<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by offbutton</i>
Obviosusly mailing them is not regarded as contact
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I think this business of making you phone them to log a ticket is nonsense, I think it's just a way to lower the number of tickets they have to log for speed complaints.
I sent a mail to
[email protected] (after my support@ attempt vanished into the system, and then I read here it's defunct), stating basically that I'm having a speed problem, am getting between 20 and 40 kiloBITS/second since last night, and would like a ticket logged. The response:
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote">Please could you contact the call centre so that we can log a ticket for you in this regard we can be contacted on 0860 736 832
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I thought this was nonsense as I've never heard of an ISP that is unable to handle e-mail support. Seemed to me they're just trying to avoid opening a ticket. So I sent a reply saying, no, I see no reason why they cannot log a ticket based on the e-mail, and that everything they need to know is in the e-mail. Now, we all know they are having pretty widespread speed problems, that there is some problem, so the logical response would actually have been to start with a simple "we are having problems and are working on it, etc". But presumably they hoped that I'd be stupid enough to fall for thinking that the problem might be on my side. So they responded with, I kid you not:
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Please provide me with the following info?
Area/Address
>
Tower ID
>
Username
>
IMEI
>
Signal Strength Percentage
>
RSCP
>
ISCP
>
Interfacing Listing
(On Windows machine you get this by entering the following
command in a DOS prompt:
ipconfig /all)
>
And please do a speed test for
www.sentech.co.za/speedtest/display_speed.php and provide
us with that information, if possible, a screen dump?
Which contract did you sign? 128/256/512?
Please include you Cel number?
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I'm not sure how some of the above info can possibly be of help in resolving the problem. Especially when, as I know AND they must certainly know, the problem is with their network, and that my speeds had been mostly acceptable until yesterday. Now, obviously no non-computer-literate customer would ever be able to fulfil all of the above requests, so I honestly think that they were just hoping that I'd feel confused and go away, thus saving them from having to log another "speed issue" ticket (worried about lawsuits perhaps?). And to back up my theory, they had set the "reply address" of this message to the now defunct
[email protected] (!) Can you imagine? So if I, as an ordinary "naive customer" had replied, my reply would have vanished into the system, and my guess is that they hoped that by the time I realised that, that the tech guys would have fixed the problems.
I was pretty angry about all of the above, so I sent them a long reply stating basically (to summarise heavily) that (a) we "both know" the current speed problems are system-wide and not with me, (b) I think that sending me these mostly useless requests that only a reasonably technically literate person could fulfil just seem like an attempt to make me "go away" and see this as not worth the effort to pursue, (c) all I want is for them to admit they're having a technical problem and are working on it and (d) that I want a ticket. Then I mentioned that I noticed and knew that they had used an invalid reply address in their support communications with me (amazing! I don't think that that could have been an 'honest mistake') and that I don't think much of that, and then I proceeded to waste more of my time by giving them ALL of the above requested information anyway.
Finally they replied with:
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I have opened a service ticket for you regarding the speed issue, your service ticket number XXXX.
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Seems like they have a whole layered procedure and strategy in place to (a) try make complaining users "go away" (b) try shirk responsibility and (c) do anything to avoid opening a ticket.
Honestly, I was very happy with MyWireless when it first appeared, but now my patience is wearing thin. They could have made this much easier for everyone involved by just replying the first time with "we have opened a ticket" or "we know there is a problem and are working on it".