Posted on 12/08/2001 6:59:37 PM PST by LibWhacker
Dec. 8 Angry subscribers are deluging AT&Ts customer service centers with complaints, griping that their high-speed cable modems are worth little more than pokey, antiquated dial-up modems. Others say that they can access only a limited number of Web sites, and some say they have no service whatsoever.
ACCORDING TO SCORES of CNET News.com readers, connections to the AT&T Broadband Internet network allow users to receive only 128 kilobits of data per second from the Internet to their computer. Thats about twice as fast as the theoretical maximum speed of a conventional dial-up modem, and its a far cry from the 1.5 megabits of data that AT&T touts that its blazing fast network supports.
Former Excite@Home customer Keith Cronin says he rarely downloads MP3 music files or other bandwidth-intensive applications, but he can already feel the slower AT&T connection to his home computer in Pittsburgh. Earlier this week, he tried to download a file that he said would have taken 10 minutes on the Excite@Home network, but the AT&T network churned for almost an hour to complete the process.
The broad in broadband is shrinking dramatically, while the bite in my wallet is increasing, said Cronin, who relies on his $45.95 per month connection for Web surfing, gaming and instant messaging. He also buys cable TV and a cable phone from AT&T, and the Excite@Home migration fiasco has caused him to reconsider.
I am just about to tell AT&T where they can shove their cable modem, their Platinum Package Digital Cable I fork over $80 per month for and their cable phone I shell out $45 per month for, Cronin said. I expect better from a company I invest a great deal of my monthly bill money into.
Some AT&T Broadband Internet customers say theyd love to swap modem problems with Cronin and other users complaining about slow connections. Pockets of users in Colorado and Pennsylvania have no connection at all.
They say that customer service agents have told them that service will be restored Sunday at the earliest, but it could take weeks longer.
AT&T Broadband Internet, the Englewood, Colo.-based division of the telecommunications giant, admits that technicians have not switched over every customer it shared with Excite@Home, which ended service the morning of Dec. 1. Spokeswoman Sarah Eder said that a number of outlying regions in Colorado, including Aspen and Fort Collins, as well as College Station, Penn., are still without service. She estimated that fewer than 10,000 of more than 850,000 former Excite@Home customers are still unconnected.
Some customers were having slower connections, Eder said, in part due to the crush of new customers and a DNS blip earlier in the week. Domain name servers translate easily identifiable domain names, such as www.news.com, to their numerical Internet protocol addresses, such as 217.87.61.920. When they go down, its difficult to surf the Web by typing in conventional universal resource locators (URLs).
For most users, slow connections are unrelated to AT&Ts downstream cap of 1.5 megabits which itself is about half as fast as the Excite@Home network.
We did a migration of more than 850,000 customers in six days, Eder said Friday. Theres bound to be a few blips here and there. We figured it was important to get people migrated and have some connectivity than none at all. We didnt do five days of testing and then move everybody; we just moved them.
Eder said she didnt know when service would improve.
CUSTOMERS WANT CREDIT, NOT EXCUSES
Eder said AT&T would not issue credit for customers experiencing slow connections. AT&Ts offer of two days of credit for each day that customers are without service applies only to people who had to use dial-up access or had no connection at allincluding some of the stranded people in Colorado and Pennsylvania.
That upsets a lot of customers: Why should they pay as much as $49.95 per month for service that is only marginally faster than dial-up access? Many have come to rely on high-speed connections for telecommuting, file downloading and fast Web surfing, and they say the migration crimped their online habits for nearly a week.
Dial-up access through AOL and other providers, which ties up a residential phone line when in use, is usually less than $25 per month, and some dial-up providers offer free e-mail. AT&T and other broadband providers like to boast that their service is 50 to 100 times as fast as dial-up.
Sacramento, Calif., resident Dennis McLeod is one of many customers considering defecting to another broadband provider because of the slow speeds. Earlier this week, he noticed that his AT&T cable modem was slow, so the systems administrator performed a series of tests.
For grins, I unplugged my network cable and hooked up my phone line to the modem and dialed out to Earthlink, a dial-up connection that works through his 28.8-kilobits modem, he said.
His dial-up connection was faster.
I will definitely be looking for another provider if this doesnt improve, McLeod said. Im paying $50 a month for what is supposed to be the new AT&T Broadband Internet network...But a simple $12 a month dialup account performs better.
Its unclear whether AT&Ts new customers are entitled to refunds or credits for enduring the slowdown. Few laws govern the pricing policies of broadband providers.
