Tuesday, March 31, 2009

AT&TU-verse: The Final (fingers crossed) Episode


Today at 12:45 pm Randy, The AT&T U-verse installer rang my doorbell. He was smart, efficient and friendly-everything one wants from a service provider. After testing the interior phone lines Randy went up the street to make the necessary configuration changes in the central phone 'closet.'

Five minutes later my cell phone rings. It is yet another disembodied AT&T voice informing me that my order could not be completed and that I would have to call back to reschedule my installation. I looked down at the various pieces of installation equipment still hooked up to my phone line and decided that Randy would most likely not be recalled to the mother ship without the gear.

Sure enough, a short while later Randy was back installing the new junction box in my basement and then hooking up the new router/modem.

The new U-verse internet works flawlessly right at the advertised 6Mbps that I signed up for. The wifi signal is much stronger than the previous system allowing us to dispose of the 'extender' that we used previously in an attempt to reach the various rooms.

If any of you who have followed this thread are still thinking about AT&T U-verse service, here is my 2¢:

The internet service, 6Mbps at $35/month is excellent.

Randy, the installer, is brilliant and probably underpaid. He should be made CEO.

AT&T U-verse sales is a nightmare to deal with. There are not enough epithets to describe the depths of their incompetence. You better have plenty of alcohol and/or slightly expired prescription painkillers on hand. A really good sense of gallows humor helps.

Steve

Monday, March 30, 2009

Before AT&T U-verse stands a doorkeeper...


To this doorkeeper comes a man from the country and prays for admittance. But the doorkeeper says he can not grant admittance at the moment. The man thinks it over and then asks if he will be allowed in later. "It is possible," says the doorkeeper, "but not at the moment."

Sunday - I ordered U-verse internet service on-line after having a dedicated, grounded electric circuit installed (old house, old wiring) and scheduled an appointment, or so I thought, for Monday afternoon. Sunday evening I get voicemail that my service will in fact not be installed on Monday and that I have to call back to reschedule.

Monday morning - Spoke with a decidedly unhelpful person at AT&T U-verse who informed me that I could not schedule an appointment until I had cancelled my AT&T DSL service. When I asked how I was supposed to cancel my internet service without knowing when I might get an appointment for the new service, I was told that that was what the supervisor had insisted upon. After the futile attempt trying to point out the absurdity of having to blindly cancel my AT&T DSL in an attempt to schedule installation of AT&T U-verse internet service I gave up on that particular conversation.

Later Monday - Called back and got a much more helpful person who spent several minutes reading up on the case. I was finally told that 'the system' had two orders in it for me and that the two orders had cancelled each other out. Whether this was similar to algebraic cancellation or like matter and antimatter annihilating themselves was unclear. In either case I would have to start all over again in ordering service on-line since it was impossible for AT&T U-verse customer assistance to process an internet-service-only order over the phone.

A little later Monday - I received a call from U-verse customer service telling me that I could in fact resolve my ordering issues over the phone. Overjoyed, I began the process of confirming phone number, address, date of birth, mother's maiden name, blood type, religious affiliation and so forth. Suddenly, it dawned on the customer service rep that the land line to the house, on which we were currently speaking, was registered in my girlfriend's name. I was told that only she could order the service change even though I had created the original order. When I pointed out that as a school teacher my girlfriend could not just take time to call AT&T customer service and hash-out an order that I had already created, the AT&T service window was once again slammed in my face.

Currently - Feeling mentally bruised from my dealings with AT&T U-verse, I am going to the Comcast web site to see if they might grant me faster internet service...

As someone else pointed out: You can always debase yourself to the fool's level - but he will beat you with experience every time.