Washington, Aloha Telecom Bits T1 Experts, Oregon DS3 Lines, OR Ethernet over Copper and Telecom Solutions.

Washington, Aloha T1 Lines, Oregon Ethernet Metro, DS3 Bandwidth, Dark Fiber Services, Long Distance T1 PRI's, Collocation, Data Centers and OR Telecom Circuits.

Washington T1 Lines are very valuable when it comes to Aloha business. A Oregon T1 Line is much more reliable than OR DSL because of the SLA guaranteed by the Washington, Oregon ISP and it is dedicated so there isn't anyone who shares the connection with the OR, Washington subscriber.

 Aloha Telecom Bits Offers the Following Services:

 

Aloha Telecom Real-Time Pricing and Internet Quote Tool

 




ENTER YOUR INFORMATION:

Service Type *
Contact Name: *
Business Name: *
Contact’s Email Address: *
Installation Phone Number (area code first): * () -

WE NEVER SPAM OR SELL YOUR PERSONAL INFORMATION, WE RESPECT YOUR PRIVACY AND WE WOULD DEFINITELY NOT EMPOWER OUR COMPETITORS!


ACCAirespringAT&TBroadskyCavalier
CovadLevel3MegapathNewedgeNetwork Innovations
NuvoxOne CommunicationsPaetecPNGQwest
TelepacificTelnesTime Warner TelecomUCNXO



TELECOM NEWS BITS EXCERPTS


The last difference between a T1 and DSL line is price. DSL service usually runs between $19 and $79 per month, depending on the plan (residential vs. commercial, 512K vs. 3M, etc.) Just 5 years ago, the average price of a T1 line was $1000/month. Now T1 pricing is in the high $400's to low $700's per month, making it a much more attractive option to small businesses and even gamers. All things considered, a $500 T1 line can be considered as a 'productivity insurance' policy, ensuring your employees, your phone calls, and your email always keep working like they should.

T1 Lines are very valuable when it comes to business. A T1 Line is much more reliable than DSL because of the SLA guaranteed by the ISP and it is dedicated so there isn’t anyone who shares the connection with the subscriber. When a T1 Line of High-Speed Internet is connected to the World Wide Web/Internet over fiber, dedicated copper or Ethernet using a telecommunications standard that was developed by AT&T/Bell Labs for North America/United States/Canada and Japan it transmits data packets at a collective speed of 1.544 megabits per second (Mbps) and usually connects from the customer premise (CP) directly to an extensive fiber optic Internet Service Provider (ISP) backbone.

At present some people are able to connect up to 1000 megabits per second, but that's way under a gigabit Ethernet. However, you will need to remember that most drives and other parts of your computer will find a very difficult time to keep up with even the 1000 megabits let alone the gigabit.

Raise your hands if you have a T1 Line, in your head of course, unless you would just like to raise your hands to stretch. Now, raise your hands if your T1 Line is too slow. Good, now that I have your attention, those who have raised their hands on both occasions hope is not all lost. There is a term out there in Telecom world called Bonded T1. A Bonded T1 is 2 T1’s Bonded which makes 1.5 Mbps x 2 = 3 Mbps. Since the price of T1’s have came down dramatically due to the competition and technology solutions, a Bonded T1 might just be in your budget. Now here are some obvious answers to questions but we will go through the motion anyways.

These smaller Telco’s rely on Telecom Agents, Consultants and Advisors to get the word out about their voice and/or data services. This means a smaller telecom expense for you. Now every service provider has its strength and weakness, but doing all this research can be cumbersome and exhaustive in manpower and revenue. This is why the telco’s adopted and crafted the Agent Channel. With the advent of the Agent Channel, Telecom Agencies hired software engineers to develop rating engines and quoting tools to research all of the nationwide databases of the telecommunications service providers.

Go back