In January 1997, America Online agreed to reimburse customers for their inability to get online. AOL settled after 37 state attorneys general threatened to sue on behalf of 8 million customers nationwide, charging that AOLs networks were overloaded with hundreds of thousands of customers who opened accounts in 1996 after a $19.95, unlimited access promotion. Customers who signed up for the service could get little except busy signals from their dial-up accounts.
Mark Kersey, a broadband analyst at La Jolla, Calif.-based ARS, said AT&Ts most urgent threat isnt necessarily a class-action lawsuit but a massive defection of customers. He said migration problems were expected, but AT&Ts handling of customer concerns has been sub-par.
It comes as no great surprise there are slowdowns, seeing as they threw this network together in seven weeks, Kersey said. Youve got an oversubscribed and an incomplete network. They dont have support for 850,000 new subscribers. Its impossible to think they could have completed the migration so quickly without any problems. They should have been up front about that.
TORTURE BY TECH SUPPORT
Tacoma, Wash., resident Randall Lewis isnt about to sue AT&T, but his patience is quickly fraying and he may jump to another broadband provider. He said his service allows him to surf the Web for about 30 minutes before cutting off inexplicably for hours or more. Calls to customer service representatives have been extremely frustrating.
Three calls to tech support have been useless, Randall said. Twice, they told me the solution was to re-boot my computer whenever the connection was dropped. The third time, the tech was clearly reading from a script and directed me to the AT&T Web site for settings I needed to check. That would have been difficult to do, because my connection had dropped.
Other customers say they understand the complexities of migrating 850,000 customers to a new network. But they are offended by AT&Ts boast that the migration has been quick and seamless.
On Friday morning, AT&T issued a press release touting that it had successfully concluded the move of more than 850,000 former @Home customers to its new high speed Internet network with the successful transition yesterday of customers in Connecticut. The release also quoted Susan Marshall, senior vice president, Advanced Broadband Services for AT&T Broadband.
Were working hard to regain the confidence of our customers who have had to suffer a very challenging period without the high-speed Internet access on which theyve come to depend, Marshall said in the statement.
AT&T customer Ron Naminski found the statement, as well as his numerous attempts to learn about when his service would be restored to full speed, highly distasteful. AT&T will not comment on when the service will return to its typical downstream capability of 1.5 kilobits per second, and Naminskis repeated attempts on the toll-free phone line and online chat have not produced answers.
Just try to go to the AT&T support chat site and youll find yourself in a queue behind over 1,300 other folks, said Naminski, a systems developer from Mountain View, Calif. I suppose that the long line is because folks want to tell AT&T just how happy they are with the new hastily constructed network they have provided...It would not have been such a stinging declaration if AT&T would have indicated that the current network shortfalls would be rectified within a reasonable period of time.
ATT owned 30 or 40 % of excite and stacked the board with their cronies. Welfare for lawyers for years to come. WHAT A COUNTRY
AT&T Broadband did not go bankrupt. Excite@Home went bankrupt. AT&T Broadband is doing very nicely, thank you for asking.
They have absolutely the worst customer service that any one could imagine.
Well, I will grant you this: The customer service is pretty lame. They could spend a sheckel or two on that.
Must be regional. Give them some time.
Unless I'm mistaken (and I'm not) cable is "deregulated"...or "deregulated" as defined by government regulations....
How many cable companies do you have to choose from in your "free market" and is service/access better at a cheaper price as promised?
---------------------
test run: 19:38CST Dec 10, 2001
your IP*: 24.126.92.97
your ISP*: AT&T Broadband West
Your raw speed was 1767532.1 bits per second. There are 3 meaningful ways we can interpret this number:
Communications context
1.8
megabits per second This is how communication devices are rated. Kilo means 1,000 and mega means 1,000,000. Examples of this context include 56k modem, 384/128 DSL, and 10Mbit Ethernet
Storage context
215.8 kilobytes per second This is how data is measured on your hard drive and how FTP programs measure transfer speeds. Kilo is 1,024 and mega is 1,048,576.
1MB file download
4.7 seconds
The time it would take you to download a 1 megabyte file at this speed.
-PJ
While their website says my service should be restored by 12/14, our local paper says they are trying to sell us to Adelphia - which if succesful would get us cable-modem service again maybe in January!
Dialup isn't too hot around here either. Ironic, considering one of the country's main fiber-optic trunk lines runs within a mile of my house. But, DSL isn't available here either, so I'll have to settle for whatever I can get...
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