Juice
Expert Member
Thanks to all the people on this board who've pointed out the numerous problems with Telkom's ADSL service. I've compiled a list of reasons not to install ADSL. If I've missed any compelling reasons, please feel free to add them. Hopefully this will give some guidance to other people who are also thinking about applying for ADSL.
<u>The bandwidth cap</u>
Once you've sent and received a total of 3 Gigabytes of data on your ADSL connection, Telkom will switch you to a different network and throttle your international access. Despite the fact that the cap exists to protect South Africa's limited international bandwidth, both local and international traffic contribute to the cap. This is hardly fair. Telkom are seemingly unable (or unwilling) to monitor international bandwidth utilisation in isolation.
In addition to this Telkom are unable to accurately and consistently monitor your use of bandwidth.
<u>The lack of options</u>
Granted that the service is relatively new, but even the general unhappiness about Telkom's only ADSL offerring has done little to convince them to introduce other options, and soon. I'd like to see different pricing on different speeds, differentiation between local and international traffic, different capping options; in fact a wide variety of options on offer by ADSL service providers the world over.
<u>The port prioritisation</u>
I would like to be able to use my internet connection for whatever I want to use it for. Streaming video, streaming audio, http, smtp, ftp, telnet, peer to peer networking, internet gaming, et al. even if I don't actually use the various services all the time. I want to reserve the right to choose for myself what I want, when I want. I resent the fact that my right to choose has been taken away from me.
<u>The cost</u>
Almost in line with the lack of variety, the cost of the current offerring is just too much for me. R680 plus R250 for ADSL is a lot of money every month and then there's also the massive installation costs. I get good service out of my ISDN connection for substantially less. It would be nice to have an always on connection, but since I work away from home all day anyway, I'd be paying for something I'm not going to use when the benefit is greatest.
<u>The attitude</u>
This is more annoying than most of the reasons above. Telkom seems to view its dissatisfied ADSL clients as little more than unpleasant squishy bugs that splattered onto the windscreen of its monopoly. They meet with you only to treat you with scorn and disrespect and only to tell you why you're wrong and they are right. They refuse to listen and they refuse to change the thing that should be easiest to change: their attitude.
Juice
<u>The bandwidth cap</u>
Once you've sent and received a total of 3 Gigabytes of data on your ADSL connection, Telkom will switch you to a different network and throttle your international access. Despite the fact that the cap exists to protect South Africa's limited international bandwidth, both local and international traffic contribute to the cap. This is hardly fair. Telkom are seemingly unable (or unwilling) to monitor international bandwidth utilisation in isolation.
In addition to this Telkom are unable to accurately and consistently monitor your use of bandwidth.
<u>The lack of options</u>
Granted that the service is relatively new, but even the general unhappiness about Telkom's only ADSL offerring has done little to convince them to introduce other options, and soon. I'd like to see different pricing on different speeds, differentiation between local and international traffic, different capping options; in fact a wide variety of options on offer by ADSL service providers the world over.
<u>The port prioritisation</u>
I would like to be able to use my internet connection for whatever I want to use it for. Streaming video, streaming audio, http, smtp, ftp, telnet, peer to peer networking, internet gaming, et al. even if I don't actually use the various services all the time. I want to reserve the right to choose for myself what I want, when I want. I resent the fact that my right to choose has been taken away from me.
<u>The cost</u>
Almost in line with the lack of variety, the cost of the current offerring is just too much for me. R680 plus R250 for ADSL is a lot of money every month and then there's also the massive installation costs. I get good service out of my ISDN connection for substantially less. It would be nice to have an always on connection, but since I work away from home all day anyway, I'd be paying for something I'm not going to use when the benefit is greatest.
<u>The attitude</u>
This is more annoying than most of the reasons above. Telkom seems to view its dissatisfied ADSL clients as little more than unpleasant squishy bugs that splattered onto the windscreen of its monopoly. They meet with you only to treat you with scorn and disrespect and only to tell you why you're wrong and they are right. They refuse to listen and they refuse to change the thing that should be easiest to change: their attitude.
Juice