Tracking Stuff in Mobile

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o2

iPhone hand-me-downs

When I was little hand-me-downs were all about getting your older brother’s old clothes. Now according to this article in PocketPicks it can mean iPhones as well.

Anyone who upgrades from the 2G iPhone to the new 3G one can simply pass the old one to family or friends. It seems if the recipient is an O2 customer they can transfer onto the iPhone tarriff, or if not O2 will be offering iPhone Pay and Go SIMs.

If you don’t want to pass it on to anyone (or you’ve got no friends) then you can use O2’s handset recycling service.

It will be interesting to see how the Pay and Go SIMs work - will it still mean unlimited data or will they cap that? Maybe it will be along the lines of Vodafone’s £7.50 per month unlimited data, as long as you top up that much per month - away you go. Let’s see.

o2 iPhone customers: Upgrade to 8GB iPhone free*

I’m pleased to see that o2 has sensibly cleared the way for an easy upgrade path for it’s existing iPhone customers — according to the details on their site (that I, rather unhelpfully, can’t link to directly):

To thank you for being an iPhone fan, we’re offering you an early upgrade to the brand new version when it launches on 11th July 2008. You won’t have to wait until the end of your existing contract either, all you’ll need to do is agree to a new 18-month minimum term contract.

*Best of all, the new 8GB iPhone won’t cost you a penny on our £45 and £75 tariffs. And it’s just £99 on our £35 tariff and new £30 tariff. This special early upgrade offer is only available online at o2.co.uk anytime from 11th July until 11th October 2008.

Take a look at our new Pay Monthly tariffs for iPhone

Then just register your interest opposite and we’ll drop you a line in early July to tell you what you need to do to be one of the first to get your hands on the new 3G iPhone.

With O2 but don’t have an iPhone?

Existing O2 customers can also switch to iPhone. We’ll contact you when you’re eligible for an upgrade and talk you through the best options.

You’ll be able to upgrade online at o2.co.uk, in one or our high street stores or by calling one of our upgrade advisors.

*8GB handset provided at no additional cost on £45 and £75 per month tarrifs when you connect to a new minimum term contrqact. Subject to availability. Connection subject to status, 18-month minimum term contract, credit check & direct debit. Excessive usage policy and terms apply.

Fancy an unlimited orgy of fun?

Not what you think.

Ricky, our BlykWatch correspondent, came across this rather smart o2 viral challenge for students. 40 multiple choice questions that you have to answer as soon as possible. Get as many points as you can for your Uni and win a bucketload of iTunes and National Express vouchers.

Here’s the a pic of chap doing the competition intro:

Check the Facebook profile here.

Pocket Gamer launches 500,000 copy mag in o2 UK stores

Nice one Chris and the team at Steel Media, the folks behind the launch of the Pocket Gamer Guide to mobile games. Total circulation is a whopping 700,000 (including digital copies on Vodafone and 3’s websites).

Look out for it the next time you’re in an o2 store…

O2 hits 80 percent 3G coverage at last

When operators bought their 3G licences back in 2000, they all promised to get coverage to 80 percent of the population by the end of last year. And they all managed it too - with the exception of O2, who got a bit of a slap on the wrist from the regulator after it missed the deadline.

The story has a happy ending though - Ofcom has confirmed O2 has finally hit the 80 percent target, albeit several months behind its rivals and after threats by the watchdog to cut its licence short unless it fulfilled its 3G pledge.

There’s some suggestions that this is secretly a signal a 3G iPhone is on the way. While it probably is, I don’t think this network build out is anything to do with it: after all, O2 launched the first 2G iPhone, and it didn’t have much of an EDGE network to start with either.

O2 gets on mobile broadbandwagon for £20

O2 has joined the rest of its operator friends in launching a so-called mobile broadband service - or a 3G USB modem to the rest of us. For £20 a month, O2 customers can get 3GB of data allowance and unlimited wi-fi at The Cloud hotspots with a free modem if they sign up to an 18 month contract. There’s also a £20 rolling month-by-month contract on offer, but users will have to pay the £120 for the modem up front.

To start off with, the maximum downlink available for ‘mobile broadband’ will be 1.8Mbps, going up to 3.6Mbps in June this year.

