Talked to OH tonight. She got a letter from BT today, to the new address, referring to the old address, quoting the correct account number, saying that the telephone number (0xxx xxxxxx) was still active at the old address, and did she want that?
The number was one she had never heard of in her life, so she called India again, on the existing phone that was transferred from the old address to the new (except for broadband) and told then that she didn't recognise that number. Oh, they said, that's your broadband.
So she said a few things about that, got transferred here and there, and eventually spoke to someone who said No, that's not her broadband, there is no problem, everything is connected correctly.
Right. Where is my Kafka, I need some simplistic escapism.
I believe that we got the truth by mistake here, but now BT will no longer admit it: that they have transferred our phone, but not the broadband; that the other number (which may or may not actually be connected at the old address) is now activated as our broadband. So we can't connect to it no matter what we do; but BT will always see it as active no matter what they do. So they will always say (correctly) that we are connected, and we will always say (correctly) that we are not connected. How can we fix that?
I suggested changing providers. OH was reluctant: firstly, she has many subscriptions using the BT email address that she would lose, secondly, she has signed up to another min 12 months from the house move date (they make you do that). I said I'd like to see them enforce 12 months for nothing, but I suppose they would.
She has now gone to bed crying and seeimingly suicidal. If she really is, and does, you will find my real name in the papers soon. Some BT people's names will be in the same article.
The number was one she had never heard of in her life, so she called India again, on the existing phone that was transferred from the old address to the new (except for broadband) and told then that she didn't recognise that number. Oh, they said, that's your broadband.
So she said a few things about that, got transferred here and there, and eventually spoke to someone who said No, that's not her broadband, there is no problem, everything is connected correctly.
Right. Where is my Kafka, I need some simplistic escapism.
I believe that we got the truth by mistake here, but now BT will no longer admit it: that they have transferred our phone, but not the broadband; that the other number (which may or may not actually be connected at the old address) is now activated as our broadband. So we can't connect to it no matter what we do; but BT will always see it as active no matter what they do. So they will always say (correctly) that we are connected, and we will always say (correctly) that we are not connected. How can we fix that?
I suggested changing providers. OH was reluctant: firstly, she has many subscriptions using the BT email address that she would lose, secondly, she has signed up to another min 12 months from the house move date (they make you do that). I said I'd like to see them enforce 12 months for nothing, but I suppose they would.
She has now gone to bed crying and seeimingly suicidal. If she really is, and does, you will find my real name in the papers soon. Some BT people's names will be in the same article.
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