I paid only a few dollars more a month for a second line (plus the $300 to $400 a month in long distance charges thanks to FidoNet and EchoMail).A bunch of my friends had a phone line just for dial-up internet. Rich folk...
I paid only a few dollars more a month for a second line (plus the $300 to $400 a month in long distance charges thanks to FidoNet and EchoMail).A bunch of my friends had a phone line just for dial-up internet. Rich folk...
A bunch of my friends had a phone line just for dial-up internet. Rich folk...

Many Australian capital city specialist hospitals still have a couple of these connected to dedicated internal analogue phone lines. They are for ultra-remote outback sites who have only landline access for hospital digital services. They are the "last resort" data connection option. Nowadays, of course, they use satellite phones and digital links most of the time.
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I still have a handful of modems, some in their original boxes.I remember the sound of that modem and back when chatrooms were popular.

Yep. 9600 squealing bauds!AT
OK
I don't think I ever had a 9600- started with a 300 baud acoustic coupler from DSE, then a 1200 baud 'Telecom' plugin...Yep. 9600 squealing bauds!
Pah - real men used CompuServe!Well that does not bode well for the MAGArats in the southern states. How will they get their propaganda now?
I had dual ISDN in my flat in London. Read and weep 128kb!I remember spotting that a friend had an ISDN line installed. In their own home! 64 kilobits per second, up and down! Imagine the inconceivable glamour of that! (I recognised the network terminal from using them at work.) He was something in banking and his employer had paid for it.
I'm not an engineer, but 64k (minus overhead, etc.) may be about the maximum speed using audio signals in the frequency range telephone lines could handle. But I share your amazement at how much bandwidth can be squeezed through a copper pair these days.I recall when 56k modems were released and articles were explaining that was pretty much the maximum speed you could have along the copper phone lines. (Think the theoretical maximum was 64k).
Yet.. here I am connected at 67 Mbps over my copper phone line.
(Please do not tell me about fibre to house, it's a very touchy subject for me, I'm not cabled up for it despite there being a junction box almost opposite my front door on the other side of the road.... Up the road from me there are houses built in the 15th century that have fibre.)
In 2002, AOL (America Online) typically charged $23.90 per month for its unlimited dial-up service. This price had increased by $1.95 from the previous rate of $21.95 in July 2001. [Keyword search "aol dial-up charge in 2002"]

Yeah, you always had two bearers so could dial up both and get 128 kilobits.I had dual ISDN in my flat in London. Read and weep 128kb!