While every operator needs one of these offers in their portfolio and O2’s pricing is pitched spot on, it doesn’t look like O2 is just copying its rivals and not doing an altogether great job of it: for mobile broadband speed, Vodafone is faster and 3 is cheaper, so how does O2 intend to make its own offering stand out?

Efficient Jasmine of o2

It’s not often you come into contact with smart sales people in mobile phone stores but it’s a delight when it happens. A real delight. I popped into the o2 shop at Holborn this afternoon to get my new sim card.

Alas it turns out that o2 don’t sell new Blackberries - only on contract. Jasmine explained that I could buy one at Carphone Warehouse and that this would probably cost a few hundred. I agree.

Hmm. Can you give me a new sim then Jasmine?

‘Sure!’ she says, radiating confidence, ‘What’s your mobile number?’

I do a blank look.

The o2 retail shops can ONLY query accounts with two (required) fields:

* Phone number
* Postcode

Both those fields need to be entered to successfully query the customer database. They can’t look up your details.

I don’t understand what information technology team would deliver such nonsense.

Surely, somebody, somewhere, in the IT team recognised that SOME customers — not all — but SOME customers come into o2 shops to ask questions about their accounts AND that they might not be able to remember their mobile phone number?

Crazy.

Jasmine did the best she could. She put me on the phone to o2 customer services. I got my phone number and was able to get my new o2 sim card activated as a result.

After I’d done that, I didn’t look in a hurry so Jasmine queried if I had a decent broadband service. Smart girl. She then pitched me on o2’s service. Alas, I wasn’t able to do business with her because we’ve just signed up with a Virgin connection here. But top marks to Jasmine. People like her keep companies such as o2 going.

Underwhelmed by o2; they found my account though

Remember I lost my Blackberry last week in Las Vegas?

Total arse.

I emailed o2 to ‘bar’ the phone (obviously) and they, rather surprisingly, couldn’t find my account details.

I phoned up and asked to terminate the contract and pay off the balance.

The lady I spoke to was able to find my details in 30 seconds.

They can, it seems, send me out a new sim card — finally.

My next issue: What do I do about a device. I didn’t bother with insurance you see. So I’m Blackberry-less.

I have got a really old one — but, come to think of it, that’s locked to T-Mobile.

Now I need to give some thought to what’s next. The idea forming in the back of my head over the last week has been to give the business to Vodafone — get a new Blackberry from them and pay them the tenner-per-month instead.

But I do like being an o2 customer, not least so I can be outraged when they limit my 3G capabilities.

o2: “You’re all techie nerds”

o2’s PR chaps worrying about how to handle The Register and their 128k o2 story made a wee bit of an error. They called the reporter — Bill — by mistake.

Oooh dear.

It’s painfully uncomfortable reading. Have a look.

The discussion, between two in-house PRs, centred around how to paint anyone wanting more bandwidth than the 128Kb/sec O2 deems suitable as clearly being “a bunch of techie nerds”.

Of course, these are communications professionals, so they wisely discuss how to avoid using that term, or as they put it, find “…a good way of saying they’re all geeks”.

Whatley on Wednesday: I CANNOT BELIEVE o2!

Right.

Today I was going to publish my third and final part of ‘The Joy of Ku’.

What with Jaiku’s recent announcement that YES they are re-opening registrations and that NO Google are not turning out the lights on our beloved life-streaming app.

What announcement am I talking about? Well here’s this from Jaiku’s own Jaikido blog:

“We’ve been working quietly for a while to port Jaiku to Google infrastructure. Today we’re taking off our welding goggles to announce Jaiku will be one of the first apps to run on the new Google App Engine.

The Google App Engine enables applications to leverage powerful Google technologies and scale up to millions of users without infrastructure headaches.

Jaiku will be fully deployed on the Google App Engine in the near future. Andy & co. are working hard to ensure the port is a success and we will make a further announcement once the port has been completed.”

Fantastic news!

Jyri was quoted on Jaiku later on that day as saying:

“…if all you notice is an increase in speed and reliability and re-opening of registrations, we’ve been successful.”

Brilliant.

However – today I will not be finalising my Jaiku opus. Something has reached my shores this morning that NEEDS to be blogged. I could NOT believe it when I read it. Could NOT!

