
OutlawNet ponders expansion
By Jo Zucker
OutlawNet, the local Internet service provider based at Sisters Middle/High
School, may invest in new hardware which would enable the company to expand
to include a substantial number of new customers.
Leslie Bushnell, who administers OutlawNet, said the expansion would
occur only if the company can c ontinue to provide the same level of
service.
She said that OutlawNet's below-10-to-1 customer-modem ratio is the best
in Central Oregon, and the company enjoys a high level of customer satisfaction.
OutlawNet began operating in spring of 1996. The company is staffed and
run by students and administered by faculty and adult supervisors. OutlawNet's
founding purpose was to provide high school students with Internet, computer
and business experience.
The private company will also provide the new middle school with access
ports free of charge.
In addition to using the computers and the Internet, students put together
new computers and repair broken ones. If the students work on the computer
during class, there is no charge for the repair. The outside-class repair
fee is $45 per hour.
Students set up new accounts, and perform customer service.
"The students take this experience out to real jobs - employers
like that" said Bushnell.
And, because OutlawNet is a relatively new business, "The students
experience all the pangs a business goes through when it is first starting,"
she said.
In addition to business experience, students apply algebra and trigonometry
while solving computer problems.
OutlawNet's president and instructor, Jon Renner, said he generally begins
the class with basic electronic training, and so far this year has also
covered basic chemistry and physics.
Technical terms like "phase-shift," "frequency,"
and "bits per second" become part of an OutlawNetter's working
vocabulary.
OutlawNet has met its original goal, which was to break-even financially
by January of this year. Since then it has continued to grow. At a recent
board meeting, members discussed whether, and to what extent, OutlawNet
should develop further as a business.
Presently serving somewhere under 300 customers, OutlawNet needs new
hardware and modems if it is to take the step of becoming a significantly
larger outfit.
"If you grow too fast, it is hard to continue to provide a high
level of service," Bushnell said. "And all decisions are based
on our goal of providing learning experiences to the students."
Renner is grateful to the Sisters businesses that have supported OutlawNet.
"The success of this endeavor has been, to a large extent, due to
support from the community," Renner said. "For the businesses
who use our services to trust us is an act of faith and a show of support
for the schools."
The most popular Internet package offers 30 hours of dial-up access per
month, and costs $20 per month. A program for families of Sisters School
District students (K-12) allows the user unlimited dial-up access for $20
per month.
For more information contact Leslie Bushnell at 549-1054. |