Jumat, 20 Februari 2015

10 internet service

Charter. In 2009, Charter declared bankruptcy and sold off assets to clear $8 billion worth of debt. Now it has over 5 million customers in 25 states with cable speeds up to 60 Mbps. Accounts include Internet security, parental controls, and ten 1GB email accounts. Charter does not offer services in the western mountain states. Plans start at $19.99/month.
Verizon. Verizon provides fiber optic, DSL, and dial-up. Its fiber optic service, which is called FiOS, is available in California, Texas, Florida, and a group of northeastern states. DSL plans starts at 0.5 to 1 Mbps and include nine email accounts and 10 MB of storage. FiOS offers speeds of 15 to 50 Mbps. Dial-up is $14.99/month. DSL starts at $29.99/month. FiOS starts at $49.99/month.
Cox. Cox provide cable Internet services to approximately 4 million customers in 16 states. It provides speeds of 3 to 50 Mbps. Accounts also feature 10 email addresses, security software, and responsive customer support. Plans start at $15.99/month for 3 months.
Optimum. Optimum is part of cable provider Cablevision. Optimum provides cable Internet to over 3 million subscribers in the New York metropolitan area and the Rocky Mountain states. It offers speeds up to 50 Mpbs. Each subscription comes with five 2GB email accounts, security and parental controls. Added features include 12GB site hosting. Plans start at $29.95 for 6 months.
Frontier. Frontier provides Internet access to over 3 million subscribers in primarily rural areas. It offers a DSL service. Subscriptions come with eight email accounts, security and parental software, and call waiting. Plans start at $14.99/month.
Suddenlink. Suddenlink is a cable broadband company that provides service to 1.4 million subscribers in primarily southern states, such as Texas and Louisiana, and rural communities. It features Suddenlink2GO, which can access TV and movie content from any computer across the U.S. Plans start at $19.95/month.
EarthLink. Earthlink offers dial-up and DSL to over a million customers. DSL provides speeds from 1.5 to 6 Mbps. Cable offers speeds up to 15 Mbps. Subscriptions feature a security center for virus scanning, anti-spy ware, email and chat protection. Dial-up is $9.95. DSL starts at $14.95. Cable starts at $29.95.
Windstream. Windstream provides Internet access to over a million people in the eastern half of the U.S. It offers three DSL residential plans ranging from 3 Mbps to 12 Mbps. It also has bundled plans for small businesses. Plans start at 39.99/month.
Cable One. Cable One is a cable company that provides Internet, phone and TV to approximately 750,000 customers in 19 states. It offers three plans: 1.5 Mbps with 2 email accounts; 5 Mbps with 15 email accounts and 100 MB of web space; and up to 50 Mbps with 15 email accounts and 50 GB data plan. Plans start at $20/month.
NetZero. NetZero provides dial-up, accelerated dial-up and DSL to over 6,000 cities. Each subscription gets eight email accounts that can store 100MB each. Also it provides a personal home page with social networking status and a Google search box. Internet security and parental controls are add-ons. Plans start at $9.95/month.
Juno. Juno offers dial-up, accelerated dial-up and DSL with virus and spam protection to over 6,000 cities. The basic plan provides speeds up to 55 Kbps and comes with eight email accounts. Dial-up subscribers receive a one-time free support session during the first month, but have to pay per minute after that. Dial-up starts at $10.95/month.
AOL. AOL provides dial-up services. It also offers high-speed services, such as security and AOL media tools, if you purchase high-speed Internet from you cable or telephone company. Dial-up features McAfee security, an email account with limited storage, and AOL media content. Dial-up plans start at $9.99/month.
MSN. MSN provides dial-up, as well as dial-up with an accelerator. Accounts feature anti-spyware tools, a personal firewall, a photo editor, organizer, and an email account that can hold up to 10GB. You can try your first month of MSN dial-up free. Dial-up is $18.95/month.
Mediacom. Mediacom is a cable company that offers service to over 1,500 communities in 22 states. It provides speeds up to 12 Mbps. Plans start at $29.95/month.
Basic ISP. Basic ISP offers dial-up and DSL access and provides over 46,000 access numbers in the U.S. and Canada. It also offers satellite broadband through a third-party provider. Subscriptions feature call alert, and email archiving. Also, Basic ISP’s dial-up accelerator is Mac-compatible. Dial-up starts at $8.95/month. DSL starts at $19.95/month.
ISP.com. ISP.com offers dial-up and DSL access and provides over 3,000 dial-up numbers in the U.S. and Canada. It provides DSL to over 20 metropolitan areas. Subscriptions come with 10 email addresses, spam and virus protection and free customer service. DSL provides speeds from 786 Kbps to 15 Mbps. Dial-up starts at $8.95/month. DSL starts at $14.95/month.