The reason why I’m so annoyed about this is that I’ve been kicking around an article for while that reviews the quite frankly, fantastic Nokia N82. At the moment the Nokia N82 is (in the UK anyway) an o2 exclusive… The piece was going to end something like:

‘On o2? Get an N82. Not on o2? Move Networks and get an N82’.

However, that will no longer happen.

No Sirree bob.

News has come to me this morning from Vero Pepperrell, Chief Blog Mistress at Taptu, that The Register is reporting that o2 3G customers are being capped/throttled/limited to speeds of 128Kb/s.

128Kb/s!!!

A quick 3G speed test on my Vodafone N95 8GB hits me with slap bang on 300Kb/s.

That’s 3G only (not 3.5G aka HSDPA).

Fwd: Whatley Wednesday... (o2 the f*ckers)

That’s more than double what o2 offer! And that’s before we even think about leaping onto 3.5G!

According to Vero, some smart chap over at 3G.co.uk did a speed test on the o2 network and here are the results:

GPRS 44kbit/sec
EDGE 145kbit/sec
3G 112kbit/sec
HSDPA 124kbit/sec

WOW. I am amazed.

iPhone owners on o2 using the EDGE network are getting FASTER connections than anyone on their 3G network!

*gasp*

I don’t really have much else to add to be honest…

My N82 review is still in the pipeline (as is my final part of the Joy of Ku), but I really must say RIGHT NOW that if you’re considering getting a new handset and you want to experience the wonders of the Mobile Web (over your network) then DO NOT go to o2.

I just needed to get that out of my system.

The FULL story is here on The Register – including updates and quotes from o2

And again – huge props to Vero at Taptu for waving this in my face first thing this morning.

o2 UK: 128k/second should be enough for anyone

I’ve had a whirlwind of email in from absolutely outraged o2 subscribers who, fresh from being screwed for ridiculous prices per megabyte of data, can’t quite believe that their 3G connections are being limited.

In an echo of the ‘640k memory should be enough for anyone‘ quote allegedly from Bill Gates all those years ago, o2, reports Bill from The Register, have seen fit to cap consumer ‘3G’ usage at 128k/sec. Business users, provided their requirements ‘warrant’ it get double.

Well, Whatley on Wednesday was supposed to be a final look at Jaiku. But no. We’ve hurriedly cleared the decks — think back to the kind of newspaper, the Daily Planet, where Superman used to work. There are people running everywhere. Excited shouts from competent people. Lots of folk with pencils behind their ears and notebooks-a-scribbling. We scrapped today’s headline. Oh yes.

Ladies and Gentlemen, standby. The Whatley is almost upon us…

My lost Blackberry: o2 don’t know it’s IMEI

I got my Blackberry from o2 a while ago. October or November last year, I think.

All was good until I lost the phone yesterday in a taxi.

I used the o2 form — smart idea — to register that I’d lost it since customer services was, obviously, closed at 4am in the morning.

I got an email back promptly from Yogesh, at o2. He’s asked me for the IMEI number of the device so they can place a restriction on the device.

I don’t have the IMEI. I don’t bother with that. It’s an o2 device — they gave it to me — they know the IMEI, right?

No. They don’t know it, maintains Yogesh.

So I don’t know the IMEI. Neither to they. Ergo they can’t lock it. Very strange.

Has anyone else experienced this? Vodafone didn’t have this sort of problem last week.

First Look: O2’s Bluebook

I managed to miss most of the launch coverage of O2’s new combined backup and blogging platform ‘Bluebook‘ (technically a re-launch, as another service had existed under that name previously), but spotted the beautiful advert on TV and decided to try it out.

Bluebook Screenshot

The marketing majors on the backup feature - all your text and picture messages either sent or received will be backed-up, you can also backup your contacts (as offered by Mobyko and others) and share some of this content with friends. On the site itself, ‘Blueblog‘ has a little more prominence offering a Moblog-like mobile blogging platform. On the face of it this is excellent - a network operator is embracing mobile blogging and content sharing whilst providing a really valuable ‘zero-effort’ backup medium for texts and content… However, it’s not quite that cut and dried - I’m giving this a ‘C+ Must try harder’ grade at present.

