On Thu, 2013-01-17 at 12:56 -0600, Mike Miller wrote:
> On Thu, 17 Jan 2013, Wayne Johnson wrote:
> 
> > I had USI Wireless for a while.  The secure connection is the way to 
> > go.  The public connections are for their limited free access.
> 
> I'm glad to hear a confirmation of what I thought I was seeing.  Their web 
> pages didn't tell me to drop the public and switch to the secure after 
> paying, but they should have told me.  It would have saved a lot of 
> trouble.

Using the usiw_secure SSID is preferential for encryption/privacy
reasons as well. When you sign up for regular service and get the modem,
it will be set to associate onto usiw_secure as well.

> 
> 
> > I used a laptop and monitored the signal strength to find the best 
> > location.  Never found anything strong enough to keep a good connection.
> 
> How do you monitor signal strength?  Does that just mean looking at the 
> icon to see how many bars or wave lines you have?  Or is there a way to 
> get numbers?

On my ubuntu powered laptop I use the following command "iwconfig wlan0"

It will give you some good info like signal strength in dBm (numbers),
modulation rate, and other info. I would bet there are other graphical
tools that could be used as well. I found a decent free tool for my
android phone too called "wifi analyzer"

The limitation with any of these 802.11 tests/analyzers compared to a
true spectrum analyzer is they don't really have a way to show you
non-802.11 RF noise from other things that produce radio waves in the
relevant frequencies.

> 
> 
> > After I dropped their service, they called and highly recommended their 
> > $49 professional installation to solve my signal strength problem.  
> > According to others I talked to, this included mounting an external 
> > antenna etc.  Those other users highly recommended their installation.
> 
> I'll bet it provides a consistent service, but I wonder how fast it is. 
> Do you know anything about that?  Is it always 1 Mbps both ways?

Upload is always 1 meg. Download there are 1, 3 and 6 meg options.
Typically 6meg option will require an outside mounted antenna.

> 
> 
> > By the time USIW called, I had already switched to Comcast Business 
> > Class broadband and have had 0 problems.  Much better that USIW or Qwest 
> > DSL.  YMMV.
> 
> I dropped Century last month because they had failed to reconnect the wire 
> to my house after a truck had taken it down, and I was pretty fed up with 
> their bad service.  But, when I called Comcast, I wasn't at all happy with 
> the guy I talked to and their price was higher for the bandwidth promised. 
> With CenturyLink I'm promised 40 Mbps down and 20 Mbps up, a speakeasy.net 
> speed test (Chicago) is showing 39.3 Mbps down and 15.7 Mbps up with an 
> ethernet connection to the router.  They want $30/mo first 6 months, then 
> $75/mo as a normal price, no contract.  I don't think Comcast could match 
> that or better it.  What did you find?
> 
> They finally did get a guy out here last night, and he went to the trouble 
> of raising the wire high enough in the alley that a truck will probably 
> never take it down.  So I think I'm going to be happy now.
> 
> Best,
> Mike


I wish I lived in a area where FTTH is available.
http://fiber.usinternet.com