Hard News: Because that's how I roll
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WH,
You know, I used the phrase "that's how I roll" just yesterday
Ditto that. My mother didn't know what the flip I was talking about. I ain't frontin', holmes. Word.
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I've given up on file sharing, since they seem to detect it and throttle it. Silly them, since it was my only reason to have a high cap in the first place. So I dropped the cap, and pay them bugger all now.
I ditched ihug for that very reason after 9 years of loyalty. I was paying for 60 gig download and they were throttling it in the name of "prioritising web browsing traffic". Which they weren't, they were killing my entire connection if I was doing any torrent downloads, and my browsing was slower than dialup.
My ambition of downloading the entire contents of legaltorrents.com in tatters, I ditched them in favour of Clear. Unlike ihug, they don't have a business model based on bait-and-switch, and charge me for what I use in 10 gig increments.
Which is probably why I won't get that new Vodafone phone "line" - I'll likely need to sign up to ihug to get DSL, which, in the Morningside, is reasonably performant*.
* if one can commit idiomicide, surely one can expound a not-yet-word ?
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I used to give a shit about my file sharing until I got MySky. Now there's always something good on TV, for that brief period when I can be arsed. So I'm happy to wait for mates who do still obsess about getting every last byte out of their ISP to just fill up some SD sticks for me. The backlog of watchingz* is getting out of hand.
*I feel that such idiomzzz are allowed to my race - pasty white man. But if I hear any gangsta using it, I'll get .... browned off? My rag on? Pinged up? Jeeez this idiom sensitivity is just too hard.
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Ihug:
And they were often a price leader and they were big on flat rate when it was a new idea here in NZ.
They invented flat rate here, and forced the rest of the market to follow them. The other big commercial ISPs in 1996 all wanted to charge $5 an hour, but they had to fold.
I had the odd run-in with Nick Wood back in the day (on one occasion receiving from him the most abusive email I've ever had) but he'll always have my respect for what he did.
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Re: the mocha situation in KC.
It's free, so get a cappucino and a hot chocolate plus one empty cup. Mix them up and bada-bam - two mochas. Free. Give the spare to a suit and see if it makes them smile. -
It's solid, if not stunning
I'm finding the announcement of Spoon pretty exciting - indie rock heaven! Was hanging out for a Jens Lekman announcement though, that would have been summer-tastic.
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Sara, that is genius. But you have to share a marshmallow?
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You only get one marshmallow with a hot choccie in Wellington? Come up to cosmopolitan Hamilton, you'll get two!
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Mate, in Auckland drinking a hot chocolate is heresy unless it comes with a chocolate marshmallow fish.
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I ditched ihug for that very reason after 9 years of loyalty. I was paying for 60 gig download and they were throttling it in the name of "prioritising web browsing traffic". Which they weren't, they were killing my entire connection if I was doing any torrent downloads, and my browsing was slower than dialup.
That's interesting, I've never had that problem with ihug. I torrent NHL games down and get roughly 30-40x dialup speeds. It probably could be faster, but taking 2-3 hours to download a 1GB file doesn't seem too bad to me.
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They invented flat rate here, and forced the rest of the market to follow them. The other big commercial ISPs in 1996 all wanted to charge $5 an hour, but they had to fold
1. I remember when Xtra controversally dropped their dial-up hourly rate from $5 to $2.50. Smaller ISPs couldn't compete and formed BOHICA (Boldly Opposed to Hositile Internet Corporate Activity), but didn't manage to stick it to the man.
2. I used to work at Ihug, and then I got a job at Xtra. Even though I had a free phone line and monthly $50 credit that I could spend on the Telecom services of my choosing, I still kept my Ihug flat-rate account because Xtra did not then offer flat-rate dial-up. One of my new workmates was astounded at my daring.
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then I got a job at Xtra. Even though I had a free phone line and monthly $50 credit that I could spend on the Telecom services of my choosing...
Having just signed a Telecom employment contract (for a very loosely affiliated business unit) I am eyeing this little clause up. How to spend? Upping the 3G cap on the free broadband plan? Or subsidising SKY? Wife's cellphone bill?
It's like a telco-loving accountants Christmas! Only I'm neither.
And the irony of having avoided any form of Telecom bill since I returned to NZ up to now hasn't escaped me... -
Yeah those workplace discounts can be a double edged sword. You wouldn't believe how much half-price MacDonalds I ate while I worked there. Put me off for life.
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Ben - ditto!
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I agree that Bill Ralston can write. I disapproved of him when he ran TVNZ News but find myself enjoying his columns and articles. He's a natural and I'm so glad the Listener has him and Linley (?) Boniface. I'm still seething about the Black page I'm afraid but I think the rest of the Listener is pretty damn good.
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Hey, I've just realized. I F&%*$#% roll! Why should I feel guilty for telling people how I do it???
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we determined that the DSL connection was faulty, and that the Wired Country was working perfectly, apart from it just not working.
I must admit to being a broadband problem virgin until recently. Very smug I was too. My xtra broadband was working beautifully - and then........ about 7 weeks ago, it all just turned to craq. Sometimes my modem lights would go blinkety blink blink like a cheshire cat on crack, sometimes they just stopped to smell the roses. I put up with it, and then finally rang Telecom. Who told me I had to do a 3 day speed test, even though it was probably my modem (a 302G) that was old, and defunct, and therefore most likely the culprit. Did the speedtest, sent it off. Got an email back assuring me that my connection speeds were completely normal and that - and I quote directly here - " It is important to know when you use the Internet you are sharing it with other users. As a result, the time it takes for your computer to receive or send information will be affected during busy periods."
