Archive for the 'Computers Internet & Stuff' Category

BT Yahoo sucks!

‘fraid I have to confess… I’m one of those net-Luddites who’re still using dial-up to connect. But at least I have two separate isp accounts. Or I did!

My main one was with BT, principally cos I’ve got a BT phone line, so it made sense to have my internet access with them as well (or at least, I thought it did).

Well, everything worked fine until they hived off (or whatever they did) their internet division and created this weird entity named “BT Yahoo”.

First problem I noticed was with my webspace. It was still there sure enough. But could I access it? Could I hell. Everything was on-line, but I couldn’t upload, edit, delete, or anything (an’ I’m not really a novice at this sort of caper, so I’m pretty sure it wasn’t “user error”).
Normal ftp wouldn’t work. Ftp through the browser wouldn’t work. Ftp through Dreamweaver (the way I normally manage sites) wouldn’t work. Even trying to go through my own account page at BTinternet (latterly BT OpenWorld - before it became BT Yahoo) wouldn’t work.
So I gave up. Wasn’t too critical, cos I’ve got plenty of other stuff to be getting on with anyway.

Tried emailing BT, but to no avail. In fact, I didn’t even receive a response (or responses, cos I sent more than one email).

So I put the problem on the back burner.

Until yesterday.

Now let me explain that my second isp is the one I normally use to access the internet, reserving the BT account only for BT-related type stuff (like not managing the website I’ve got with them!).
So I disconnect from my default isp and dial up BT, only to be confronted with a page informing me there’s a problem with accessing the ‘net, and redirecting me to another page. Which link I dutifully click, taking me to a page that informs me BT Yahoo have had a problem collecting payment for my package and have therefore downgraded me to Pay As You Go. Which is very strange, cos I always pay quarterly in advance through my phone bill.
Anyway, I’m being redirected to yet another page, promising me the option to re-register for my package.
So once more I click the link… lo and behold, here comes a message saying I’m using the wrong browser and should upgrade to at least IE4!

Bloody cheek. Not only do they lie to me about my account status, they’re now telling me I’ve got to use some crappy Microsucks product instead of Firefox (and the latest stable version of Firefox at that)!!!

Obviously a phone call to BT’s in order.

Following morning (i.e., earlier today) I prepare to spend a coupla hours on the phone negotiating the ubiquitous automated answering system. Finally I get to speak to someone in BT accounts.
Before actually mentioning the problem I’ve encountered I talk them through my account, getting them to list the various items I’ve got on my quarterly bill; further getting them to confirm that I’m actually paying quarterly in advance for BT Surftime and BT Yahoo Internet Services. Yet further getting them to confirm that my account has always been paid in a timely manner, and that there are no outstanding amounts waiting for payment.
I then clarify for the very pleasant gal on the other end of the phone why I’m calling and, after a few seconds embarrassed silence from her end, there’s the open admission that clearly there’s been a mistake, and they offer to connect me to BT Yahoo straight away so that it can be sorted.

Preparing for another lengthy wait I’m pleasantly surprised to find myself, almost immediately, talking to someone whom I suspect was probably talking to me from India or somewhere.
Anyway, describing the problem (and having got this other person to admit there’s obviously been a screw-up), I’m then informed that what’s happened is that BT Yahoo have discontinued the Surftime package. “So how does that justify downgrading me to PAYG from a service I’ve already paid for in advance?” I ask, and “why wasn’t I at least notified?”.
(I forgot to point out that had this explanation been offered on the first error page I’d encountered on the web I’d have been in a far better mood than that generated by it being implied that I’d lost my service cos I owed them money… bloody cheek!)
Cleverly avoiding my questions, this remote telephonist offers to get the responsible department to re-activate some sort of service for me, and that they’ll phone me back.
“So do you mean I’ve got to sit here for the next couple of hours waiting for a phone call?” I ask, rather irately (silly me.. I’d been expecting that they could get the problem - i.e., their screw-up - sorted straight away, or at least within a few hours, without needing further input from me).
I’m told that the department in question will probably call me within the next two to three days.
“What?!” I yelp. “So what about the internet access that I’m not getting that I’ve already paid for in advance?”

By this time I’d just about had it with BT Yahoo. Which is what I told them. In no uncertain terms. Adding the rider that for the past coupla months I’ve been mulling over going broadband (true, absolutely true) and that BT would have been my preferred provider. Tough! I’ve just this minute signed up with my other provider, and BT Yahoo can get stuffed.

They’ve clearly got a lot to learn about customer relations.

Web Hosting

Over the past few weeks I’ve been giving a hand to some folks who’ve been setting up their own website.
As its a commercial venture the project is “time critical”; that shouldn’t really have been a problem - were it not for the fact that they’re not terribly website-savvy, and I’ve only come in toward the latter stages of getting it up and running.

So what do I find? A raft of different domain names pointing to various seemingly random webspaces hosted with different providers.

Tidying things up a bit, we finally achieve some sort of coherence and all that now really remains is to get some scripts up and running, configure a database, and then replace the interim pages with something half-way decent.

Along the way though I’ve learned a fairly important lesson - one that’s passed me by before, presumably cos I’ve been real lucky in previous experience of website hosting.
And the lesson is that the choice of website provider is crucial!

The service my mate went for is, to say the least, not particularly user-friendly. The control panel’s bare bordering on skeletal, there’s not much in the way of help files, and there’s a real scarcity of useful add-ons.

Which is why I’ve been prompted to write this present blurb, cos I’ve just now finished setting up the basics of this present website, hosted by Heart Internet. (Apparently, its the same guys that first set up WebFusion.)
I picked ‘em originally, purely by chance, cos I wanted some temporary freebie space to get the site up and running whilst I organised (and got the dosh together!) a domain name etc and sorted out a few ideas.
A quick scan of my fav search engine threw up their name as offering 100Mb webspace free, without ads, without popups - basically without any of the normal rubbish that accompanies freebie services.

Well, Ive now got my domain name through them, upgraded to their Pro hosting service, and have been fine-tuning things to just the way I want them.
The control panel’s a doddle to use; there’s scripts in plenty and they’re just too easy to get up and running; the service is fast (and I mean real fast; and the prices are genuinely very competitive.

So if you’re thinking websites, give these guys a try.


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