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#1
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I have a friend who is getting AOL broadband on a couple of weeks,
Apparently he has been told by AOL tech Supp, that you cannot use a broadband router with AOL. My friend wants to do this as he has 2 pc's in the house, and is understandably miffed at this. Can anyone offer any advice please . BTW I have a 'normal' ISP that doesn't interfere with my pc like AOL does, and set up a home network no problem, and thats why he now wants to do it. TIA What The!!! |
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#2
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"What The!!!" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in
news:r2F6b.3108$(E-Mail Removed): > I have a friend who is getting AOL broadband on a couple of > weeks, Apparently he has been told by AOL tech Supp, that you > cannot use a broadband router with AOL. My friend wants to do > this as he has 2 pc's in the house, and is understandably miffed > at this. Can anyone offer any advice please . > BTW I have a 'normal' ISP that doesn't interfere with my pc > like AOL does, > and set up a home network no problem, and thats why he now wants > to do it. > I enquired about this recently for one of my customers. AOL doesn't support it. The router manufacturer (Netgear in this case) doesn't support it. I gave it up because, against those odds, I sure as hell can't support it. [You may find snippets on the web that suggest it can be done: but it appears these apply to AOL broadband in the US, not this side of the pond.] This is but one of many 'features' that differentiate AOL from the rest of the Internet. -- BRG === http://www.brgservices.co.uk/ |
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#3
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In article <r2F6b.3108$(E-Mail Removed)>, malcb37
@Nospamhere.blueyonder.co.uk says... > I have a friend who is getting AOL broadband on a couple of weeks, > Apparently he has been told by AOL tech Supp, that you cannot use a > broadband router with AOL. My friend wants to do this as he has 2 pc's in > the house, and is understandably miffed at this. Can anyone offer any advice > please . Use a different provider. AOL is not an ISP, they are a content provider with internet connectivity. THey use a closed proprietry system which basically means you can't share the connection the normal way. You'll have nothing but grief. Either convince him to change to one of the many cheaper ADSL providers or walk away from it. -- ________________________ Conor Turton (E-Mail Removed) ICQ:31909763 ________________________ |
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#4
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"John" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in news:3f5e0d51@212.67.96.135:
> Newsgroups: uk.comp.home-networking > Subject: Re: AOL Broadband and home networking with a broadband > router From: "John" <(E-Mail Removed)> > Date: Tue, 9 Sep 2003 13:55:10 +0100 > > Its a challenge, but it can be done. ....details please? -- BRG === http://www.brgservices.co.uk/ |
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#5
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Stop using asshole ISP's like AOL and use a real one. "What The!!!" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message news:r2F6b.3108$(E-Mail Removed)... > I have a friend who is getting AOL broadband on a couple of weeks, > Apparently he has been told by AOL tech Supp, that you cannot use a > broadband router with AOL. My friend wants to do this as he has 2 pc's in > the house, and is understandably miffed at this. Can anyone offer any advice > please . > BTW I have a 'normal' ISP that doesn't interfere with my pc like AOL does, > and set up a home network no problem, and thats why he now wants to do it. > > TIA > > |
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| aol, broadband, home, networking, router |
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