Using a Cable Modem at Home - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Using a Cable Modem at Home

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Maximum baud rate 56 kbits/s (often less) Can be unreliable. Dialup times ~30s 'Free' services available, but often heavily oversubscribed. ISDN ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Using a Cable Modem at Home


1
Using a Cable Modem at Home
  • Tim Adye
  • Particle Physics Department
  • Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
  • PPD Christmas Lectures
  • 17th December 2001

2
Home Internet Options
  • Traditional dialup modem
  • Maximum baud rate 56 kbits/s (often less)
  • Can be unreliable
  • Dialup times 30s
  • Free services available, but often heavily
    oversubscribed
  • ISDN
  • 64 kbits/s (can be doubled by using two lines)
  • Fast dialup 1s
  • Available anywhere
  • ADSL
  • 500/250 kbits/s (download/upload)
  • Only available in some areas?
  • Various companies

3
Home Internet Options
  • Cable modem
  • 512/256 kbits/s (cheaper 64 kbits/s option
    available)
  • Always on
  • Only available in some areas
  • NTL and Telewest
  • Cheapest broadband option, if available
  • I have a 512 kbits/s NTL Cable Modem (Oxford).
  • Everyone I know with broadband internet access
    has an NTL Cable Modem
  • The rest of this talk is on this option only

4
Cable Modem Availability and Price
  • NTL claims to be available in Abingdon, Bicester,
    Oxford, Wallingford, Wantage, Newbury, Reading
  • Not everywhere in those areas
  • Check you area at www.ntl.com/broadband
  • uses your postcode
  • Could also check www.telewest.co.uk
  • NTL Cable Modem cost
  • 35/month (includes cable modem box rental) or
  • 30/month 149 (to buy cable modem box)
  • Includes phone line
  • Can also be combined with cable TV
  • better deal if you have both
  • Installation is 25

5
My experience of the NTL service
  • Arranging for an engineer to call (installation
    or service) is really slow and frustrating
  • Notoriously bad call centre
  • NTL engineers were excellent
  • Installed phone, cable TV, cable modem sockets
    just where I wanted them (at different ends of
    the house)
  • Took a couple of hours
  • Service has been pretty reliable
  • 4 overnight outages since February
  • One longer problem
  • Took several days to arrange for an engineer to
    call
  • Fix was trivial (removing an attenuator on the
    coax cable) now I know what to try

6
Installation
  • Cable modem box
  • Size of a large paperback (single edition LotR?)
  • Coax cable to socket in the wall
  • Socket does not need to be near TV/phone sockets
  • Requires ethernet (10Base-T) or USB on your PC
  • Works with Windows, Linux, or Mac
  • Ive only used Windows
  • Brief tests with Mannys Linux PC were
    unsuccessful
  • USB only with Windows 98/ME/2000
  • Supports DHCP, so software setup is simple
  • just like a laptop at RAL
  • Using more than one PC is complicated
  • Even switching PCs isnt trivial

7
Documentation
  • NTL Documentation is really basic
  • Usually enough to get you started
  • It took me some time to discover more details
  • Firewall configuration
  • Transparent web cache
  • Cable modem diagnostics
  • Speed tests
  • until I discovered these excellent pages
  • http//homepage.ntlworld.com/robin.d.h.walker/

8
Speed
  • Bandwidth limited at
  • 512 kbits/s download
  • 128 kbits/s upload
  • Could be slower if demand is heavy
  • I usually see the full rate, but maybe Oxford is
    a luddite area

9
What it feels like
  • With a 56kbits/s modem (usually connecting at 33
    kbits/s)
  • Convenient ssh connections to RAL/CERN/SLAC
  • Unreliable connection could interrupt work at the
    wrong time
  • Most X-Windows applications (eg. xterm, emacs)
    unusable
  • PAW possible, but slow
  • No problem downloading small files (up to 1 MB)
  • With cable modem
  • Reliable ssh connections
  • X-windows mostly OK
  • xterm, emacs, PAW nearly as good as at RAL
  • Heavy applications still sluggish, but many
    normally run locally, eg. Netscape, Acrobat
  • No problem downloading medium-sized files (up to
    20 MB)
  • Accessing PPD NT disk shares can still be slow ?

10
Advantages of being Always On
  • No dial up time
  • No contention with phone
  • Can run servers
  • Allows access to your home machine from work
  • Useful to pick up files you forgot to bring to
    work
  • Can run ftp, web, login I just use sshd
  • IP address changes every few days, so need to use
    DNS service, eg. DNS2Go
  • NTL forbid high bandwidth ftp/web servers

11
Security implications of being Always On
  • Need to be more careful about security
  • Hackers scan for security holes
  • More chance theyll find you if you are always
    connected, and have the same address
  • Unless you really know what youre doing, make
    sure you disable
  • File and printer sharing (Windows)
  • All unused inetd services (Linux)
  • Consider setting up a firewall
  • After trying several firewalls for Windows (eg.
    ZoneAlarm), I use Tiny Personal Firewall
    (www.tinysoftware.com)
  • Virus checking is even more important

12
Accessing RAL
  • RAL internal web pages and services are not
    directly available
  • Eg. PPD internal page, RAL Information for Staff,
    PPD Unix systems, NT disk shares
  • Sometimes there are alternatives
  • RAL Notices can be accessed with a password
  • ssh to csf and then to PPD Unix
  • NT disks can be read via ftp
  • You can also set up a virtual private network
    connection to RAL (AKA PPTP)

13
Accessing RAL VPN
  • After logging in with your Federal ID/password,
    you tunnel inside the firewall
  • See RAL PC Support pages (Network services
    PPTP)
  • NB. PC Support pages only accessible within RAL!
  • Slower than a direct connection
  • Also useful when at CERN, SLAC, etc.

14
Conclusions
  • Once installed, cable modem is fast and reliable
  • If you have 35/month to spare
  • Be careful of hackers
  • PPTP to RAL can be very useful
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