Tag Archive for phone

END ROBO CALLS!

I’m up to my ears in the &%$#!!! things now, and it’s only going to get worse, with election season about to start.  I’m sure you’re as irritated as I am with those phone calls from people who don’t know us and are often, in fact, not people but recordings.  They come at all hours, interrupt our lives, pitch scams at us, and make us mad.  Nobody likes those automatic, sequentially dialed robo calls!

Finally, an organization is gathering force to do something about it.  Watch this short video about the efforts of Consumers Union (the advocacy part of Consumer reports) at http://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/Consumers-Union-Pushes-for-End-to-Robocalls-297727451.html.

Then get on board to stop robo-calls–sign the Consumers Union petition at https://consumersunion.org/end-robocalls.

 

Follow-Up on “Is there Something I’m Missing?”

I MUST add one more bit of questionable logic to Monday’s (10/20/14) posting on situations in our daily lives that make little sense.  Yesterday I saw that TV commercial yet again.  It’s for an ambulance-chaser–er, I mean, law firm–in which anyone who has been in an auto accident and has been either seriously injured or killed is urged to call their office.  Now, I know that long-distance companies have improved greatly over the years, but does the land-of-the-afterlife have phone service?

 

 

Prison Cell-Phone Business

Don’t believe that the kidnapping of Frank Arthur Janssen, a prosecutor’s father, was orchestrated via cell phone from prison?  How is it possible for inmates to get their hands on and use cell phones, anyway?  http://people.howstuffworks.com/prison-telecommunication3.htm describes the widespread problem and lack of solutions.  It’s an interesting read.

However, the article glosses over the role of prison guards.  As a person who has visited and written to state prison inmates for many years, I hear things from the mouths of those who live it.  I’ve been told again and again how some guards run a cell-phone business.  A guard brings in a phone and charger, sells it to Joe in cell D222.  After awhile, there’s a search of Joe’s cell and the phone is confiscated.  Then, that phone is sold to Sam in cell 114.  And so it goes.  What, the prisoner is going to complain to the warden that a guard stole his illegal cell phone?  I don’t think so.

Cell phones are a lucrative business for cell phone companies and for unscrupulous prison guards.

 

 

Comcast’s Dirty Tricks

If you have Comcast, be sure to read this.  Because we weren’t happy with our old AT&T phone service, I listened to the Customer Service guy’s explanation of Triple Play.  It would be $24 a month less than what we’re currently paying for TV and Internet, but we’d get phone service for free.  It would be only a year at this price but then go up to a little more than we’re paying now–still cheaper than them plus AT&T.

Today I got the first bill–for MORE than we used to pay, not less.  I called Comcast, waited on hold (they’ve had “an unusually high volume of calls” all the years we’ve been with them), and waded through a hard-to-understand man named Mark.  After being put on hold several times while he researched things, I asked for a supervisor–meaning another 15 minute hold.

Anna came on and informed me that the person who signed me up didn’t see the other equipment we had (modum, DVR, adapter), even though he had read to me right from our account.  That brought the price up.  But that wasn’t the biggest dirty trick.

When digital TV became the only game in town, Comcast gave a free adapter to their customers who needed it, I believe in response to pressure from the government. We have one digital TV and one analog.  Anna told me that 6 months ago Comcast decided to charge $1.99 a month for that adapter.  I asked when and how customers were informed that this charge would be kicking in; she said that Comcast had NOT informed its customers, just began charging.  I expressed my opinion that they can’t just add a charge their customers didn’t agree on.  No response.  She finally agreed to waive the $1.99 a month for a year, so long as we didn’t change our plan.  (The trick here is that, in 5 more months, when they start charging for HBO, which we don’t particularly like, we’ll cancel HBO and, I bet, that will trigger the charge.  So we have 5 months to price out and buy an adapter and, while we’re at it, a DVR to replace Comcast’s expensive one.

Have you checked your Comcast bill lately?  Do it now.  If you see that charge, cozy in with a good book (for your long on-hold time) and call 1-800-comcast.