Pros: It was easy to use. Cons: Overly aggressive expansion resulted in abusive billing tactics.
From free E-mail to eternity It's almost hard to remember, after four relatively happy years as a subscriber to America Online (AOL), that for the first 17 months of my Internet usage history I was a customer of Juno Web. Nevertheless, from ...
Pros: You can say "Juno" 10 times real fast with relative ease... free personal web page, and fastest download speeds for Napster out of all the free ISP's (in my experience) Cons: Dropped connections, annoying advertisements are unsurpassed.
I usually reserve my first paragraph for a cute little intro to my epinions, but this time I'll get right down to it: I cannot stand Juno Web!
Not much of an introduction, and rather blunt, I know. But I don't even think that...
Pros: $9.95 per month, Plenty of local access numbers, Reliable Connection Cons: $1.95 per minute for phone Tech Support!, Long wait downloads
I started my relationship with Juno in the late 90's by trying their free dial-up service. It was a nightmare with continual boot-off's, extremely slow service, advertisements bothering the web surfer every other minute, and few dial-up numbers. ...
Pros: Low cost, reliability, lots of access numbers, very easy to use. Cons: Costly and mediocre tech support, too many ads for a paid service.
I started out way back in 1996 with Juno's free email download service. I then graduated to their free web service, their paid (no ad banner on top) $9.95/mo web service and finally their $14.95/mo "Speed Band" enhanced dial up. For the most part, ...
Pros: Free internet service Cons: Advertising view bar
With over 2,900 local access numbers, Juno offers two types of services. The first one is called Juno Premium, which costs $ 9.95 per month and offers a basic Internet service without any view bars on within the screen. The second one is called Juno...
Pros: Free, lots of access numbers in Atlanta, Free Cons: None, well the ad banner
Let me tell you a little bit about myself. I make good money and my wife works, so we always have the means to cover the necessities and to splurge a little also. That is not the issue here, but I just wanted to mention it.
Pros: free, user friendly Cons: kicked offline within a few minutes for no apparent reason
Juno was actually okay, before they decided to venture into the free ISP business. With their free e-mail, you connected only to download and send email, which was already slow in the first place. Now, when you add internet to it, you have to be...
Pros: User Friendly, Can download e-mails to keep from tying up phone lines Cons: Can't get connected and stay connected to the www
I have Juno on my system, but I hardly ever use it. They do have a nice set up, but I hardly ever can get online, and when I do get online, I often get dumped offline.
One of the nice features of Juno is you can download your e-mails to the...
Juno is another one of those Internet service providers that’s beginning to become a little bit more popular. I feel someday that they may be able to overcome the best ISP AOL. I have tried BellSouth, People PC, MSN, Juno, AOL, Net Zero, and Blue Light....
Pros: Decent connection in a major city Cons: A nightmare just fifty miles west
I first used Juno as a free backup ISP about four years ago and then switched to Juno Premium as my primary provider. It's New York City Pop worked pretty well...a decent first time connect rate, few disconnects and I had few problems surfing web sites....
Pros: Cheap. Cons: Bad connections, bad service, too many unsolicited ads.
I have been a Juno user for about eight months, and the only thing keeping me from switching to another service at this point is the low price ($9.95 per month), sheer inertia, and the dread of having to change my email address in all of my website...
I started using Juno about 5 months ago. I originally used AOL and had gotten fed up with the constant busy signals, always getting booted and the high cost each month. My brother-in-law recommended Juno to me so I tried it out. All I can say is...
Pros: great service, good tech support, not too expensive Cons: none so far
When I first got my PC I was using a free internet service and I was plagued by disconnects, slow connection times, and busy signals. In frustration I got out a disc I got in the mail from Juno.com. I installed, set up, and soon I was surfing again...
Pros: Inexpensive, no busy signals, or boots Did I mention cheap?? Cons: Need to close ads prior to connect, not for heavy users.
Juno is one of the older Internet companies operating today. My first venture into web e-mail was through Juno back when their program was limited to your simply downloading or uploading mail with no other access to the Internet involved.
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