By Guest Blogger Lily Gayle
I love gadgets and technology. I don't always understand how they work, but I've always had a knack for electronics. My husband gets flustered trying to install a DVD player. Not me. I love the challenge.
When I tired of high phone bills, I
switched to internet phone. When my internet provider sold out to another
company and the server kept going down, I disconnected my DSL. I set up a Gmail account and got a hotspot for the internet. I just added a clip-on
wireless router the size of a cigarette lighter to my desktop monitor and
plugged it in with a cord. Then I plugged the hotspot in and placed it in a
central room of the house. Ta-da! Internet for everyone and no modem!
Then I got get rid of my internet home
phone. The only people calling on that line were telemarketers and politicians,
and my friends and family used my cell phone. Now, I have fewer bills and fewer cables
connecting all that technology together. And connecting everything was simple
enough, given good instructions. But I soon learned, electronics can be much
more complicated. Sometimes, technology bites!
My parents are 75 and 78, but they try
to stay current with the latest technology. They both have their own computers,
email addresses and Facebook pages, but they live in the boonies so their
choices of internet providers is limited.
A few years ago, they upgraded from
dial up to satellite internet through their satellite television provider. The
company set them up and my dad figured out how to set up a wireless network.
Then a week or so ago, a telemarketer called my mother on her land line and
convinced her she could save money by bundling her internet with internet phone
service. She did the math and figured she could save $10/month.
The company guaranteed she could keep
her phone number and email address. They came out to the house, installed the
new internet dish next to the old internet dish, and showed my parents how fast
their service was. My parents were pleased so they agreed to cancel their old
internet service when the tech suggested it. They didn't want two internet
bills. Then the tech dismounted the old dish from the roof and my mother no
longer had access to her email account. The tech told her she could still use
her Gmail account. But my mother didn't have one. They also didn't have the
internet phone, but the service tech promised the box would arrive in the mail
and all they'd have to do was plug it in. Yeah. Right!
The box barely came with instructions.
So, when I brought my mom home after her cataract surgery Wednesday, my dad asked if
I'd hook up the internet phone box as it
required hooking up cables under his desk and he's 78 with a recent hip
replacement and a bad knee. No problem.
Or so I thought.
When I had Vonage, it was just a
matter of running cables and turning things on. Vonage took care of the
registration and porting my phone number. Not so with this company. After
hooking up the box, the customer has to log in to the website and handle the
registration and porting. I followed all the instructions and hooked up the
cables but when I logged on to the website, it kept kicking me out and not
letting me log back in. When I finally managed to log onto the site long enough
to register the pone, I got an error message. So, I called the company. Five
hours and three service techs later, I still couldn't register the phone and
the service techs had no idea what was wrong. They said it was a
"bad" box but they still wouldn't send a tech out. They told me
they'd call me Friday and let an advanced tech walk me through the process
again.
"If it's a bad box, why not just
send a new one?" I asked.
They couldn't do that until an
advanced tech went through some tests on their end. Why they couldn't run those
tests that night, I'll never know. But their responses and answers to questions
bugged me. Something didn't add up. The way they told me to hook up the cables
prevented anything from working. The way I had hooked them up gave my parents
internet, but no phone. There had to be
a problem with the cables not the box.
So, the next day after work, I drove
the 45 minutes to my parent's home with a box of old portable phones and cables
I'd used when I had internet phone service. I hooked everything up and ta-da!
It looked as if everything was going to work. I was even able to get back on to
the website and register their information. But I still didn't have a dial tone
and I still needed to transfer their existing phone number. So, I called tech
support. Again.
Nothing they suggested worked. During
all the redundant things they asked me to re-do, such as resetting the IP
address and rebooting the computer, their website went down. This had happened
the night before too and they claimed my computer wasn't hooked up correctly,
even though I hadn't changed the connections and had just been on their website
a couple of hours earlier.
One tech told me I could only log in
using Internet Explorer. One told me I could only log in using their service
provider's email address. One told me I had to reroute the wires so the
internet cable connected directly to the phone box in order to access their
website. In a nutshell, no one knew what they were doing!
