[colug-432] ISP Recommendation

Stephen P. Molnar s.molnar at sbcglobal.net
Fri Jan 16 20:16:31 EST 2015


Thank you for your rather sanctimonious lecture, but I don't see where it
answers my question.

Stephen P. Molnar, Ph.D.                                    Life is a fuzzy
set
Foundation for Chemistry                                   Stochastic and
multivariate
www.FoundationForChemistry.com
(614)312-7528 (c)
Skype:  smolnar1

-----Original Message-----
From: colug-432-bounces at colug.net [mailto:colug-432-bounces at colug.net] On
Behalf Of Tom Hanlon
Sent: Friday, January 16, 2015 1:59 PM
To: Central OH Linux User Group - 432xx
Subject: Re: [colug-432] ISP Recommendation

When we as members of a group of what I most likely correctly assume to be
highly literate, very intelligent people have trouble with "customer
service" over technical issues I pause with horror to think about the
struggle that the non-technical or the semi-literate face when dealing with
the same issues.

If you think we are angry when we often _know_ what the problem is and have
to convince the script reader on the other side to listen to us, those
without the power of knowledge or the literacy of tech.. they perhaps just
end up hurt and taken advantage of and feeling stupid.

At least we know they have a script, we know at least in theory how to
escalate, we understand structurally what these companies have done to
ignore the customers needs.  The semi-literate non technical masses, they
just end up losing time and money and money is something that they also most
likely have little of.

It is a personal issue, and a societal issue.



On Fri, Jan 16, 2015 at 11:54 AM, Rick Hornsby <richardjhornsby at gmail.com>
wrote:
>
>
> On Jan 16, 2015, at 09:36, Stephen P. Molnar <s.molnar at sbcglobal.net>
wrote:
>
> A tale of wor!
>
>
>
> I have been with AT&T as an ISP since 2003, 10 years with DSL and 3 
> years with Uverse.  Each year has required a new router.
>
>
> I lost service early Wednesday evening and immediatly called what they 
> non-laughingly call "Tech Service".
>
>
> ugh.
>
> I've mentioned Wide open west on this list before, but we had a great 
> experience with WOW in Columbus some years ago.  They were always 
> quick to help on the rare occasion something went wrong, and were 
> technically competent.  When we described a problem in technical 
> terms, they didn't treat us to the whole "here's how to first clear 
> your internet explorer cache" nonsense.  They sent a tech a couple of 
> times when needed without any argument and quickly.
>
> It was about 10 years ago (moved to another house which had no WoW 
> service), so YMMV today.
>
> After sorting out some initial issues with a "stolen pair", ATT 
> dry-loop DSL was reliable and a crapton more consistent than TW* 
> residential service ever was.  They were the worst, and support almost 
> entirely useless.  Then again, my experience in another state with ATT 
> DSL was that when it rained the interwebs quit working. They wouldn't 
> troubleshoot or fix it because it would never be raining when the tech
finally came out.
>
> * I know there's at least one TW biz class employee on this list who 
> in the past has been helpful in troubleshooting issues and providing good
advice.
> I had a co-worker up in Delaware who was happy w/ TW biz class service 
> at his house. He may have had an SLA, I don't recall.  However, the 
> residential class experience has always been awful and I'd only 
> recommend it as a last resort.
>
> Then again, you could always try this [awesome] lady's approach to get 
> ATT's attention -
>
> http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/10/17/AR2007
> 101702359.html
>
> -rj
>
>
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