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ORANGE Broadband has demanded that its 92,000 dial-up internet customers upgrade to broadband in the next couple of weeks, but experts suggest it is the perfect opportunity to switch to a better deal.
Users have been told that Orange’s £14.99-a-month dial-up services will end in December and are offered a 2 megabit (Mb) replacement service that is 40 times faster but costs the same.
People who want to switch to another deal must opt out of the change as anyone who does not respond within 14 days of receiving their letter will be upgraded automatically. A new modem will be sent through the post and their dial-up connection will stop.
Orange denies critics’ claims that these are bully-boy tactics and says it will not switch customers if they would be paying more for broadband.
Chris Frost, broadband expert at comparison firm uswitch, suggests Orange customers take the opportunity to find a better deal. He said: “Orange broadband is not the best deal out there. It came bottom of our most recent customer-satisfaction survey.”
A good alternative is PlusNet, which came top of the uswitch survey, offering broadband up to 8Mb for £9.99.
Orange said: “We have decided to close the Any Time Dial-up service at the end of this year. This is because we believe broadband provides our customers with more benefits and greater value for money.”
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French company eh! What is customer service. Not quite got the hang of choice these wanadoo types have they. (In France one has little or no choice - they obviously think the whole word is like the homeland!)
Tom Taylor-Duxbury, Ludlow, UK
Have no probs with OBB - 6 months online now.
Did initially have a prob with the free VOIP phone line. Took numerous calls to India then Rotherham to sort. Orange gave me free OBB for a time as apology. Credit to them.
Now a very good service. Don't know why they come bottom of a poll.
Howard, Chester, UK
I would advise those on dial-up to go elsewhere. Like chip of London the service originallly was good but since July my line speed has permanantly been128kbps.(+/- a few kbps) Umpteen calls, letters, e mails and line checks by Orange have not resolved the issue. I actually had a call from Orange on Sunday to tell me they were going to get BT round to the house - they would ring me back with a date - still waiting!
Simon
Simon, Bexhill, East Sussex
OBB service was good for the first few months. Then a complete failure. Broadband service was returned but not talk (VoIP service). Many calls to call centre - still no success. Last call I asked for escalation to a supervisor. Not unless I answer numerous questions which I've answered many times before. Change of tack . Extract of dialogue: how many calls have I made re this failure. Reply 'oh possibly seven or eight'. And do you call this good service? 'Well we are trying'. Promise of escalation and call from CSG. Several more weeks have passed and still no follow-up. Next step - ring and cancel service (withold direct debit) even though I've not completed 18 month agreement.
chip, London,
My son has been trying to connect to OBB since Nov 2006. We are still unconnected despite numerous phone calls and continually fobbed off. I have been on Orange dial up all this time and now have been offered the chance to switch. I wrote to them 9 days ago, explaining all the probs we'd had trying to connect to OBB and asked for their comments. To date I'm still waiting to hear fom them as so is my son waiting to be connected to OBB since Nov 2006!!!
D Stanford, STAFFORD, Stafford UK
OBB 'technical' support is in India. Their dial up tech support office in Rotherham is the only UK based tech office open to us broadband users, they are useful and able. India is cheaper and lacks training and knowledge and ability. My prolonged lack of broadband (25 days) was considerably lengthened by my following India's advices and when it came to the 3rd time of repeating it to me, after 21 days, I lost my cool. I was put thru to Rotherham and the matter sorted within a few days and I was credited £65 (I spent £77). Orange stating they are doing that for the customer is laughable - the business is there to make a profit. I
I am now looking elsewhere - altho my BT engineer friend says, day in day out, they are constantly sorting out problems that overseas call centres create by not understanding the issue from the start
There are language and cultural differences enough to create havoc. Tho' some India help has been magnificent, by and large it has not.
claire cadoux, york, England
Orange said: âWe have decided to close the Any Time Dial-up service at the end of this year. This is because we believe broadband provides our customers with more benefits and greater value for money.â
Isn't this an example of the supreme arrogance shown by many companies today? We decide what you like and make you take it.
Roger Gradeless, Stafford, Staffordshire