I finally got connected to a tech
supporter with some sense. We got everything working again, but the phone still
didn't have a dial tone. He said the box was bad and they'd send out a new one.
When I asked if he could send a technician to hook the box up for them this
time, he said, "No. None of our service techs are trained to install the
phones."
"WHAT?!" I shouted over the
phone. "You have service technicians who need training before they can
connect the internet phone box and yet you expect a 75 and 78-year-old
geriatric couple to crawl around under the desk and connect the wires?"
I was livid. Even if my mom wanted to
go back to the previous company, the dish has been taken down and she'd have to
pay another installation charge and probably sign a new contract. She still has
her land line, but that's double what the internet phone would be if we could
ever get it connected.
As for the new internet provider, they
are double the cost of the previous provider. My mother's savings were to be on
the phone service, which we can't seem to get connected. So, now, my parents
are stuck paying the higher phone bill and the higher internet bill until we
can get some resolution on this internet phone line. They are NOT saving money!
In the meantime, I have retrieved most
of my mother's email addresses and I've gotten her back on Facebook. The tech
support guy promised to call me today
and let me know if my parents need a new box or if I need to go back out there
and change some wires or settings on the computer. And that's when I went into
bitch mode. I managed to get the company to postpone charging them for the
phone service until it's actually working and I got them to extend the
introductory pricing offer for an additional three months. And apparently, they
expedited shipping on that new phone box. The company didn't call me today as
promised, but my mother just called to let me know that Fed Ex had delivered
the new box. Looks like I'll be
playing internet Geek again as the company still won't send out a technician to
connect the phone. They did, however, promise to walk me through the connection
process over the phone. Now, I just have to find time to get back out there.
Yep. I think I'm keeping my hotspot
and cell phone. No matter where I go, I can take it with me. And I don't have
to deal with installation or poorly trained technical support!
Lilly Gayle is a wife, mother of two
grown daughters, and a breast cancer survivor. She lives in North Carolina with
her husband and little dog, T.T. When not working as an x-ray technologist and
mammographer, Lilly writes paranormal and historical romances.
Over the years, she's convinced her
family to take side trips to museums and historic sites while on vacation. Her
daughters never complained—to her face—and thankfully, her husband enjoys those
same activities. However, he doesn't seem to enjoy science fiction and the
paranormal as much as Lilly would like.
Lilly grew up watching western, science
fiction, and paranormal movies and television with her father. Her mother and
both grandmothers taught her a love and respect for history, and she credits
her love for reading and passion for writing to three wonderful teachers.
5 comments:
Oh good grief! I'm sorry your parents are going through this and you too! How frustrating. I have a private internet service because my satellite company charged way too much for iffy internet where we live.
I hope you get it sorted out and working right soon, Lilly.
I still cannot believe this story. Honestly, I don't know how you didn't end up taking a ball bat, hunting down every worker at that internet company and going completely postal! Man! What just blows. I really, really hope everything gets worked out. At the very least, they should give your parents a month free, in my opinion. Hang tight, Lilly! I'll be thinking of you!
The worst part about this story is that the supposedly cheaper bundle package charges my parents 9.99/month to rent the equipment and another 11.95/month for express repair service. I laughed my ass off over that one--and not a funny-haha laugh. Express? I asked the customer support person. What's express about ME having to set up YOUR equipment? If I can't get the phone working with the box they sent today, it's going to be "on" for sure!
My mother lives in podunk nowhere. It's lovely out there, but options for internet are very slim as well. Thank goodness my husband is a systems administrator. Yeah, he's a computer geek for a living, and it's wonderful. Still, the companies are maddening and do take advantage of anyone they can.
Companies like that should be held accountable for false advertising.
Marci
Wow. Sounds like my fiasco with Rogers and trying to get them to only charge me for services I actually signed up for, and use, instead of every godforsaken thing that think they can tack onto my bill without me noticing. So far, over he past two months (each time I get a bill) I have spent a total of about five hours on the phone with them. I'd say at least 2/3 of tat time was on hold. Jerkfaces....
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