Surfing à la françaiseAfter years of lagging behind its neighbours, France has finally caught the internet bug, spawning a rash of different internet service providers (ISPs), subscription offers and download speeds. Kevin Walsh guides you through French cyberspace to help you choose the package best suited to your needs.
Oh to be in Pau: residents of the Pyrenean town will soon have the ride of their lives with the introduction of ‘Pau Broadband Country.’ Due for completion in 2004, this super-broadband project will bring video on demand, interactive TV, e-learning and a host of other services at breathtaking speeds – up to 100 times that of the fastest available connection today.
For the rest of us, choosing an internet connection in France is a more mundane affair: you have to weigh up the relative benefits of speed, cost and user-friendliness. With a bewildering array of products on the market and the uncertainty of dealing in French, it can seem an uphill struggle.
But it needn’t be. So here is the simple guide to how to launch yourself into cyberspace on the other side of the Channel, and how to make your euro stretch as far as possible.
The most basic question is, of course, how much time you intend to spend in France, followed closely by how much time you will spend on the Net when you’re there and how much data you upload and download. Your choices then broadly mirror those in the UK: dial-up, ISDN or broadband (also referred to as ADSL).
FACTFILE Finding the best offer:
www.lesproviders.com (ISP comparison)
www.comparatel.com (ISP comparison)
www.linternaute.com (latest news/excellent newsletter)
www.livingfrance.com (La Mairie discussion forum)
ADSL-specific sites:
www.netissimo.tm.fr (to check availability)
www.adsl-france.org (latest news)
Useful terms:
Abonnement – subscription
Bas débit – dial-up (narrow band)
Bridé – restrained/limited (used to describe lower-speed broadband connections)
Consommation – usage
Contrat – contract
Déconnexion – log off/disconnect
Engagement – commitment (of a contract)
FAI (fournisseur d’accès à internet) – ISP
Forfait – package
Haut débit – broadband
Identifiant – username
Internaute – web surfer
Mot de passe – password
Numérique – digital
Résiliation – cancellation (of a contract)
RNIS (réseau numérique à intégration des sevices) – ISDN
RTC (réseau téléphonique classique) – dial-up connection
Tonalité – dialling tone
ISP web sites:
AOL – www.aol.fr (offers unlimited dial-up access)
Easyconnect – www.easyconnect.fr (good value ISDN packages)
Free Telecom – www.free.fr (currently the best-value ADSL offering)
Tiscali – www.tiscali.fr (offers unlimited dial-up access)
Wandoo– www.wanadoo.fr (France Telecom’s ISP – check out their Accès Libre pay-as-you-go service)
Did you know?
In France you can still send and receive email from a UK email address. In your email programme, simply set your SMTP server to your French ISP’s settings, but do not change your POP server settings.