What is an ISP?
An ISP (Internet Service Provider) is a company that collects a monthly or yearly fee in exchange for providing the subscriber with Internet access. An ISP might provide dial-up service, cable, DSL, or other types of Internet access. Some ISPs are local while others are national. A national ISP will provide access throughout most of the nation, while a local ISP will only serve subscribers in a limited geographical region. When looking for an ISP the initial consideration is the type of access desired. Some ISPs only offer dial-up access which is the slowest type of connection. If you want cable service, you’ll be checking with your local cable TV provider to see if cable access is offered. For DSL service, you may have multiple choices – or it could be that DSL is not yet available in your area. Often this can be remedied with a call to the phone company to upgrade local telephone lines. Every ISP has a privacy policy and Terms of Service (TOS) contract that subscribers must agree to
An ISP is an Internet Service Provider; Aim High!, Inccorporated is an ISP offering US nation-wide connectivity, web hosting and other Internet services. Originally, ISP s solely provided connectivity to the internet for people who were interested in doing web browsing, news group searches and posts, and sending e-mail. Connectivity consisted of dial-up connections, ISDN connections (still a telephone dial-up connection), or full data connections such as T1 and T3 which are high speed connections. ISP s were an adjunct to the on-line services that were available at the time. These were bulletin board dial-up systems that then connected to each other throughout the country. The original AOL, Prodigy, and CompuServe were basically big bulletin board systems, and still are. Today, many other types of connectivity services have become available. For example, DSL, ADSL, wireless, satellite, etc. are available from many ISP s. As more people required access to the internet and more services