[talks-uk] Re: Wayfinder Access and mobile networks

  • From: "Ibrahim Gucukoglu" <ibrahim_gucukoglu@xxxxxxxx>
  • To: <talks-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 24 Apr 2009 11:11:59 +0100

Hi Mark.

Well, the early days have been and gone mores the pity. Orange took wildfire offline and now their answering machine facility is less powerful too. My wife took out a pay as you go deal on Orange, because she was under the delusion that Orange were still the bright and charming company she'd used back when. All she got were sour pips, poor coverage and high prices for anything but texting which orange seem to consider a speciality.

All the best, Ibrahim.


----- Original Message ----- From: "Mark Brett" <markbrett@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: <talks-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Friday, April 24, 2009 9:58 AM
Subject: [talks-uk] Re: Wayfinder Access and mobile networks


Yes the future was bright in the early days of orange. And we had plenty of good services from them as well. Shame they have got rid of most of them completely or only made them available to business customers. The equity points got all the christmass presents and wild fire and every phone were good services. The orange answer phone has some good features as well. I remember in the early days you could have a text package on your account for just £2.50. The trouble was i didnt know anyone at that time could send and receive them. How things have changed.

Mark Brett

This e-mail was produced on a Nokia N82

E-mail: markbrett@xxxxxxxxxx
Home: 08712221267
Fax: 08704422678
SMS: 07962432222
Mobile: 08713159900 and 07092226226

-original message-
Subject: [talks-uk] Re: Wayfinder Access and mobile networks
From: "All formats" <allformats@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: 24/04/2009 09:37


Neil.  Fantastic information. I used to read a lot of the mobile magazines
(sad git I know) and I had forgotten a lot of that stuff.

Orange definitely had one of the best customer service models in the early
days and that was one of the reasons as you say that they were as successful
as they were. It wasn't just the high quality knowledge of any one you
talked to in the company, it was all the additional stuff like being able to
find out where their coverage roll out was happening and their being upfront
about where the future developments were going to be.  They also took the
whole thing of branding, marketing and  loyalty reward schemes to a whole
new level to anything that was around at the time.

I think they were the first to offer "caller ID" and they had that line 2
option so you could have a business and home number on the same phone.

On the other hand, Vodafone had a presence way before the first truly mobile
phones we see today with their two way radio service and I think that was
somewhere in the 70s.  So, they would have been more business focused by
default really as it would have been businesses like fleet transport that
would have used such a service.
-----Original Message-----
From: talks-uk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:talks-uk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Neil Barnfather
Sent: 23 April 2009 16:51
To: talks-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [talks-uk] Re: Wayfinder Access and mobile networks

Andy,

Likely to do with the method of cell tower deployment, O2 or Cell net as
they were along side Vodafone deployed originally in a grid style across the
UK, thus network coverage is more widely spread and low coverage areas are
less likely.

Orange and One 2 One as they were now T-Mobile deployed in a radial fashion
spurting out from town / city centres. This of course keeping costs down
whilst offering the maximum coverage buy population.

Have you ever seen the phrase 99.9% of the UK population covered, of course
this term originally coined by T-Mobile / One 2 One in the early days, and
later Orange. This of course misleading as it implies lots of coverage, but
with vast amounts of the UK population being in cities / towns, it doesn't
mean 99% of the UK which it could be mistaken to mean.

3 Have repeated Orange and T-Mobile's method, with even more distance,
afforded to them by newer technology in cell towers.

I rather suspect like Paul, that the reason more partners exist with
T-Mobile is not due to their incredible network or customer services, but
more the cost parameters they afford to those partner networks.

O2 and Vodafone have long been the business users network's of choice, due
to their overall network performance and reliability, supported of course by
their higher plans and tariff charges, Orange / T-Mobile being more aimed at
the consumer and bargain savvier home user. With 3 having all the teaming
issues that One 2 One had all those years ago. Ask how many business users
opt for 3 and you'll see my point.

I think that Orange didn't suffer as much from the bad press as One 2 one
did, as orange were innovators with their pioneering technology and features
along side quality customer service staff.

Hope that this helps in some way... PS, used to work for Nokia's network
infrastructure / deployment division, so have a little knowledge on these
things.


Neil Barnfather
WFA List Administrator
Talks List Host

TalkNav is a Nuance Accessibility and Wayfinder Access dealer / distributor,
with product activation codes delivered direct to your mailbox why not use
TalkNav today?

http://www.talknav.com
service@xxxxxxxxxxx
-----Original Message-----
From: talks-uk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:talks-uk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of ANDY COLLINS
Sent: 23 April 2009 09:51
To: talks-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [talks-uk] Re: Wayfinder Access and mobile networks

Don't want to start a best coverage debate, but I have found that T-Mobile
have better coverage than Orange. What I'd like to know however, is why so
many other people seem to have coverage on Cross Country and Virgin trains,
when for me with T-Mobile [and it was as bad with Orange] I get hardly any!
Is it anything to do with hand sets? Are non-Nokia phones more powerful when
it comes to picking up connection? I'm guessing not, but can't figure out
why I get such poor coverage while others phones are ringing out all the
time! -

Andy
----- Original Message -----
From: "All formats" <allformats@xxxxxxxxx>
To: <talks-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, April 23, 2009 9:29 AM
Subject: [talks-uk] Re: Wayfinder Access and mobile networks


It is ironic.