10 search engine

Google.com – Launched in 1998 by Larry Page and Sergey Brin, Google is by far the most popular search engine globally. Originally named BackRub, Google’s network of sites roughly get 65% of all the United States queries and is considered by most people to be the world’s best. As of Oct. 3 2010, Alexa reports Google.com as the most visited website worldwide.Submit your website to Google.
Google powers: AOL (including CompuServe & Netscape), MySpace, Comcast Search and many other websites.
Yahoo.com – Started in 1994 by David Filo and Jerry Yang, Yahoo! was originally a directory of websites that later became its own crawler-based engine in 2002. As of late 2009, Yahoo! was the second biggest search engine on the web. However, in late August of 2010, Yahoo!’s results started using Bing’s index. As of Feb. 1 2012, Alexa reports Yahoo.com as the 4th most visited website globally. Submit your website to Yahoo!.
Bing.com – Launched in 2009 by Microsoft, Bing is their latest web-based search service. In late August, Bing officially started delivering Yahoo!’s results. Former Microsoft search engines include Microsoft Live and MSN. As of February 1 2012, Alexa reports Bing.com as the 26th most visited website worldwide. Submit your website to Bing.
Bing powers: Yahoo!, AltaVista, AlltheWeb, GoodSearch, Lycos, Go.com and many other websites delivering results to their users.
Ask.com – Formally known as Ask Jeeves, Ask was founded in 1996 with the idea of allowing users to get answers to questions posed in everyday, natural language, as well as traditional keyword searching. Today Ask.com includes support for math, dictionary, and conversion questions. In November of 2010 Ask.com announced it would no longer be crawling, indexing and ranking its own pages, and will instead be outsourcing that to Google or Bing. Ask will continue to focus heavily on Q&A. There is no need to submit your site to Ask.
DuckDuckGo.com – Founded in September of 2008 by Gabriel Weinberg, DuckDuckGo (DDG) prides itself on respecting user privacy. Duck Duck Go compiles its result by crawling many sources, including DuckDuckBot (their web crawler), crowd-sourced sites, Yahoo! “BOSS”, embed.ly, WolframAlpha, EntireWeb, Blekko and Bing. There is no need to submit your website to Duck Duck Go.
Yandex.com – Beta-Launched in 2010, this search engine offers people around the globe to the opportunity to search pages in English, French, German and other European languages. It’s a spin-off of Russia’s predominant search engine, Yandex.ru, which has been around since 1997. Features include free email, an API and search suggestions. Click here to add your site to Yandex.
SrubTheWeb.com – Since 1996, Scrub The Web claims to rank all indexed pages individually, with all pages getting an equal chance of ranking high in their search results. Submit your website to Scrub The Web.
Entireweb.com – Originally launched in 2000, Entireweb launched their International search engine Entireweb 3.0 on April 7th, 2010 to compete with the current market leaders. It provides a number of advertising programs to help you get exposure, but you can also certainly Submit your website to Entireweb for free.
blekko.com – Launched on November 1, 2010, blekko is quickly becoming known as the “slashtag” engine. blekko’s slashtags allow you to quickly and easily create custom searches. blekko also offers some of the best free optimzation and anlysis tools for webmasters. There is currently no website submit form for blekko. Blekko will crawl and index your website after finding it through sites that are linked to your. There is no need to submit your site to blekko.
Entireweb powers: Exactseek, Slider and a the results for a few other web sites.
Gigablast.com – Launched in 2000, Gigablast aims to index up to 200 billion pages with the least amount of hardware possible. It’s one of the leading clean-energy websites online with a whopping 90% of its equipment receiving power from wind energy. Submit your website to Gigiablast.