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Re: cable modem inquiry



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I'm on Adelphia and had a scientific modem for the first 3 yrs of service. During the last year I would experience dropouts lasting from 5 to 10 mins. They changed the wiring leading to my house and the cables inside but nothing helped. They finally changed my modem and the problem was resolved. I'm using a motoral modem now. Thumbs up for the motorla modem.

Never had issues with routers. Using a buffalo router now and I'm very happy with it. I'm really against using something very expensive unless it is warranted. Sometimes the only difference is the price tag and the number of options you get when you call tech support. just my 2 cents.


Jimmy Snowden wrote:

My experience may be unusual but I have setup several systems for
people and several for myself. I bought expensive routers and really
cheap ones. Sometimes the high dollar ones died and other times the
cheap ones. No rhyme or reason. I just gave my first wife the most
expensive router I had. One that would change over to dial up and all
that stuff. It is big and fat. The router not the ex wife. It never
actually worked but the router part did. I'm using the cheapest one
I ever bought and it is really old. Really small too. I use it as a
switch but it still works as a router ok. It's a COMPusa cheapie. I
use DSL and my modem is a router also so that is why I use the stand
alone as a switch. I used to have cable modem and routers. I would
not go that route again. DSL is much more stable at least in Texas.

Now the first modems they came out with were a problem sometimes.
I've had to replace a couple of them. They had no access via the
computer. You just plugged them in and unplugged them to reboot them.
If you have one of those get rid of it.

Jimmy



Hi Mike,
I read the post a few weeks ago about the Cable / DSL modem that can automatically switch when a signal is dropped . I saved that thread and link. So, I agree with you about the router. Can you point me to a source for a quality router? Don't think that I need all the bells and whistles but I'd certainly be willing to pay for a better quality modem. I don't use a laptop so there isn't much reason to go wireless.

Also, I have Tradestation and IB set up to run on 2 different computers.
That is why I am using a router.
May go to Cable and DSL if trading improves again but I just use a dial up as a back-up and have only had to trade with it once or twice over a period of years.

I seem to have enough notice with a lost connection to dial up or to simply use the telephone. However, I would like to avoid the back-up plans as best I can.

Thanks,

Tom


mike ball wrote:


Tom,

I have and used to run that same Toshiba cable modem. It was for my backup line in case DSL went down.

If you are trading (actively) throughout the day. Number one, I wouldn't rely on shared bandwidth(cable) for my trading. If that can be avoided.

Furthermore, as for the cable modem wouldn't worry much there, your weaker point will be your Router, these 59.99 dollar specials; linksys, Netgear, etc..
are more of a concern. Their fatality rate is high, not to mention their low heat-tolerance ASIC chips they use, as a result performance problems manifest themselves in
a myriad of ways. If you are building your network for mission critical work like trading, then isn't a top quality router worth the extra money?

mike



----- Original Message ----
From: TOm <t47usa@xxxxxxx>
To: omega-list@xxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Thursday, December 22, 2005 9:11:54 AM
Subject: cable modem inquiry


Hi,

Any thoughts about the most reliable cable modem to use for trading? I'm not too concerned about speed but would like to find a solid performer. Running my old Toshiba PCX 1100 for a few years and at times I am noticing a loss of connection. I think it is probably time to upgrade. I also run a Linksys 4 port router off of the cable modem.

I can't seem to find any test reporting on this subject and all Cox will say is what modems are compatible with their service.

Thanks,

Tom