The Internet is an international network so some of the factors that affect your overall broadband experience are outside our control. For example some websites limit the speed at which they send out information and sites that are further away (i.e. overseas) can be slower to download than sites hosted in New Zealand."
No shit, sherlock. After quite a long time being an online user, I think I might know that already. So I ring xtra helpdesk to tell them just how very patronising and offensive I find their email, (in Manila - ain't it grand?) and the very lovely man there said he would send me a new modem. And the point of the speed test would have been what, exactly? After years of being smug, now I am empathy personified.
I agree that Bill Ralston can write. I disapproved of him when he ran TVNZ News but find myself enjoying his columns and articles. He's a natural and I'm so glad the Listener has him and Linley (?) Boniface. I'm still seething about the Black page I'm afraid but I think the rest of the Listener is pretty damn good.
I loved that article, Maureen, such good writing. As for Joanne Black, I can't stand the sanctimonious tone she takes.
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Ihug:
They invented flat rate here, and forced the rest of the market to follow them. The other big commercial ISPs in 1996 all wanted to charge $5 an hour, but they had to fold.
damn straight. after my first $100 bill from some isp i immediately changed to ihug, and enjoyed the service for 2 or three years.
they also wisely put a rather busty young lady on the front counter for bill payment. geeks would line up down the block once a month to see her.
these days? the company is shit.
took me a month to even get broadband connected , i spoke to a number of people who outright lied about when i was getting my service, and when finally i did it started dropping to dial-up for days at a time.
naturally i was told it was "probably a problem at my end"
immediately changed to orcon and haven't had a problem since. same modems, same cables to same port on wall. same computer.
oh, except ihug still trying to charge me for services i'd cancelled.
COMPLETE. FUCKING. MUPPETS.
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oh, except ihug still trying to charge me for services i'd cancelled.
Ironically when I shifted my toll calls from Telecom to Ihug several years ago, Ihug sent the notification through to telecom that they were no longer my provider, and Telecom arranged for my calls to go through ihug with whatever they do.
For the next three months or so my toll calls got billed by both companies. It took several phone calls to both, and several grumpy phone calls from ihug to telecom before 1. it got sorted, and 2. Telecom agreed that I should get refunded for the 3 months of their bills that I had paid to avoid disconnection, for phone calls that I had already paid for through ihug.
I find regularly with ihug my broadband just loses its connection. For a while I was swapping to dialup, assuming that broadband was broken. I soon figured out that if I ran the test procedure on my D-Link broadband router, that flicked whatever switch needed to be flicked and it started working again. I still do it about every two weeks or so when I have problems.
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My xtra broadband was working beautifully - and then........ about 7 weeks ago, it all just turned to craq. Sometimes my modem lights would go blinkety blink blink like a cheshire cat on crack
A similar experience, same symptoms, in my case a technician called round and checked all the ADSL filters, his diagnoses was that it was a “filter” problem, exacerbated by the recent installation of SKY digital. He did things including replacing all the filters and the problem went away. I seem to recall a comment from the techie that this was the not the first SKY install resulting in ADSL connection problems that he had dealt with.
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I had one a couple of weeks ago, with a friend's mother who I set up with XTRA broadband. I made the shocking mistake of getting her a WIFI DSL router. Shocking not because it's crap technology, but because it gives XTRA so much more opportunity for muppet-outing. There's been at least 6 occasions when she's reached the end of her tether with their lame support and called me, and I've come over and fixed the problem in seconds, knowing full well if I was a technician at the ISP I could have done it remotely.
The last one was them saying that the router must be totally stuffed because they were getting a very poor signal, and that she'd have to get a new one. I came over and noticed the phone cord had become tangled around a power cord. Untangle, problem solved. Their techos can't engage in the most basic problem solving outside of their process script book. The number of times I solved MY customer's similar problems with a few minutes of being logical.
In their defense, though, I found it a lot longer a process when they had gear that someone else had supplied, or I had to deal with someone I didn't know. So I do have a lot of patience with them and sympathy for what is actually quite a hard job. I wonder if their service would improve hugely if you got allocated a support person with whom you developed a relationship.
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the phone cord had become tangled around a power cord
Doesn't that say something about the quality of technology that is ADSL? Not to mention the Sky issue, which I had and solved by unplugging my Sky box (with zero impact on the telly that came through it). My ADSL in an old house was crap because of old telco wiring.
As an intermediate technology I guess it's filling a gap, but are we going to get something more robust one day?
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Rich, it really is bizarre I agree. I wonder if we're going to leapfrog over fibre optic cables, since they'll be obsolete by the time Telecom ever get around to supplying them. Meanwhile DSL gets faster and faster, acting as a better and better stop gap. Surely there is a limit to how good it can get, though? Wireless options are getting better and better all the time. At some point they must break through the DSL pain barrier, and then goodbye Telecom. Not holding my breath, though.
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and my backup DSL connection working the way DSL connections so often work in Pt Chev: that being, not at all.
Whoa...I see your "roll" now seems to extend to the illustrious heights of Telecon.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10477862
Watch out world here comes RussB
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Hell, after a week, I'm still waiting for Telecom to enter my new landline onto their system, so I can get ihug to ask telecom to switch me to the adsl network. I fail to see why I have to act as a go between for them.
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