Umm!  Let's see now?  Why don't we go with the UK service with the
worst coverage we can which will entice our customers to stick with us...
Not!

When T-mobile were one2one, we used to call them one2none as no one
could get coverage with them but, only had their handsets because the
tariffs were so good.  But, then, they had to be to attract people
even though they would never be able to use their minutes but, then at
least, they could feel good about thinking they had a good deal.

I don't like T-mobile!  Not that anyone would have guessed.

Cheers.

Paul

-----Original Message-----
From: talks-uk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:talks-uk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Mark Brett
Sent: 22 April 2009 17:59
To: talks-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [talks-uk] Re: Wayfinder Access and mobile networks

Yes they are using orange but part of that agreement is that they stop
using O2. What is even more ironic is that they are going to network
share with T-Mobile.

Mark Brett

This e-mail was produced on a Nokia N82

E-mail: markbrett@xxxxxxxxxx
Home: 08712221267
Fax: 08704422678
SMS: 07962432222
Mobile: 08713159900 and 07092226226

-original message-
Subject: [talks-uk] Re: Wayfinder Access and mobile networks
From: "All formats" <allformats@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: 22/04/2009 15:09


I think three are tied in with Orange, but, not absolutely sure.

-----Original Message-----
From: talks-uk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:talks-uk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Mark Brett
Sent: 22 April 2009 14:19
To: talks-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [talks-uk] Re: Wayfinder Access and mobile networks

People who are using the 3 network may not have coverage in some areas
because in september i think it is the deal they have with O2 comes to
an end.

Mark Brett

This e-mail was produced on a Nokia N82

E-mail: markbrett@xxxxxxxxxx
Home: 08712221267
Fax: 08704422678
SMS: 07962432222
Mobile: 08713159900 and 07092226226

-original message-
Subject: [talks-uk] Re: Wayfinder Access and mobile networks
From: "Ibrahim Gucukoglu" <ibrahim_gucukoglu@xxxxxxxx>
Date: 22/04/2009 13:16


Hi Andy.

I'm not making any promises about whether you will or will not be charged.
I've never been charged for WFA on payg, but then when I've been on
contract which has been from June last year, I've always paid for an
unlimited data plan.  If you've an unlocked phone, by all means pop in
to a three store and pick up a payg sim or if you want L10
complementary credit you can buy the sim online.  Either way, its not
a major investment and you can trial three for yourself to see if it
is free to use WFA.

All the best, Ibrahim.


----- Original Message -----
From: "ANDY COLLINS" <Andy@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <talks-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, April 22, 2009 12:49 PM
Subject: [talks-uk] Re: Wayfinder Access and mobile networks


Hi Ibrahim -

Is this to say then, that one could have a PAYG or sim contract with
three, and not get charged for moderate use of WFA? I would be
interested if this were the case -

Andy
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ibrahim Gucukoglu" <ibrahim_gucukoglu@xxxxxxxx>
To: <talks-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, April 22, 2009 11:58 AM
Subject: [talks-uk] Re: Wayfinder Access and mobile networks


Hi Saqib.

The reason three don't charge you is because you use only small
amounts of data daily.  If you surf the open internet, download a
large file etc you will be charged however three do realise that
some smartphones connect to the internet for services as part of
their setup but the data consumption is so small that they aren't
too concerned.  Wayfinder falls in to this catagory as its data use
is comparitively small.  If you are getting something for nothing,
don't let on to three.  I pay for my web access to the tune of L5
per month on my contract, however I do use it heavily downloading a
lot of audio and video content however I've never gone over any limits.

All the best, Ibrahim.


----- Original Message -----
From: "Saqib" <saqib500@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <talks-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, April 22, 2009 11:04 AM
Subject: [talks-uk] Re: Wayfinder Access and mobile networks


Hi. Three don't block internet access and further more they don't
charge

as I've never bin charged for any data. I had noticed the non
charge of data a couple of months back.

--------------------------------------------------
From: "Darren Harris" <darren_g_harris@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, April 22, 2009 10:08 AM
To: <talks-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [talks-uk] Re: Wayfinder Access and mobile networks

Hi,

I thought 3 was like that but am not quite sure any more because
I've also herd that this is no longer the case.

-----Original Message-----
From: talks-uk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:talks-uk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Jackie Cairns
Sent: 22 April 2009 10:07
To: talks-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [talks-uk] Wayfinder Access and mobile networks


Could someone please clarify this for me fairly quickly, pretty
please?
(smile).

My understanding is that one or two networks don't allow
connection to the Wayfinder Access server on Pay-As-You-Go.  Does
anyone know comprehensively which networks don't allow or block
it, and whether this is on contract or top-up?

Any info appreciated.

Jackie Cairns
Braille Specialist
Email: Jackie.Cairns@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Sight and Sound
Technology Ltd Welton House North Wing Summerhouse Road Moulton
Park Northampton
NN3 6WD
Telephone: 01604 798024
Fax: 01604 798090
Web: www.sightandsound.co.uk
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