—-

Sign-up: O2 are really marketing this at the moment and there’s a large advert on O2.co.uk. I follow it and a fairly standard sign-in / register screen awaits. I missed the small-print on the bottom left that explains that if you already have an account on the O2 website (I do) I can use those credentials, so I create a new account. I’m really impressed when I notice the prompt: “You can register any mobile phone for any network”… Good show O2!

Picture 1

I decide to try this and enter the details of my Three handset - it has more content to be backed-up any way. It beeps receipt of a validation SMS and all is going well…

Picture 2a

Damn. It appears that ‘any network’ means ‘any network that is O2′. Great. There’s no way around this so I have to start over with my O2 handset. Not impressed - and I’m not the only one. On a second try it completes, but not without a few odd errors:

Picture 3

It also later gives-up on handset selection for contacts backup. This only works for certain Nokia and SonyEricsson models (I am using the iPhone), I’m guessing using the ubiquitous SyncML approach. Disappointing - especially that no other options are available over this (admittedly easier) approach other than manual entry via the website.

In use: Having resigned myself to being without contacts backup (I can iSync, it’s not a worry) the initial screen is pleasant with a Flash animation that, as I add content, shows the pictures and messages I have stored. I immediately flip to the messages tab to test out the backup feature - as a network operator this is where O2 can stand out from the crowd. I send and receive a number of messages and wait… nothing. I send ‘forward’ some older messages to the O2 shortcode (not possible on teh iPhone that lacks a ‘forward’ feature so I just create new messages and pretend) - this works:

Picture 5

Several hours later the ‘automatically’ stored messages still aren’t shown. Perhaps it’s just slow… the whole site grinds along at a painful pace, but it’s not confidence inspiring at all.

 

‘Albums’ can contain groups of images (naturally), but also text messages too. Content can be from stored messages or uploaded via the web interface. It all works smoothly enough, with 1GB of free storage enough to be useful, and testing the sharing feature also works well, albeit the feature set is ‘basic’ at best and the lack of an option to bulk upload or upload via e-mail is frustrating. Any moderately demanding user is going to find Shozu with a service like Flickr a much slicker experience. Reading the Bluebook product manager’s ‘blueblog’ I see a post about a Facebook application and give that a try too. Initially it errors and once refreshed refuses to find my one shared album. I’m getting pretty fed up with this by now. It could, of course, be me doing it wrong, but I manage to do this sort of stuff day-in day-out, so if I am it should be more simple… just sayin’.

Continuing the theme of ‘good idea, executed badly’ Blueblogs doesn’t fail to disappoint either. On the plus side, posts can be made from browser or via SMS. However, any shared content is moderated… I don’t object to that in principle if this is a platform designed for ‘family friendly’ use, but it appears to be a manual process which is slow. Mobile-blogging with an hour’s delay? Hmmmm. Not to worry though, because there’s no RSS feed or e-mail alerts anyway so your friends will have to return to your blog again and again. Comments, the personal profile and the option to have multiple blogs is nice, but given even the featured blogs have only a few posts it doesn’t look like a platform that makes life easy. Oh, and whilst I’m complaining… the layout, particularly for commenting, is grim.

—-

So overall, that reads like a pretty savage kicking for O2 and really I don’t want it to be. I just can’t help thinking that if they’d put a bit more of the money spent on the advertising into the actual product it could have been so much better. The concept is great and continual backups of text and picture messaging is one of the things that only they could do, but it’s executed so poorly (and with a previously documented security gaff that makes me wonder if I really want all my messages logged by this system) I wonder how it launched… and on further reading I wonder how Newbay, the Dublin firm who’s Lifecache product this is based on, feel about this as the product spec seems to suggest O2 have really loused up this well-featured tool in the implementation.

My suggestions:

  1. Speed it up and fix the bugs
  2. Refine Get some designers to completely re-do the interface a bit
  3. Make the blog a proper blog (use Lifecache’s features!)
  4. Get your moderation done electronically (if you must have it)

…and I reckon O2 might have the beginnings of a winner here. Otherwise it’s too clunky and limited to have long-term appeal. Shame.

