Managing an Internet Service Provider (ISP) operation requires a level of administrative and logistical discipline that standard spreadsheets fundamentally lack. When a new user registers for service, relying on verbal agreements or fragmented paper forms leads to untraceable company assets and unverified identities. If a customer cancels their subscription but the exact "WiFi Router", "ONU", and "Cable" serial numbers aren't logged against their "User ID", the company faces immediate hardware shrinkage. This Memento system acts as a rigid, digital onboarding ledger, forcing every subscriber into a standardized, legally defensible profile.
The Identity and Demographic Baseline
A secure ISP operation begins with the unambiguous identification of the subscriber. The database begins by enforcing a strict demographic and legal audit.
It requires the "User Name" and a mandatory "user image" to anchor the digital record to a physical reality. The system demands deep personal vitals—including "Fathers Name", "Mothers Name", and "Date of Birth"—paired with both a "Present" and "Parmanent" address. Crucially, the template requires a formal "Photo ID Type" (NID, Passport, or Birth Certificate) and provides dedicated fields for high-resolution images of the "Photo ID Front" and "back", ensuring that the company has an unassailable record of the customer's legal identity.
Connection and Asset Logistics
The core power of this terminal is its ability to manage the physical hardware deployed in the field. It transforms a simple registration into a rigid inventory audit.
The system requires the classification of the "Connection Type"—differentiating between "Optical Fiber", "CAT 6", "CAT 5", or "WIRELESS". It then forces a mandatory check of all "69 SYSTEMS PROPERTY" assigned to the user, from "WiFi Router with power adapter" to specialized components like "ONU" and "TJ box". By requiring a "Product Image" for every installation, the ISP ensures that the physical state of the hardware is documented at the moment of "Connection Date & Time", protecting the company from future disputes over missing or damaged equipment.
Financial and Legal Enforcement
The final phase of the registration manages the economic and contractual reality of the service. It bridges the gap between technical setup and recurring revenue.
The template locks the financial parameters via the "Profile" (e.g., 500 TK, 800 TK) and the exact "Mothly Charge" in BDT. It incorporates a comprehensive "Conditions" module, forcing the user to accept strict terms regarding bill payment deadlines (by the 7th of the month), cancellation notices (by the 25th), and legal liability for illicit internet use. The entire record is closed with a mandatory digital "signature", transforming the registration into a binding contract that is both efficient and legally sound.