@acemarkwrote:Years ago if you wanted to change your mobile phone provider it could only be done by changing your number so most stayed with their provider until Ofcom made it possible to keep your number when changing providers at no cost.
It was mainly due to the invention of the SIM. Prior to that tiny card that fits in your phone, the phone number was locked to the phone, whereas once SIM cards had been invented, it made the possibility of having a portable phone number... (My 1st mobile phone bought in 1989, a Motorola 8800x 'brick' could not technically have had the number transferred)
All we have to do now is find out what they broke fixing it 😂😂😂
@licquoricewrote:All we have to do now is find out what they broke fixing it 😂😂😂
I also feel that if I could work out how to generate 17 pages of a response on this forum for my query, they may also increase the exceptionally small and arbitrary limit of 300Kb for a WebMail email body LOL 🤣 Still, nice to have the link issue fixed...
I am looking in the small print for the apology.
This happened two weeks ago, and they are thanking us for letting them know we had a problem !
Don't they use BT Mail themselves ?
Why didn't they advise their customers that it had happened instead of letting people waste their time finding out for themselves, and having to google the problem to find not an answer but just more people with the same problem.
And why didn't they email us to tell us it had been fixed ?
@DCSwrote:I am looking in the small print for the apology.
This happened two weeks ago, and they are thanking us for letting them know we had a problem !
Don't they use BT Mail themselves ?
Why didn't they advise their customers that it had happened instead of letting people waste their time finding out for themselves, and having to google the problem to find not an answer but just more people with the same problem.
And why didn't they email us to tell us it had been fixed ?
I simply can't understand the origin of your vitriol and anger. A simple fault developed, which to put into perspective wasn't life threatening, and it was fixed. Why can't you just accept that sometimes (often actually), things in life don't go the way you want. You'll burst a blood vessel at that rate. I also doubt that anyone at BT uses WebMail. It's all now fixed, and with you responding within minutes of it being announced, a separate email would be totally superfluous...
Simple faults in software do not develop by themselves, they are man-made. It's far short of vitriol and anger. Of course, it is not life-threatening. I am questioning the poor service and the lack of communication from the supplier. The message was only for community users. What about the others who had this thrust upon them ? What are you an expert of ? Defending BT ?
@DCSwrote:It's far short of vitriol and anger. Of course, it is not life threatening I am questioning the poor service and the lack of communication from the supplier. The message was only for community users. What about the others who had this thrust upon them ? What are you an expert of ? Defending BT ?
I'm not an 'expert', just a human being displaying a bit of empathy as I have been in a work place when things have gone wrong, and have worked hard on a solution. I have no need to defend BT, I pay them £90/year for my email service which is pretty much extortionate as it should not incur anywhere hear that cost, but, I rely on that service & would be lost without it.
The others' you speak of, think of this. If your power supplier suffered a power cut, then, managed to restore supply, would you like them to post you a letter saying power was now working, or, would you just turn on a light switch.
Bored now, respond if you wish to have the last word, but I won't be participating...
My electricity supplier does exactly that. By text and email. One for when it happens, one for how long it will take to fix it, and one for when it's restored.
Same here, all working as it used to.
Thank you to whoever sorted it out.
🙂