 

 

 

 

 

O2 dusts down Bluebook back-up service for reappearance

O2 is going on a promotions offensive for its back-up service, Bluebook. Bluebook stores users phone numbers, messages and cameraphone snaps remotely, so in the event a customer loses their phone, all the content goodness inside the device isn’t lost forever.

While the free service isn’t exactly new, O2 has decided to bring it to the attention of consumers with a £4.5 million advertising campaign. This sort of service, I’d imagine, will be gold for anyone who’s found themselves on the wrong side of a pickpocket, a boozy night out or a clumsy phase.

Presumably if a user switches to a rival operator, their content is no longer accessible though. It’s a great way for O2 to convince customers not to churn, but I wonder if some sort of cross-operator storage might be a bit more handy?

iPhone coming to Ireland 14th March

irish iphone

4 months later than I wrongly predicted last September the iPhone is coming to O2 in Ireland for €399 / €499 for 8GB / 16GB respectively (the same price as other Euro countries). It’s without visual voicemail and has a 1GB data allowance. Some commentators have described this as being ‘without an unlimited data plan‘ which, whilst technically true, is rather ungenerous as I defy anyone to exceed 1GB of data usage per month over EDGE.  Also, other operators define 1GB as being the limit of ‘fair use’ for handset downloads on their ‘unlimited’ data tariffs.

O2 3G shortfall could cost it £40 million

Oops. I bet the execs at O2 are not best please at the moment, after Ofcom has delivered a severe slap on the wrist - a slap on the wrist that could be worth up to £40 million.

The problem? 3G network coverage. When 3G licences were doled out in 2000, O2 dug deep and paid £4 billion or so. One of the conditions it signed up on buying its licence was to cover 80 percent of the population with its 3G network by the end of this year - a figure the regulator says it’s failed to meet by around 5 percent or 2.5 million people.

If O2 doesn’t get the network out to the full 80 percent by the end of June this year, it could see its 3G licence cut short by four months, a sanction worth around £40 million. With that kind of cash at stake, I reckon those 2.5 million people can expect to get their 3G any time soon.

Title of test post here — o2 XDA blog

o2’s XDA blog is now live, reports Stephen at PR Blogger.

Check this out:

Picture 5

It’s not that professional, is it, to have a ‘title of test post here’ up on the front page of the o2 XDA blog, is it?

Still, kudos to o2 for launching the blog. Here’s hoping it’s going to be a little more involved than the last one I caught for the Cocoon.

o2’s Business Call Plan caught my attention

Picture 5

Caught this one in tonight’s London Evening Standard — it’s a pretty neat deal. These offers are, slowly and surely, getting better and better.

- 3 months free (on an 18 month contract, I’m sure)
- Unlimited email from via Blackberry (no mention of unlimited data though)
- Unlimited calls to anyone on o2. This is a really good offer — one that o2’s been continually marketing for quite some time. A super draw, this, to make sure your friends and family get on their network.
- Unlimited calls to ten chosen UK landlines. Again, pretty cool. Enough to pique my interest in o2? Well, it’s already piqued — I could quite possibly be in the market for an iPhone (on, alas, an entirely different price plan).

If you sign up before the 18th of March 2008, you’ll get free unlimited calls to any UK landline for the first three months of the contract. Again, very good.

Hmm. Lots to consider. More at o2 business.

Who do you use for your business mobile provider?

Confirmed: O2 have 16GB iPhone £329 [updated]

16gb iphone
Confirmed with the manager of an O2 store. The Engadget rumour is correct.

Handsets are in the stores being ‘checked in’ now. Available from 1:30pm.

Update: Still no news on the UK Apple or O2 sites, but the US stores have them listed at $499 which confirms the price leaks were also correct.  No new features, just a second model to run in parallel with the existing 8GB model.  iPod Touch also gets a bump to 32GB too which may indicate this form factor still has space for more…

My thoughts?  16GB is nice, but £329 isn’t going to have the people who haven’t already bought one flocking to buy one.  Other than a price drop, 3G is the only thing that will do the job here…

O2 and 3 combine video platforms under Eyevibe brand

O2 and 3 have decided to unite their mobile video platforms - bringing LookAtMe! and SeeMeTV together under the EyeVibe brand. The operators said they were taking a leaf out of the book of SMS and MMS by making the technology work across operators, with the hope of getting more consumers on board as a result.

