08.24
Fellow techie and club advisor to The Oredigger David Frossard passed this along. For those of you toting an iPhone or iPod Touch around, this little application might save you a few bucks on books with the greatest of ease.
the tech talk’s here
Fellow techie and club advisor to The Oredigger David Frossard passed this along. For those of you toting an iPhone or iPod Touch around, this little application might save you a few bucks on books with the greatest of ease.
UPDATE 3: Here is the official Comcast information regarding the new speed tiers. Note that, according to the site, PowerBoost has upper limits depending on the speed tier you’re using. Comcast has deployed these limits in some ares, however they aren’t here in Denver yet. When they are, I’ll report/moan/whine/complain about them in typical blogger style.
UPDATE 2: According to other Denver-area folks, the DOCSIS 3 upgrade does not require a truck roll, as I suspected. Just go to your local Comcast store (the closest one to Golden is in Wheat Ridge, 11501 W 44th Ave), make the upgrade and pick up a modem if you want to rent one.
UPDATE: Apparently DOCSIS 3.0 in Golden went mere hours ago (this morning, to be exact). So if Comcast representatives don’t seem to know what they’re talking about yet, try to forgive them; the northern part of the Denver metro doesn’t even have DOCSIS 3 turned on yet. Some places aren’t even on DOCSIS 2.
Also, if you want to get a Motorola SurfBoard 6120 modem to take advantage of DOCSIS 3 speeds (or channel-bonding PowerBoost, which from what I hear works even on lower tiers) they can be had at Amazon for about $93. On the flip side, that’s 29 months worth of modem rental fees, and prices will go down for the modems as time goes on. On the other hand, if you plan on sticking with a non-DOCSIS 3.0 Comcast tier, looking around for a cheap modem could put you out ahead of rental fee costs in under a year.
Finally, for those wondering where Qwest’s service falls in relation to Comcast’s in terms of speed, Comcast trumps both Qwest tiers available here unless you guy the Economy tier on Comcast. On the other hand, Qwest costs less than Comcast when not on promotion…
ORIGINAL POST
Sometime in the past couple of days, Comcast has gone live with their DOCSIS 3.0 service in the Denver area, just in time for school. Below are current speed tiers and prices based on what I was able to gather from a Comcast rep online. The two highest-end tiers require a new channel-bonding DOCSIS 3.0 modem like the Motorola SurfBoard 6120 (or you can get whatever Comcast has in stock, which might be a Cisco model instead).
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So you got a shiny MacBook as a graduation present. While it’s a great computer, it isn’t quite compatible with everything on-campus. You’ll need Windows and Office for the best on-campus experience. Here’s how to get both with relatively little pain in the pocket:
Bottom line: with less than $200 ($60-ish for Office, $120 for Windows 7) you don’t have to use the computer labs to do Windows-centric work (trust me, it’ll happen if you stick around Mines long enough).
In case you’ve been here before and are now questioning your sanity, yes, this is a different WordPress template than what this blog used to use. Also, I’ve gone back and tagged all Tech Break posts with keywords relating to post content, in case you want to, say, pull up all posts relating to Google’s Android operating system. The tags aren’t quite perfect, but my intention is to tag every post from here on out to make things easy to search.
I also have added “more tags” on posts so most posts aren’t displayed in full on multi-post blog pages. This should make Tech Break slightly easier to browse through, rather than having a very lengthy page for each collection of posts.
Last but not least, I corrected a few punctuation, capitalization, spelling and typographical errors in my previous posts. I didn’t catch ‘em all, but things should look slightly better now.
Hope you like the changes!
In all fairness to Qwest, the last post about their sly-fox DSL pricing schemes was a bit harsh. The company is in a mountain of debt, and yet they are trying to roll out next-gen internet speeds in “select areas”. But what exactly is this next generation internet, and what makes it different from what’s available right now? Well, here are some answers (twelve, to be exact):
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Welcome (a bit early) to the 2009-2010 school year. For those of you moving off-campus, you’ll need internet access. Get Comcast if it’s available to you. Get US Cable if it’s not. If neither provider is available then (and only then) get Qwest DSL. Be creful though; Qwest’s pricing can get crazy quickly, once all the promotions are peeled away.
Qwest does business a little differently than Comcast. Whereas Comcast’s website tends to emphasize non-promotional pricing for internet tiers (which run $35, $55 and $65 per month without TV, depending on whether you want 1 Mbps, 6 Mbps or 8 Mbps download speeds, s=respectively), Qwest prefers to tuck non-promotional pricing away behind a few layers of internet fluff. The result: Qwest’s deals seem better than Comcast’s…and they are, as long as you ditch their service when their promotions expire and rates steepen dramatically.
Even with Qwest’s “Price For Life” option (which requires a two-year contract on service), you can’t lock in Qwest’s best promotional rates. Price for Life just shaves $10-$13 off of Qwest’s after-promo price, turning highway robbery into something more palatable.