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Guide to Customizing and Distributing Mozilla 1.4.1

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Appendix A       Resources for ISPs

Setting up an ISP involves a range of business, financial, and technical issues. This appendix provides links to online sources for more detailed information.

This appendix contains these sections:

Business Planning
Setting Up Your Servers and Internet Feed
Preparing Your Account Setup Solution
Troubleshooting and Customer Support

Business Planning


Before you begin planning the technical details of your ISP, you need to address a range of basic business issues, including market research, financing, and setting up your basic business infrastructure. At a minimum, this includes obtaining necessary state and local licenses, setting up office services such as phone systems and accounting software, domain registration, and so on.

You should also have identified your potential customers, created a viable marketing and business plan, worked out a detailed budget, identified sources of technical assistance (your own employees or external services), and performed all the other tasks required to set up a successful business. The ISP industry is mature and highly competitive; you will not succeed unless you do your homework.

For background information on planning and setting up an ISP business, see the following:

Setting Up Your Servers and Internet Feed


To provide Internet access, an ISP needs to sign up with a regional or national backbone provider and set up a local loop—that is, a physical connection between your location and the provider. In general, it's preferable to set up a 24 channel T1 or equivalent circuit for your first access switch.

An ISP also needs servers to handle its primary functions, including DNS, mail, Web servers (both HTTP and HTTPS), authentication, and news. Theoretically, you can do all this on just one machine, but at least four separate dedicated PCs is usually considered the minimum requirement.

One of the most basic decisions you must make is whether to own your own server facilities, rent them, or use a hybrid solution that permits users to connect to your service through other service providers as well as your own.

For more information on these decisions and other aspects of setting up your servers and Internet feed, see the following:

Preparing Your Account Setup Solution


When a customer signs up with your ISP service, you need to provide an Account Setup solution as well as a customized version of Mozilla 1.4.1. An Account Setup solution helps users create ISP accounts and configures both system software and Mozilla 1.4.1 to enable Internet access. Configuration includes:

An Account Setup solution can take one of two forms:

Troubleshooting and Customer Support




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Last Updated October 05, 2001