Users of Eyevibe will now be able to post video, comment on others’ clips and use messaging regardless of whether they are customers of O2 or 3. To date, LookAtMe! and SeeMeTV - both developed by Yospace - have earned their users £800,000 on 60,000 clips uploaded and generate on average 28 million page impressions a month.

With the business models for some areas of mobile telly still a little on the uncertain side, it’s likely that there we’ll see even more of these type of sharing deals in the future, particularly when it comes to broadcast infrastructure.

O2 increases bundled call and text allowances for UK iPhones

O2 iphoneLink: O2 iPhone Tariffs for Existing Customers via TUAW

O2 have announced that they’re changing iPhone tariffs, bringing them in line with their recently-revised standard offerings (making them a bit more competitive):

  • £35 per month customers now get 600 anytime minutes (up from 200) and 500 anytime texts a month (up from 200).
  • £45 per month customers now get 1,200 anytime minutes (up from 600) and 500 anytime texts a month (unchanged).
  • £55 per month customers are switched by default to the new £45 tariff which now gives higher allowances than the £55 tariff did previously, but you can request bigger bundles.

The changes will happen between February and March for existing customers and will be available from the 1st Feb for new customers.

Apple iPhone UK - a tale of woe and “can’t-help, won’t-help, please go-away”

iphone

My father isn’t a patient man when it comes to limp wristed customer support. His patience rapidly departs in the face of illogical customer relationship policies. He’s particularly attuned to customer service, you see, because he’s responsible for infrastructure (servers, connectivity, data centres, the whole shebang) at a world leading telecommunications company. He spends his days managing dozens of service and technology teams to ensure that they’re all pulling in the right direction to deliver greater than ‘five nines’* at all times.

(* ‘Five Nines’ — 99.999% up time. Anyone in the technology / data centre space loves saying ‘five nines’ to you, just to see if you know what they’re talking about. It’s like a masonic handshake. The people in the industry like dropping the phrase into conversation now and again just to check if you’re one of them.)

If you’ve been reading regularly, you’ll recall that I bought my mother an Apple iPhone from the United States. I unlocked it and gave it to her, replacing her Motorola RAZR that she’s had for years and could barely use. She couldn’t really get comfortable with the Motorola interface and I reckoned the iPhone would revolutionise her telecoms. I was right. She took to it immediately. The only explanation I gave her — and this was very satisfying — was the ‘one button speech’ (i.e. this one takes you back to the main menu, just click on whatever you want, OK?’)

Apple are just geniuses. Whoever can make a device that my mother can use without any training, looking at manuals or general panicking, deserves to be lauded. It was a fascinating experience for me to see just how bad the existing mobile device manufacturers had been performing. Previous to the iPhone launch, one could go on about how stupid the interfaces were, how unfriendly, how badly conceived they were… but with little in the way of ‘proof’. Whenever I argued the point, people would just tell me that my mother needed to learn how to use the phone — that, because she’s from the ‘pre-digital’ generation, it was her problem to have to learn. Rather than the technology fit around her, she was the one that needed to do the learning. I thought this was crazy. So when I was getting text messages from mum via her iPhone all day, I was absolutely delighted. My younger brother texted me in amazement one day shortly after mother got the iPhone, saying, “You won’t believe this but mum is playing music she bought on iTunes through her iPhone whilst she’s cooking, no joke!”

Fantastic.

I bought mother an unlocked iPhone from the States because she had a Vodafone SIM — on the family account. My father goes absolutely nuts if something he’s paying or paid for doesn’t work (think ‘five nines’ and you can at least understand why he gets so annoyed, it cuts right into his DNA when something isn’t operating correctly). It is my father’s viewpoint that Vodafone ‘works’. Therefore swapping mother to an o2 contract ‘official UK iPhone’ = not good.

Everything was brilliant. Mother was using the device to it’s full potential. Surfing the web whilst at Waitrose; getting her eBay updates on her iPhone mail; texting her globe trotting children; playing music; taking pictures of the dog; and of course, making phone calls. My father was bemused and delighted to be able to send text messages home and receive replies right-away from mother.

