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Encyclopedia > Demon Internet

Demon Internet is a British Internet Service Provider. It was one of the earliest ISPs, starting on 1 June 1992 from an idea posted on CIX by Cliff Stanford of Demon Systems Ltd. The branch in the Netherlands started in 1996.


Its first service was dialup IP, combined with access to mail and news servers. This was priced at £10 a month (£11.75 including VAT), or as it was described in the sales literature, a 'tenner a month'. They still offer this service at the same price today, but more customers today use the surftime and ADSL packages.


In 1998 it was bought by Scottish Telecom, a wholly owned subsidiary of the privatized utility Scottish Power. Scottish Telecom rebranded as Thus in October 1999, and floated on the London Stock Exchange. Thus fully demerged from Scottish Power in 2002.


Demon provides free internet access for Wireless Leiden, a wireless community network, in order to gain experience in this area.


The public telephone number of the company, and many of the dialup access numbers, end with 666 (the supposed Number of the Beast), a deliberate pun on the name Demon.


External links

  • Demon Internet (http://www.demon.net/)
  • Thus PLC (http://www.thus.net/)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Demon Internet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (251 words)
It was one of the earliest ISPs, starting on 1 June 1992 from an idea posted on CIX by Cliff Stanford of Demon Systems Ltd. The branch in the Netherlands started in 1996.
In the early days users were expected to connect to a BBS and download basic internet connection software based on the KA9Q implementation of TCP/IP.
Demon provides free internet access for Wireless Leiden, a wireless community network, in order to gain experience in this area.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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