on 10-02-2015 21:34
on 10-02-2015 21:34
on 10-02-2015 22:24
on 10-02-2015 22:24
on 10-02-2015 22:50
on 10-02-2015 22:50
on 10-02-2015 23:09
on 10-02-2015 23:09
I'm afraid to commit to another network until I know for sure that, it is going to be a good move. O2 is getting better again though with my 3G and 4G signals becoming ever more present. The customer support has been fair although the third party support is run by morons (personal opinion, not an actual fact or anything).
O2 has been good to me mostly.....
on 10-02-2015 23:19
on 10-02-2015 23:19
@anticpated wrote:. The customer support has been fair although the third party support is run by morons (personal opinion, not an actual fact or anything).
O2 has been good to me mostly.....
A very valid opinion which many npeople agree with....
I have no problems with customer service. My big problem was always coverage issues and masts going down once a month regularly. 4G has finally reached my area and overall coverage is better but despite what the coverage map shows, there are still quite a few blackspots where there is no coverage at all. One of the reasons I carry my spare phone with the EE sim with which, up to now, I have found no blackspots.
on 10-02-2015 23:28
on 10-02-2015 23:28
I've been with Vodafone from the first phone I ever had....always on contract.
Always had just a basic phone only for calls and texts.
Apart from a few local mast problems I've never had cause to criticise them for any parts of their service.
And no doubt I am in the majority just as those with O2 who are happy with their service.
But it's the minorities that always shout the loudest.
on 10-02-2015 23:46
on 10-02-2015 23:46
on 11-02-2015 10:03
on 11-02-2015 10:03
Here are some of my (very subjective, of course) findings regarding network performance on the East Coast train route from London to Glasgow. I'm mostly taking into the account that part of the jouney when your train is 'in the field', i.e. between the stations, as roundabout all the key cities and towns all networks seem to produce more or less equal (acceptable) experience.
O2 - Plenty of 'no spots' along the route, so having a long voice conversation is hardly possible. Data network is mostly EDGE, but having a 'full bars' EDGE signal does not necessarily mean you'd be able to use data, even on slow speeds.
Vodafone (Mobile by Sainsbury's sim) - hardly any 'no spots', so ok voice wise. Couldn't tell much about their data service as I've got this sim inserted into a very basic feature phone.
Three (in terms of a data usage only) - there certainly are some 'no spots' along the route, but getting the impression that it's way more useful for your data needs than O2.
EE - couldn't tell
on 11-02-2015 11:20
on 11-02-2015 11:20
on 11-02-2015 15:29