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Internet Service available in Costa Rica

 

Computer buffs will be pleased to know Internet services are available throughout Costa Rica. Costa Rica has Central America's highest Internet connection rate, with 20 of 1,000 citizens regularly going online. The country is second in Internet use in Latin America, surpassed only by Chile. At the beginning 2004, Costa Rica had more than 100,000 Internet accounts. It is predicted that soon one-quarter of the country's population will be frequent users of the Internet.

In Costa Rica, Internet users have several ways of connecting to the national network; by cable modem provided by local cable companies in connection with RACSA (Radiográfica Costarricense); ADSL and RDSI provided by the Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad (ICE) , the telephone company and parent of RACSA; or by dialup provided by RACSA. Unfortunately, the vast majority of Internet users are limited to the slow dial-up system. Most people complain that it is very slow, difficult to get connected at times and they often get disconnected while online.

To get connected to Internet, just go to the Radiográfica offices and open a RACSAPAC account. Recently, using the Internet became less expensive and the hours more flexible.

Rates for home Internet users are $10 to $15 per month. The new $15 unlimited-hours rate does not include the basic telephone rate of $0.55 per hour online. The extra charge will be added to the Internet client's telephone. For further information about these services, call 287-0321 or 287-0087; Fax: (506) 223-1609, or e-mail: tarifas@sol. racsa.co.cr.

ICE now offers that ADSL broadband Internet. Broadband Internet will eventually enable homes, schools and businesses to connect to the Internet at high speeds at a fraction of the current cost without using regular telephone lines. The monthly cost of this service ranges from $16 for 128-kbps connection with a download speed of 512-kbps, $19 for a 256-kbps connection with a download speed of 2,048-kbps and $25 for a 512-Kbps connection with a download speed of 2,048 kbps. A connection speed of 1,024 with a download speed of 512-kbps costs $38 and 2,048-kbps with a download speed of 768 will run $169. In addition to the ADSL service, ICE also offers a RDSI that comes with two independent phone lines and a greater speed than the regular dial- up service. To find out whether these services are available in your area or to sign up, call 115 or see http://www.grupoice.com for more details.

Internet service cable TV hookup is also available in Costa Rica through a couple of cable TV companies. This service is faster than regular dial-up service. Cable Tica (210-1450) and Amnet (2102929) now offer two-way high-speed cable modem Internet service in some areas, mainly the Central Valley. The monthly cost ranges between $40 and $80 depending on the speed of the connection you choose. At present, this service is available in San José, Heredia, Santa Ana and some of the surrounding suburbs. I live in Heredia and am very happy with the service Amnet provides.

You can also get high-speed satellite Internet service from several companies. The installation cost is about $2,600 and the monthly charge is about $125. In rural areas where there is no broadband Internet, DSL or cable, this may be the way to go. Call 290-0689 for more information.

Internet users can now make long distance telephone calls using Vonage. They offer an all-inclusive phone service that can bypass the Costa Rican phone system. You can use your existing high-speed Internet connection (broadband) instead of standard phone lines. You will also need a U.S. address to use this system. We know many people who use Vonage from here and are very satisfied. To find out more about their services see http://www.vonage.com.

Many private Internet companies offer private services such as hosting and Web design.

ICE plans to offer an international Internet phone service by the end of 2006.

For an hourly fee, you may send and receive mail and surf the Web at any of the many local Internet cafés. Internet café prices can range from anywhere from 200 colones ($0.40) to 470 colones ($0.90) per hour in the San José area to as much as 2.000 colones (US $3.90) at the beach.

Here is our friend Charles Mill's experience at a local Internet café: On my first two trips I used the Internet café. They are available almost everywhere. In Heredia you trip over them all the time. They are fast and very reasonable. The main issue that bothered me was that in some cafés the keyboards were dirty. You can find Internet café's for 150 to 500 colones ($0.30 to $1) or more per hour. Last year I was in Branson, Missouri and an Internet café was charging $6 per hour. In New York it can cost $12 per hour.

Many hotels now offer free Internet service to their clients, and some of them even have Hot Spots now if you are traveling with your laptop.

The Radiográfica office, in downtown San José, has computers you can use to surf the Web. They even have printers so you can download and print out information from the Web. The central post office in downtown San José offers several computers with Internet and email connection for about $1.50 per hour. Costa Rica's postal services hopes to have nearly 150 post offices branches online over the next few years.

You can pay bills online form here. There is no need to have the paper bill present; you only need to know the last day due and the appropriate account number and name for your bill so you can pay them on time online. IMHO at the Banco Nacional de Costa Rica has the easiest, most complete and best online bill pay here in Costa Rica.

You can have an electronic colón and U.S. dollar account on the same page and move funds from one to the other as needed. To pay private parties (such as your landlord) or companies not listed, you need to have their account number and account name, but you can transfer money to them online also within the same bank. They have promised interbank payments coming soon.

As for the U.S. side of online banking, you can use NetBank (http://www. netbank.com) and pay virtually anyone in the United States either through e-bills, if they are offered, or send them an electronically generated bank check directly. With a PayPal account, you can pay anyone that has an e-mail address anywhere in the world, with some political exceptions.

From "The New Golden Door to retirement and Living in Costa Rica" by Christopher Howard.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No part of this article may be reproduced without written permission of the authors and copyright owner.
 

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