Then the problem: Someone at home, I’m not sure who, decided to take heed of the Apple warning on iTunes and pressed the ‘update firmware’ button. I had specifically unchecked the ‘update automatically’ option so somebody had to actually press the update button. And they did. The iPhone immediately stopped working. Mother had to swap back to the RAZR.

Normally I’d have gone home, reflashed the iPhone etc etc and all would have been fine. However I’m in San Francisco for a while. I came up with a solution right-away though. I phoned my other brother, “Right, let’s get her an o2 iPhone?” I said.

He readily agreed. We’d done the math. (Or ‘maths’ if you’re British). The additional expense of buying a UK iPhone and taking out the o2 contract for 18 months was nothing in the context of:

a) getting my father involved
b) making sure mother had the right device to communicate with her geographically dispersed family
c) simplicity — if it doesn’t work, you can take it back etc.

My brothers and I didn’t need to even speak about this. We already knew it. Least line of resistence and critically: Don’t get dad involved.

So brother #2, Martin, headed out to an o2 shop on his way home from work and bought the iPhone. At this point, mother had been offline for 2 days. Annoying for her (and us) but at least we’d got a fix. Martin took mother through the setup, got the contract activated and so on.

There was a problem. After a few hours or arsing around trying to get the activation to work, Martin had to go back home to get ready for work the next day. The next night, he tried again. No dice. It looked like the device was screwed. It kept on displaying the Apple symbol. Despite my transatlantic “Hold the home button and the sleep button and that will reboot it” advice, the iPhone wasn’t working.

“Ok, take it back to the Apple store and get them to give mum a new one,” I reckoned. Martin agreed.

Mum took it out to the Apple store the next day but returned home with it. The helpful idiot at the Apple store asked her to take it home and said Apple would send UPS to pick it up.

Now I’ve already blogged on this before. There’s a specific reason why we dropped all this cash on the UK iPhone. It was so the sodding thing worked. If it failed to work, I expected Apple to just replace it. THERE AND THEN. No jiggery pokery, no shitting about.

I don’t mind having to play by the dickhead customer service rules if it’s me. I just shake my head. But when they’re doing it to my mother, it really begins to wind me up.

I breathe calmly when mother explains she’ll just need to wait for the nice UPS man to arrive.

He arrives.

Mother gives him the iPhone. He promptly takes the iPhone back to the Apple tech department.

“Good,” I think, “At least she’ll get a new one in a few days.”

No. She gets the iPhone sent back with a ticking-off. “This is a US iPhone and we can’t support it or help you with it,” (paraphrasing) says the note that came back with the bricked iPhone. Ah. Mother sent back the wrong one. Woops.

At this point my father decided to get involved. He assigned brother #3, Fraser, to fix the issue. Unfortunately Fraser had a busy time at work this week and didn’t manage to resolve it. So when this Saturday morning arrived, my father spotted it as an unresolved problem (think ‘five nines’) and adopted the problem.

Oh dear.

We do our best to isolate my father from the best of the United Kingdom’s don’t-care, not-bothered, not-interested customer support executives, most of whom operate without any independent thought and hide behind the corporate rules and regulations to avoid getting things done. At work, my father’s team do the same — they insulate him from the mundane ‘er, no but’ executives. On the few occasions where my father is exposed to general unwillingness hiding behind ‘themz tha rules’, he simply and politely escalates to the relevant CEO and has the issue fixed in seconds.

This morning, father hopped in the car with the (UK) iPhone and headed over to the o2 shop at Lakeside shopping centre.

He presented the device to the o2 sales chappy and asked for some help.

“Did you buy this from an o2 shop?” the chap asked.

“Yes”

“Are you an o2 customer?”

My father was shocked at the question, “Well, yes, we’re paying 35 pounds a month to you for this device — which isn’t working.”

“Ah, right, have you got a proof of purchase?”

“Proof of purchase? Obviously. We’re a customer. We bought the device and signed up. You’ve got our bank details on your computer. You’re taking money from us each month?”

“Ah well I need a proof of purchase to help you,” says the sales chappy.

