I was thinking of contacting Jazztel HQ in London to inform them of the situation with ?normal customers? on the ground here. What do you think?
It will be interesting to see if they respond!
Basically I think all ISP’s are essentially the same. Draw the customer in with spectacular advertising promising something that they can only supply to about 5% of their customer base, hoping that they wont read the small print. Once they have got you ensnared they really don’t give a rats ass…
Telefonica have sub-contracted a lot of their installation and maintenance to third party companies; this has an impact on Jazztel customers who rely on T’fonica’s infrastructure. Where we live, the engineers don’t even bother coming to the house anymore; they know our system is clean; they go straight to the switching centre in the village and do whatever is necessary. It invariably brings in a new IP address. The repaired system then performs well for about 3 weeks the we have to call them again, same snag, low speed.
To be fair, the infrastructure maybe be sagging under the load, but T’fonica have always respond positively to our complaints. We gave up calling their ADSL helpline because they do not offer an English speaking service (not that I would expect them to; this is Spain after all). We email the central customer services centre. I normally make out the complaint in Notepad or Word, giving details of our phone number our contracted service and details of the fault, then run it through Google translate into Spanish Then I put the Spanish and English versions into the email. Sometimes I get a response in English, sometimes in Spanish but I always get a response. Invariably they pass on details to the Technical Dept and they in turn pass it on to the maintenance company.
One thing I note with interest; the other people in your block that have moved away from Jazztel might just have freed up some bandwidth at the local Central maybe your speeds have improved slightly?
One thing you could do as an experiment. Have you tried resetting your router? Not by just switching it off and back on again but by using the reset button on the unit? You could try that and see if you get an improvement. Note that if you do try this, if you are using XP you will have to reboot your computer because its unlikely that the computer will find the changed IP if you reset it with the computer switched on. If you are running Vista or W7 a reboot shouldn’t be necessary.
For XP…switch off the computer. With the router switched on depress the reset button for about 20 seconds then release it. The router will then resynch itself. After resetting, switch the computer back on and let it do its start up thing. it should find the new IP addy.
hope all improves…
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