestingly, quite a few of Plusnet's controversial policies ("Fair Usage" Policy etc) don't apply to vISP's that they don't own... |
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