Looking for Dial-Up Suggestions

My Internet comes to me via cable from Comcast, and I've had relatively little problem with them. My one big complaint is that for some reason, they don't offer a dial-up number so you can connect to the 'net while on the road. To solve this, I subscribed to a cheap dial-up Internet Service Provider called Access4Less that charged very little and required only a month-to-month contract. Alas, Access4Less is getting out of the dial-up business and handing their accounts over to Earthlink. I received a couple of e-mails (and one robotic phone call) from them informing me that if I did nothing, my month-to-month Access4Less account (for $5.95 per month) would automatically convert to a year-long subscription to Earthlink for $119.40, which they'd bill quickly to my credit card. Ain't that a heckuva bait 'n' switch?

So I've cancelled Access4Less and am looking for something similar. I need a dial-up ISP that I can access from anywhere in the nation but especially from Los Angeles. I'd like the lowest rate and no long-term commitment. I don't care about bells or whistles or parental controls or anything of the sort…just a decent connection.

Anyone have any recommendations?

Recommended Reading

Some great articles over on Slate. Edward Jay Epstein explains how much money Michael Moore and his associates made off Fahrenheit 9/11. (Hint: It's enough to buy a better outfit.) Jacob Weisberg makes a good point about what's happened to the Conservative movement in this country. Jack Shafer discusses what's gone awry over at the Public Broadcasting System.

Wednesday Evening

Mom's a lot better and things are returning to normal, thank you. It's been a couple of rough days, and I thank those of you who sent encouraging messages, especially those that said, "No need to respond." I don't know how in one week, I could slip three weeks behind on everything I'm doing, but I somehow managed.

I continue to battle many bureaucracies to make sure she has the treatment and equipment she needs…and the last few days, this has required an ungodly number of phone calls, waiting on "hold" and then finding out that I have waited 15+ minutes for a call which ultimately connects with the wrong person.

By this, I mean that someone says, "You'll have to speak to Mr. Jones in our Glendale office about that. I'll transfer you." And then they transfer me and I wait and wait and wait, only to eventually have my call answered by Ms. Smith in the Van Nuys office who has nothing to do with my issue. Twice, I have been given phone numbers to call, only to have the numbers turn out to be of the non-working variety. In both cases, this meant starting all over with dialing the main number. (I've learned to ask people if they can give a direct number to get back to them in case we're disconnected or I am wrongly routed. In most cases, they cannot.)

I've also encountered bizarre applications of the principles of medical confidentiality. At the hospital where my mother stayed for several days, the medical personnel will tell me absolutely anything I want to know about her condition, medication, treatment, etc., merely because I call up and say I'm her son. The accounting people, however, will not tell me how much her co-payments will be because they can only release that information to the patient.

What I've had to do in the last week has not been impossible but it's been very time-consuming and annoying. I keep wondering about patients who don't have someone else to make these calls. A person could not recover from a serious illness and spend hours on the phone straightening out mistakes and omissions. It is possible to get good health care in this country but too often, it involves someone staying on top of the situation and making certain that what's supposed to be done is done when it's supposed to be done.

The doctors and nurses have all been wonderful but the folks who juggle schedules and push papers are either less than competent or they've been plugged into a dysfunctional system. Today on the phone, a nice lady told me that someone had wrongly cancelled a certain appointment. Her computer did not allow her to uncancel it, nor could it tell us who had cancelled it and/or who had the power to reinstate it. It took me around 20 minutes (19 of them on "hold") to locate that person and practically threaten them into overriding procedure and making things right.

Hey, here's a cute little story I have to share with you: Very early Thursday morning, I was in the Emergency Room at U.C.L.A. Medical Center with my mother…and I must say, she received superb treatment. Everyone was nice and efficient and, well, if you absolutely have to be in such a place, that's the place.

My mother was on a gurney surrounded by one of those flimsy curtains they have in hospitals. Next to us, there was another gurney with another woman on it, and I could not help but overhear what was transpiring over there. The lady, who was maybe sixty, had been brought in with some sort of balance problem — an inner ear disorder, I believe I heard the doctor say. Whatever it was, she could not stand without falling. She had fallen twenty-four times in as many hours, and was clinging to that gurney for precious life.

The doctor — same one who treated my mother — was a charming, authoritative man. He looked like Pernell Roberts, sans toup and spoke like Ricardo Montalban, sans accent. Having treated her and decreed that the problem was gone, he asked her to stand. She was too scared to do this. "I'll fall over," she said.

He assured her she would not. A male intern came over and the doctor promised that they'd stand on either side of her and prevent her from falling. She refused. He promised her there was no way she could fall. She said no, she couldn't. The doctor told her she couldn't stay there on that gurney forever. She didn't answer. She just clutched the side of the gurney and held on, tight and trembling.

