Sadly I am going as well

Started by gwidnet, May 02, 2012, 18:49:41

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gwidnet

Hi, I just wanted to say that sadly, after 6 years, I am just on the verge of signing with that evil conglomerate BT with their infinity package.

My exchange has just been enabled for fibre. Their unlimited package for £26 with no connection fee is too low to resist.
I feel a bit guilty as I have usually posted on here in not best humour when things have gone wrong, but I have really appreciated the support from Rik and Steve, Simon, and Glenn, and others, and the customer service has of course been better than fabulous.

Even today, a credit has appeared on my invoice for my next years subscription, due on the 8th of this month, which is totally unbelievable administration

I feel it's a bit of an unfair playing field for the small independent ISPs at the moment, and if idnet could come close I would unhesitatingly stay. I have always recommended idnet, always accepting I was paying a little extra for the premium service.

I never exceed my existing bandwidth, but the availability of sky anytime on any provider and the general trend towards streaming make the migration difficult to resist.

Rik - how do you help so many people and not appear on idnet's payroll?

Anyway I still haven't got a MAC number (after 28 hours cough cough), but unless a miracle happens, I will have to bid you all farewell
best ever speedtest 01 11 2011:

Simon

Good luck, and sorry to see you go, but you're always welcome here on the forum.  :thumb:
Simon.
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Glenn

As Simon says, no need to be a stranger.
Glenn
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Steve

Although forum members may not be a representative sample of IDNet's customer base, one can't fail to deduce that FTTC and a limited bandwidth allowance just don't fit comfortably together. I hope BT and Sky can cope with their 'everything you can eat' allowances otherwise there's going to be some unhappy customers on even longer long term contracts than BTw fibre. Good luck with BT lets us know how you get on!
Steve
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

gwidnet

Absolutely, as idnet has been my spiritual home since downloads were either 9.6 or 14.4 home I definitely will.
If BT don't deliver, I will be back to idnet and pay the premium
I wouldn't sign up with any other ISP as it stands.
best ever speedtest 01 11 2011:

Lance

If you've not got your mac soon I'd give support a prod. It's normally near instantaneous.
Lance
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Simon_idnet

Quote from: Lance on May 02, 2012, 22:15:52
If you've not got your mac soon I'd give support a prod. It's normally near instantaneous.

It can take a couple of days to get a MAC code for an LLU circuit (Telefonica).

Lance

Lance
_____

This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Gary

#8
Quote from: Steve on May 02, 2012, 19:38:15
Although forum members may not be a representative sample of IDNet's customer base, one can't fail to deduce that FTTC and a limited bandwidth allowance just don't fit comfortably together. I hope BT and Sky can cope with their 'everything you can eat' allowances otherwise there's going to be some unhappy customers on even longer long term contracts than BTw fibre. Good luck with BT lets us know how you get on!
Sky's LLU all you can eat seems to have good reviews, I think FTTC will work well too, its redefining how people use the net, mostly for high quality entertainment, Sky especially with anytime+ and iPlayer coming this year want people to have a seamless experience, even Apple TV now plays 1080P movies that's going to eat a hell of a lot of bandwidth. Reasonable off peak times are really needed too so you can use your monthly allowance. All you can eat if done well does allow that, Idnets model is pretty restrictive, I have 150GB off peak I never use really because Justina and I are not going to watch a film at 1am when we want to at say 7pm. I think more people will migrate from smaller ISP's as they cannot afford to offer the kind of packages people are going to need. Zen seem to be the next best bet for me, but when FTTC comes to my village if infinity/Sky are still performing well that would be the way to go, along with phone line because the packages they offer are such good value, and above all allow the use of the net for something more than browsing and email. Things are changing fast with online media and some companies are slipping behind.
Damned, if you do damned if you don't

Simon_idnet

There are two ways to build a network: to an acceptable performance target or to a price point. To hit a low price point the network operator has to fill the network with paying customers. BT Retail have sized their network and are now setting about filling it up. The other mass-market operators such as Sky are following suit by promising unlimited everything for too-good-to-be-true prices. That is a race to the bottom and IDNet firmly intends to maintain our goal of providing a high performance service. The only way that they can deliver the cheap service is to outsource support overseas, over-subscribe the network and use heavy traffic shaping. IDNet will do none of that.

The old maxim for ISPs is true: cheap, fast, reliable - pick any two!

Simon

Simon.
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

jezuk1

I would personally never touch an "all you can eat" service, even if it was FTTC. Just imagine all the people downloading 24/7 and over-contending the service. Ultimately you get what you pay for in my opinion. Quality of service day or night is most important to me and I'm prepared to pay extra for that!

pctech

You do get what you are prepared to pay for.


john

Quote from: jezuk1 on May 03, 2012, 12:52:16
.... Just imagine all the people downloading 24/7 and over-contending the service. Ultimately you get what you pay for in my opinion. Quality of service day or night is most important to me and I'm prepared to pay extra for that!

Whilst it's possible that everyone on the network could be downloading 24/7 it would be interesting to know just how many actually are. Quality of service during the night is not very important to me as I rarely use it and even when I do I'm usually only browsing the BBC News, checking my e-mails or catching up with the posts on Idnetters. What is important is any traffic management during peak hours that might affect how I'm using it. I'd be interested in watching films from Netflix or LoveFilm and listening to Internet Radio stations but would not be happy if Traffic Management caused them to buffer.

pctech

Traffic such as Netflix is suppoedly prioritised but when I was on a traffic managed ISP supposedly so were DNS lookups but in peak periods these would slow to a crawl too.


.Griff.

