BT Tuesday announced that
it has more than halved the cost of low-speed permanent Internet
connectivity by introducing an entry level service named BTnet Start.
Designed to meet the needs of small companies, the new service
from the BTnet Services division
costs £2,995 (US$ 4,800) per year for a 64kbps link. BT calls it
"the first step into fixed Internet access."
Forrester Research:: Web services slash the cost of connecting to customers. Net retailers have let fulfillment - the bulk of their operating costs - run out of control. http://www.forrester.com/rb/search/results.jsp?SortType=Dab=1&dAg=10000&N=202+50076HOME |
To entice businesses to sign up for the service, BT says it will
waive the normal £500 (US$ 800) connection fee until September, while
other benefits include the registration of a business domain name,
free e-mail addresses and full support during normal business hours.
Excluded are security options, POP3 mail, and a Usenet feed.
BW Online | March 27, 2000 | Now, Brits Can Surf to Their Hearts :: to a fixed-rate pricing scheme is expected to slash the cost of Web surfing most of the big Internet access providers will benefit as Net usage increases. http://www.businessweek.com/archives/2000/b3674242.arc.htmHOME | BBC News | The Company File | Telewest high-speed Internet plan:: have been saddled by the cost of constructing networks, are hoping BT speeds internet access. ICL creates 1,000 UK jobs. National Power splits in two http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/the_company_file/412520.stmHOME | netsec32.txt:: architecture and message for net work security users, many of whom have turned to one felony count of unauthorized access to protected computers and http://packetstormsecurity.org/advisories/netsec/netsec32.txtHOME |
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