Calmly, and with a disarming friendly manner, he engaged her in conversation. Where was she from? What did she do? Did she have any hobbies? Two minutes into this chat, she happened to mention that she'd once been a champion ballroom dancer.

The doctor brightened. "Oh, it's been so long since I've danced with someone who really knows how. Would you dance with me?"

The woman looked at him (I assume — I was just listening) like he was nuts. "D-dance with you? Here?"

He said, "Why not? Just a few steps. Do it for me…please."

I don't know if it was because he was so charming or because he was a doctor but, sure enough, the woman slowly turned loose of the gurney and allowed him to help her to her feet. Within moments, I could see them dancing around the small amount of open space in the Emergency Room. There was no music, of course, but the doctor hummed and they waltzed about for maybe a minute.

Just as I was about to ask if I could cut in, the doctor stepped lightly away from her, leaving her standing there…on her feet, in full possession of her balance. If you'd seen the expression on this woman's face — tears of joy as she realized she was not falling — you'd have witnessed one big reason why people become doctors.

I have to get back to work. On my breaks, I'm catching up on websites I routinely read so I'll probably post some links here tonight.

Tuesday Afternoon

And another round of apologies for not posting anything here lately. I'm dealing with an unhealthy mother and an even less healthy company that is supposed to provide certain home health services for her. Or at least, I was dealing with them, which meant endless hours (hours, plural) on the phone, being placed for long periods on "hold" before I could reach what, nine times out of ten turned out to be the wrong person. And don't you just love hearing over and over again, a cheery voice telling you, "We know your time is important so someone will be with you as soon as possible"? They play classical music while you're waiting and I think in the last few days, I've heard the combined works of Beethoven, Brahms, Chopin, Mozart, Handel, Hayden and P.D.Q. Bach.

It's amazing, simply amazing, that a major company has their phones configured so that it takes 38 minutes just to reach a human being. That's how long my first call to them took…and the person I finally did reach was of no help whatsoever.

Even more amazing is that this is a firm that supplies medical supplies to people who need them to survive. You wouldn't tolerate this service from an outfit that delivers pizza…and oxygen is almost as vital. After a day or so of receiving endless apologies but no change in behavior, I think I've blown off the Big Name health services provider (which shall remain nameless) and moved its responsibilities to a small, three-person outfit where the three people answer their phones and one of them is coming over later with the equipment. True, my mother's health insurance won't pay for the small outfit — I will — but at least she's going to get what the doctors say she needs.

Past experience has shown me that when I post something like this, I get a lot of e-mails from people who say, "Oh, how true," and they tell me the story of the lousy service they received last October. Please, since I'm so far behind on everything, save those tales for another time. I don't think we should be entertaining one another with them. I think we should be sending them where they might do some good. I've been complaining — loudly and forcefully — to various execs at the company in question, plus I'm talking to a lady with something called the Joint Commission of Accreditation of Health Care Organizations. (I don't guarantee I got that name right.) She phoned me because a doctor-friend I called for advice phoned her, and she said that one of the reasons companies can get away with such shoddy service is that there's so little downside for them. Folks like us simply don't complain enough. I intend to do my share.

I'll be back in a day or so. Just as soon as I get things straightened out.

Sunday Afternoon

Didn't post anything yesterday and this may be it for today. Briefly, I'm inundated with other matters, which also explains why so many e-mails are languishing in the "To Be Answered" folder. My apologies. I made time for the obit of Zeke Zekley because…well, he was Zeke Zekley. Other affaires d' blog have to wait.

It may be a few days before I'm back to regular posting. When I am, I'll comment on reports that Stan Lee's settled his lawsuit with Marvel. I'll tell a little story about when I worked with the late Mason Adams. I'll answer some questions I've received about the Writers Guilds lawsuits and respond to some comments about my piece on Al Franken's past and why it may not matter.

In the meantime, here's a link to Frank Rich's weekend column, here's one to a piece that says Arnold Schwarzenegger is becoming as unpopular as the guy he replaced…and here's one to a piece on the ruination of Cookie Monster. That's right: I typed Cookie Monster…one of the greatest TV stars of all time. Or at least, he used to be.

Lastly, here's a link to something rather amazing. Go read Kevin Drum about how the U.S. military issued a report last week that was full of redactions…but put it out in a PDF format which allows anyone with Adobe Reader (which is, like, 85% of all Internet travellers) to read the redactions. Drum doesn't seem to know if the redactions are of important data but you've got to figure it this way: If they are, then whoever censored this document then released it is a chowderhead. And if they aren't, then whoever censored this document is restricting our access to information that we have every right to know…and is a chowderhead. The latter possibility reminds me of Jack Anderson's old claim that of all the information in Washington that is marked "Classified" or "Top Secret," 75% is withheld for no reason whatsoever, and another 20% is so designated because someone's trying to hide the fact that they screwed up and/or broke the law.