Quote from: jezuk1 on May 03, 2012, 12:52:16
I would personally never touch an "all you can eat" service, even if it was FTTC. Just imagine all the people downloading 24/7 and over-contending the service.

This isn't a criticism of IDNet in any way, merely an observation after my 18 months with them, but one of the problems with a "you can only eat so much" service is that as soon as "off peak" hours start then everyone starts their downloads at exactly the same time and as an ironic result the network becomes heavily contended for a few hours at least. This was demonstrated in my time with IDNet when as soon as the clock struck midnight my connection would slow and people all started their downloads the second peak hours stopped and off peak began.

At least with unrestricted services people don't stack up their downloads and all start them at the same time. I know there's lots of concern about BT, SKY, Virgin etc all filling their networks to capacity and certainly in the case of Virgin evidence of this is available but it's a little too soon to state it's going to happen as if it's a fact. It's more a concern that people should take into account when choosing an ISP.

Technical Ben

It's also not entirely the ISPs fault. If media industries were not so scared of "downloads" they could swap "streaming on demand" services over to reduce peak time bandwidth. If people could set up a list of movies to download before going to bed or work, they would be ready for them later. But "streaming on demand" means the entire network gets clogged up at 7pm when everyone sits down to watch a movie.  :slap:

Not sure how ISPs are suppose to support the business model the media giants are pushing. :(
I use to have a signature, then it all changed to chip and pin.

mervl

#17
As I see it the only point of the UK's competitive framework is to allow you to choose between competing marketing packages, as it's always the same BTOR local loop and, with two exceptions, the same BTw links back from the exchange to the PoP. For most people, and most of the time, the network isn't an issue. So if you don't like your ISP package offer you move, that's the way the system works. It's called competition and it's about time we were used to it. Too much of the modern western world, in my view, is made up of (the adult) babies screaming out to be fed (by someone else, always). Don't blame IDNet or shed crocodile tears.

Some of us (unbelievably to some people, no doubt) don't find it the end of the world to modify our habits to make the best of what we've got. It's old-fashioned economising (or sustainability in modern mumbo-jumbo) and it's good for the soul, and the planet. I appreciate IDNet's sticking to their principles and concentrating their attention on those matters I can't control namely their own part of the network and QoS, and I'm quite happy and capable of doing my part and managing my side of the equation which is my consumption. I never find slowdowns at the start, end or during off-peak hours, nor am I so addicted that  I have to download for the sake of it, but then I think perhaps I live on a different (but happier) planet :P! I'm really happy I don't have to deal with some of these miseries on the roads or in any queue, where it must be intolerable for them to deal with speed limits or not to have their every desire fulfilled instantly!!

Technical Ben

True. But you can also manage your provider, and swap to one that offers the GBs you want. ;)
I use to have a signature, then it all changed to chip and pin.

pctech

At the time I was with a traffic managed service owned by BT my line was running about 1.9 MB and at peak times the connection became unusable thanks to the traffic management even for basic browsing, I kept getting fobbed off by being told 'it was my line'.

Shorly before I left as a test I switched to their pro package (no traffic management) voila! the slowdowns disappeared.

By this time I'd had it with their lies so moved to a provider that had no traffic management at all.


Technical Ben

Same here. Although with O2. Even their near perfect 5 year record in serving me on the mobile did not keep my custom when they started fobbing me off.
I guess it's the only thing keeping me here. Although I've now stopped playing online games. So I've got less reasons to need the higher ping times and consistent speeds.  :po:
I use to have a signature, then it all changed to chip and pin.

pctech

I've been with O2's mobile phone service on and off for about 6 years now, mainly because they seem to give the best coverage round here.

Whenever I've contacted them the customer service has been superb.

I did try their ADSL a few years back and the connection frequently resynched, I qeried this with them and all they wanted to do was send a BT engineer round, no other diagnostics from their end.


Gary

There was me thinking idnet outsourced its out of hours service, which is why people complain about it  ;) Users will choose what's best for their needs, my usage pattern is changing and I may need at a point to go with a product without the peak/off peak restrictions Idnet has, I have anytime+ and to make use of that I need to watch a TV show or film after midnight same problem using Netflix/Lovefilm. It's a real pain.
Damned, if you do damned if you don't

Gary

Quote from: Technical Ben on May 03, 2012, 14:52:07
It's also not entirely the ISPs fault. If media industries were not so scared of "downloads" they could swap "streaming on demand" services over to reduce peak time bandwidth. If people could set up a list of movies to download before going to bed or work, they would be ready for them later. But "streaming on demand" means the entire network gets clogged up at 7pm when everyone sits down to watch a movie.  :slap:

Not sure how ISPs are suppose to support the business model the media giants are pushing. :(
I agree, if I could choose a weeks worth of say films and back catalogue TV and plan it out over seven days and record after midnight that would be great, but people want to be able to just use it there and then, not plan it. This kind of media is not planned usage its a off the cuff moment 'lets watch a film' or 'I really liked that show, I'll watch some old episodes' planning that doesn't work but being able to just press a button and watch it on whim is what most people want. It is going to cause problems, but Sky seemed to manage for a few years on LLU doing that and people were happy, maybe because they knew nothing better was out there, or maybe because the difference isn't that huge after all and we just assume it is.  :-\
Damned, if you do damned if you don't

Technical Ben

BBC iplayer does allow you to do that to some degree. But even that does not allow an entire series download.
I agree it's not a complete solution Gary, but it would help. They could even add the option to their download services! IE, Series link that downloads at 7 in the morning so when you get up/back from work it's waiting on the pc.
Even Spotify could cache some songs to play later in the day. But noooooooo... it has to be streamed.  :slap:
I use to have a signature, then it all changed to chip and pin.