GARTHWILSON wrote:
Not available here, and I don't know why. I won't ask them or they'll never stop pestering me.
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If you have a land line, you can add DSL for as little as little as $13/mo, unlimited data. We don't have, or want, any TV service. Our land line costs something like $30/mo.
I'd like to have a land line. I cancelled the one I had about seven years ago. Our state banned small phone companies from undercutting the big ones, and since then, a POTS line ("unbundled") is around $75/month.
I have multiple cell phones, because the service is free, and I usually buy the phones when they are on sale for $35. I rarerly ever actually use the phone, I typically use them for internet access, which is free to a point.
whartung wrote:
First, of course, theres ye old 'free wifi' at Starbucks -- that may be a solution. Or perhaps a public library.
But the other, is to get the source code, via whatever source code system they're using (Git, SVN, etc.), then when they release an update, you can "switch" to the new branch, and, ideally, just download the differential in terms of the source.
Then, of course, you have to build it your self, which may well be non-trivial.
But once you get it done the first time, you should be able to keep up to date much more cheaply at least in terms of bandwidth.
Finally, you may well be able to find a friend that you can send an SD card who will stuff the latest on to it and mail it back.
There are two routes I take now. One is the free public Wi-Fi. That is fine for small downloads, and questionable at best for large ones, like operating systems. I downloaded NetBSD6.x one time that way and it took over 6 hours, with multiple retries. Most places I go where there is free Wi-Fi seem to have elaborate throttling systems just to prevent this sort of thing.
The other is to buy CDs from an outfit online which I can't remember the name of. They sell CDs of install disks for free operating systems at the price of the media plus postage plus a little for their time. I've run into two issues. One is that the computer I have which can read CDs and DVDs will no longer work with the larger SD cards, and my current (foreseaable future) budget does not allow for me to purchase computer hardware (which may or may not actually work with the hardware I currently have, which is always another issue). The other issue is that I refuse to buy SD cards like that by mail anymore (even if I could afford to). I had two that went springing out of the envelope and into oblivion when I opened the packaging, on separate occasions. So I simply refuse to go down that road again.
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I hope to get an RPi in the next couple months.
I would highly recommend it. One of the problems I have with them is that every time I think I have enough of them, I find another use for one.
Take a lot of time figuring out what you want to buy. It's very easy to buy a prepackaged setup that is missing something you wish you'd bought. But, buying it separately usually means spending more than a different package with it would have cost. I have three different ones that came in three different packages. I wish I'd taken notes about what Iliked and disliked about them. Also be careful about packages that come with parts that don't actually work together. I have one that came with a 128Gb SD card, and think the Pi that was in the package only supports 32Gb. Another one came with a Wi'Fi adaptor that I just didn-t need because the Pi had built'in Wi'Fi. And for some reason that Wi'Fi adaptor only works in the Pis I have, not with desktop computers.