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Internet Access While Traveling Outside U.S.?

awgy writes "I will be traveling to Germany and France soon, and have been looking for a way to dial-up with my laptop while overseas so as to update a journal, post pictures, etc. Is it best to find a regional ISP, or go with a big, international provider? Any catch-alls about European ISPs versus American ISPs? Who would you recommend, and what advice would you give?"

10 of 31 comments (clear)

  1. ATT Global net by vukv · · Score: 3, Informative

    ATT Global net... they prive dialup access in most of the countries

  2. only one... by Zurk · · Score: 3, Informative

    AT & T global. accept no substitutes.
    they are the only one i found for virtually all the countries i have travelled to.
    expensive as hell though.

    1. Re:only one... by PhaseBurn · · Score: 2, Informative

      Earthlink. (I'm a former employee, and I can't believe I'm recommending their services, but...)

      They have what's called GRIC, and you can get more info at gric.com... It works rather well, from several experiences of tting tech calls from france and england. It's available in Germany as well, as well as most of Europe...

      Call up Earthlink and ask... They have a lot more info that I do...

      Hope it helps...

      --
      -PhaseBurn Welcome to Linux country. On quiet nights, you can hear windows reboot.
  3. Compuserve by haplo21112 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Global, reliable and fairly inexpensive....
    there is no better way to go, they have more pop sites world wide then anyone I can think of...and they have then in places you wouldn't even expect.

    --
    Power Corrupts,Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely, leaving one person(group)in charge is absolutely corrupt.
    1. Re:Compuserve by balamw · · Score: 2, Informative
      I signed up to CIS for a 2 week business trip to France in ~1999. Paid $9.95/mo and some incidental phone charges. Worked like a charm! Just finally got around to cancelling the account about 6 months ago after 2 years of not using it.

      However, can you still get a Compuserve classic account? At the time AOL was pushing Compuserve 2000, a more AOL-like service that used AOL's POPs instead of the good old Compuserve ones. I recall that even at that time I had to scrounge around to find the right install CD. I think it was version 4?

      Anyhow, unlike the classic service, "Compuserve 2000" did not list any international access phone numbers available online at the time... :-(

      On my last European business trip, I just found an internet cafe and used webmail over SSL...

      All the frequent international travelers in my company use AT&T Global...

  4. Pay-per-call by knabar · · Score: 2, Informative

    There are a lot of providers in Germany that support pay-per-call (i.e. you don't have a login, you just dial into a special number and the charge, a few cents per minute, appears on the phone bill). I don't know though if it is possible to use this from a Hotel, but if you stay with friends, it is probably the easiest and cheapest way to go.

    MSN is one of the ISPs that offers this. Here is a directory of others with price comparisons: http://de.dir.yahoo.com/Computer_und_Internet/Inte rnet_und_WWW/internettarife/

  5. Free internet providers by Dead+Penis+Bird · · Score: 2, Informative

    France and Germany have some free access providers, courtesy of emailaddresses.com:

    Germany: Comundo and Germany.net

    France: Free.fr, Freesurf, Liberty Surf, WorldOnline

    --

    If I weren't nailed to the penis, I'd be pushing up the daisies!

  6. UUnet by Pauly · · Score: 2, Informative
    Several years aga, I used UUnet dial-up for a traveling job that sent me just about everywhere in the US, many places in Great Britain, the Caribbean, Scandinavia, Germany, and elsewhere. I found their service to be routinely excellent and reliable, no matter where I was. However, things have certainly changed in the dial-up marketplace since then (1996-7), so their service may no longer be what it once was.

    Use their POP finder to seek out dial up access points for wherever you may be going.

  7. IPass by douglips · · Score: 2, Informative

    Try IPass. They basically repackage access from ISPs all over the planet, you can get a decent cheap rate.

    IPass is not an ISP, but if you navigate their web page you can sign up with an ISP that uses IPass, so you then have access to the entire IPass POP collection.

    i2Roam is an ISP that works with IPass, for $100 you can get lifetime service, then you just pay for usage. This means if you go six months without using it, you pay zero. Or, you can pay $5/month plus usage.

    See i2Roam's cost page for a sampling of how much it costs in various world cities.

  8. Re:Internet cafe by raju1kabir · · Score: 3, Informative
    Do you really need your laptop? If not, don't bring it.

    Amen.

    I travel to a pretty diverse range of countries on a fairly regular basis. I have long ago given up on toting a laptop around unless I specifically need it for a meeting.

    Outside of the US (where I assume you're posting from) internet cafes are thick on the ground. In developed countries, the service is much faster than you'll get by dialing in, and quite often cheaper than the phone call.

    I use the mindterm Java applet to provide an SSH terminal from my web server.

    In some places, mainly in Asia, I've found Linux-based internet cafes where I could ssh home and tunnel X through the connection, running my home desktop on the screen.

    --
    "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS