IP Connectivity

One of our first goals was to get the Internet connection up and running.

Lesson: Set milestones and stick to them.

Setting up an Internet service provider and a commercial Internet service is a huge task. I broke the job down into smaller, understandable chunks. Each chunk had its own milestone: a thing that was to be accomplished, and a date by which it was supposed to be accomplished.

On a piece of paper, I sketched out my first set of goals and milestones:

  • July 1, 1995—Get leased line installed.

  • Mid-July—Get IP connection up and running.

  • August 1—Get dialup access working to router.

  • August 15—Open up service for a few testers.

  • September 1, 1995—Announce service to the community.

The key ingredient to making all of this work was working phone lines—something that the house didn’t have when we moved in. Before we closed on the house, we placed an order for four residential phone lines—after all, the house was first and foremost a residence. I had also made arrangements with a mid-level ISP in Cambridge called CentNet for a 56K connection to the Internet that would be delivered over a four-wire DDS frame relay connection. To make this whole thing work I arranged for Cisco to loan me a Cisco 2509 router—a basic router with two high-speed serial ports, eight low-speed asynchronous serial ports, and an Ethernet. I foolishly thought of this router as an “ISP in a box.”

Lesson: Get your facilities in order.

I waited for and met the NYNEX telephone installer on the day our residential ...

Get Web Security, Privacy & Commerce, 2nd Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.