Omega Owners Forum
Chat Area => General Discussion Area => Topic started by: deviator on 27 July 2015, 09:48:31
-
...I had an email over the weekend, the line rental is going up £1 per month. This means the early exit clause is active.
I have just phoned them and after a 10 minute wait, they just didn't seem to care. They confirmed 30 days for me to move away, NOT the 14 days the email suggests TUT TUT BT.
-
A very complacent company BT, always have been, the sooner they relies theres other completion out there the better, how long has it been now since they lost the monopoly. ::)
-
The problem BT has is regulation. I'm sure BT would love to be able to offer phone line deals in the same way as the likes of Sky and the Whorehouse. But that wonderful idea of a regulator in this case stifles any decent competition, and prevents lower prices for consumers. Sadly.
I also suspect, right now, BT is busy trying to increase effective competition, to reduce its monopolistic hold, so the regulator allows certain things to happen in the next 9 months ;)
-
All noise seems to point that way, or should I say the noise Iam hearing is to try and make it appear that other companies have enough of a competitive edge for BT to be split in two. The spin being peddled onthe R4 show (money show I think) last week was hilarious! ;D
In the end the only way we will get a full and fair market is for this to happen The BTs CEO can stop whinging about other companies not spending tax-payer funded grants investing in the infrastructure.
-
In the end the only way we will get a full and fair market is for this to happen The BTs CEO can stop whinging about other companies not spending tax-payer funded grants investing in the infrastructure.
I fear the opposite. Would Openreach rest on their laurels without BT Retail (via the head honcho) snapping at their heals?
We enjoy the best and cheapest broadband in Europe, and there is absolutely nobody else to effectively challenge OR. Its doubtful if we'd get BT's tweaked version of g.fast in a hurry (in fact, probably just bog standard g.fast at best), and 1Gbps will (relatively) soon be available to anyone that wants it.
I should add, I am not a BT customer, but both phone and broadband run over OR products.
-
Be careful of what you wish for.
Looking back we had BT broken up because it was a monopoly. Now they are fighting back and hey "we" the people want them broken up. Why? so Sky can become even more dominant and then ramp the prices up.? Buy shares in Sky..
Personally I think BT has done pretty well with its hands tied year after year. I am trying to Skype someone on copper broadband in Perth Australia. They have a couple of Meg down and about 30k up. Ha.
-
...I had an email over the weekend, the line rental is going up £1 per month. This means the early exit clause is active.
I have just phoned them and after a 10 minute wait, they just didn't seem to care. They confirmed 30 days for me to move away, NOT the 14 days the email suggests TUT TUT BT.
I wasn't 100% sure it was a genuine email, get a lot of dodgy emails purporting to be from BT, as I was not named in it. As it did not ask for any details, and having seen this on here I am guessing it was genuine............ :)
-
Also Plus Net who are part of B.T, are increasing their line rental to £16.95 a month and 24/7 calls from £5 to £6 per month,,,again 30 day opt out applies........Its a well known fact that the increase is because B.T..have bought the television rights for the top notch foot ball matches (which i do not watch ).....on B.T sport......All those who have B.T,sport are very happy about that,,,but come on wake up..you are paying for it ??? ???
-
In the end the only way we will get a full and fair market is for this to happen The BTs CEO can stop whinging about other companies not spending tax-payer funded grants investing in the infrastructure.
I fear the opposite. Would Openreach rest on their laurels without BT Retail (via the head honcho) snapping at their heals?
That's why a full and complete break would be the only option. Enforced, of course, by OFCOM..... oh wait.... ::)
-
That's why a full and complete break would be the only option. Enforced, of course, by OFCOM..... oh wait.... ::)
OFCOM actually DO something? ... (https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/26795734/Smilies/rofl.gif)
-
That's why a full and complete break would be the only option. Enforced, of course, by OFCOM..... oh wait.... ::)
OFCOM actually DO something? ... (https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/26795734/Smilies/rofl.gif)
Only if you are a small business without the means to fight back :-X
-
Its a well known fact that the increase is because B.T..have bought the television rights for the top notch foot ball matches
Is it? I know suspect that is pure speculation ;)
-
Also Plus Net who are part of B.T, are increasing their line rental to £16.95 a month and 24/7 calls from £5 to £6 per month,,,again 30 day opt out applies........Its a well known fact that the increase is because B.T..have bought the television rights for the top notch foot ball matches (which i do not watch ).....on B.T sport......All those who have B.T,sport are very happy about that,,,but come on wake up..you are paying for it ??? ???
If you took BT Sports as a free add-on to your package, then you are paying for it NOW! I had an email a month ago saying they were introducing charges for BT Sports £5.99 I think and I had OPT OUT. I raised a complaint about that, but it fell on death ears (irony).
-
Also Plus Net who are part of B.T, are increasing their line rental to £16.95 a month and 24/7 calls from £5 to £6 per month,,,again 30 day opt out applies........Its a well known fact that the increase is because B.T..have bought the television rights for the top notch foot ball matches (which i do not watch ).....on B.T sport......All those who have B.T,sport are very happy about that,,,but come on wake up..you are paying for it ??? ???
If you took BT Sports as a free add-on to your package, then you are paying for it NOW! I had an email a month ago saying they were introducing charges for BT Sports £5.99 I think and I had OPT OUT. I raised a complaint about that, but it fell on death ears (irony).
BT , in keeping with many other top notch firms, employ very good marketing guys. They rely on inertia and tie ins to keep customers. No doubt it was in the small print when you , in this case, took on the free BT Sports. They would argue it is such a good product that they would be surprised if anyone was bothered about paying £6 a month.
I smile about all the cheap broadband offers. 300nano bytes only £8 month and then buried in the small print is 2 year contract and second year is a much higher fee. Excellent marks for the Marketing guys.
-
I turned around to the guy on the phone and said, "If I write you a letter saying that if you do not reply within 7 days you owe me a million pounds. What would the chances of me getting that million pounds from you? So why are you doing this to your customers?"
-
I turned around to the guy on the phone and said, "If I write you a letter saying that if you do not reply within 7 days you owe me a million pounds. What would the chances of me getting that million pounds from you? So why are you doing this to your customers?"
Zero. As that's not in any contract ;)
BT, like any provider, is able to raise its prices (or has to in many cases, as OFCOM says so) within a defined range. The trouble is, hardly anybody offers a cheaper phone line service. And here's the shock, that's because its a shrinking market with little profit in it, so nobody is entering it. Those that are generally use restrictive practices to make money, as any Whorehouse customer will explain.
-
The real battleground is going to be video / tv on demand down your phone line with maybe Wimax etc. This is what Sky and BT are both gearing up for. There will also be other big players from the US including Apple, Google, Amazon and Microsoft. What shape and form the traditional terrestrial broadcasters will be in, in 10 years time is anybodies guess.
The big change is that content and the successful providers of this will make large amounts of money, which is why Sky have been ramping up the quantity of TV programs they make.