It seems that you're using an outdated browser. Some things may not work as they should (or don't work at all).
We suggest you upgrade newer and better browser like: Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer or Opera

×
avatar
HoneyBakedHam: Ahhh... I get it... You live out there in the wild. You might not be off the grid, but you can see where the grid ends maybe?

I was having a hard time figuring out why you had these odd bandwidth cap issues, but having satellite Internet clears up that mystery.

My hats off to you. I couldn't do it. I'm a Chicagoan. If I don't have a dry cleaner, a dentist, a deli, and three Chinese restaurants all in walking distance, I break out in hives. If I even see an animal that hasn't been skinned, bled, butchered, grilled, and served next to a baked potato, I quiver with fear.

Why would I think you were bigoted? I also like understanding the people who answer my phone calls.
Chicago? Eesh. What's it like living near like, what's it now, five nuclear power plants? Your Polish sausage dogs smothered in onions make up for it. Anyway, the problem with speaking to overseas tech support isn't that I can't understand them. The guy who owns the closest liquor store is from Bombay, and I always end up chatting with him for thirty minutes to an hour. No, the problem is that the guys overseas don't understand some of my mannerisms and articulations, and so the majority of the time spent on the phone is explaining the problem I'm having.

Living "out in the Wild" is relative. I'm only a fifteen minute drive from Myrtle Beach. It's just that my house is situated on a plot of "undeveloped" land (read: swamp/wetlands that the Army Corps of Engineers say can't be disturbed), and it would cost $20K just to run a cable or fiber-optic line out here. Hell, it cost $5K just to get the local electric co-op to run a power line out. There's a Post Office and two supermarkets, three petrol stations, multiple restaurants (one of them Chinese, and it's "Hong Kong" Chinese), the aforementioned liquor stores, and a garbage drop-off all within ten miles.