Classic mistake. My father, a lifelong Vodafone customer, assumed that he’d get the same level of assistance from o2. You see, you can walk into any Vodafone UK shop — anywhere in the country, from Inverness to Hartlepool, and talk to them about your account. You don’t need a proof of purchase. You simply need to give your address and account password (as you would do over the phone) and any Vodafone sales executive can talk through your account and deal with your enquiries.

You’d think that o2’s information infrastructure includes the facility to confirm the iPhone was purchased from an o2 store and offer service accordingly? Well, no, it seems.

“But I’m a customer? We’re paying monthly?” asked my father — his exasperation count moving swiftly toward annoyance.

“I can help you if you’d like to buy something else?” asked the sales chappy.

“Sorry? No, I…” my father was losing his words. Bad sign.

“You might want to try the Apple store upstairs,” suggested the sales chappy, clearly delighted to have deflected the problem.

My father turned around and did so, putting his trust in Mr Jobs. He later told me that he reckoned he’d get a better service from Apple rather than stand about negotiating with the o2 sales chappy.

He walked up to the Apple store basking in the glow of brand-Apple. The can-do nature of the buzzing store filled my father’s heart with relief.

He was referred over to the customer service bar:

“Can I help you?” asked the chap.

My father explains the issue, thrusts the iPhone over to the chap.

“Ah where did you buy it from?” asks the chap, calculating whether he can deflect my father.

My father calmly explains we bought the device from o2.

“Ah you need to go to the o2 shop. They’ll help you.” Case closed, as far as this Apple chap was concerned.

“But you’re one and the same, yes? o2 and Apple, in the UK? Besides I’ve just been to the o2 shop, they told me to come here.”

The Apple chap’s face fell as he noted that my father didn’t deflect, “OK, we’ve got a genius bar here, right?”

“Sure?” says dad.

“Can I take your name?”

“You what?”

“Can I take your name for the system?”

“Oh, right, MacLeod.”

“Ok Mr MacLeod, you’ll need to go into the queue. The four geniuses are very busy. Could you come back at 645pm?”

Faced with hours of wait, my father declined.

“If I give you 20 pounds, can you just sort the problem, give me a new one, anything?”

The Apple chap looked as though he’d been slapped.

“Oh no sir you’ll need to wait in the queue for the geniuses to check the device.”

“Listen,” explains my father, his exasperation count reaching 9, “You and I both know this device is broken. We don’t need the geniuses to tell us that. Can you just give me a new one?”

No. That’s not the way things work.

My father left with the screwed iPhone and returned home absolutely furious. Not before he used one of the iMacs in the shop to post this comment on a previous SMS Text News post (Title: “How do you use your mobile handset”).

Not even out of the Apple store, he was on the phone to Martin and instructing him to get rid of the MacBook Pro, the G5, the 30″ iMac and all the other Apple equipment in the MacLeod household.

“Ebay the lot of it, and get us some DELLs, this is just ridiculous,” he instructed, “I’ve had enough of this rubbish!”

The MacLeod senior household is thus an Apple-free zone. It’s also an o2 free zone, at the moment, whilst my brothers and I figure out how to move to the next step. My father, apoplectic with annoyance, is seething at the behaviour of both o2 and Apple. He, rightly-so, doesn’t care for the “inane” policies (or lack of care) that prevented any number of o2 and Apple chaps from helping him out.

Mother is back on her Motorola RAZR. I’m not impressed. Particularly since this shite experience reflects entirely on me and makes me look like a Class-A arse for suggesting an iPhone in the first place. Even more so, I’m the self-branded dickhead who got mother signed up to an 18-month contract from o2 complete with a device that doesn’t work.

I’m going to phone Martin and see if he can find the damn receipt so we can get a stupid, STUPID o2 shop to replace the sodding device.

How difficult does it have to be? I expected a lot more from o2. It can’t have been that difficult to look up my family’s account and confirm that my father was indeed Mr MacLeod and that the iPhone was, indeed, not actually working — and to immediately replace it. Perhaps it’s not within their control. Maybe they’re just salesmen. Perhaps you actually *have* to send the iPhone to Apple?

I expected a lot more of the Apple store, too. It’s simply not good enough to fob off my father with “er, speak to o2″ shite. Being an Apple customer is a universal experience. Well, it’s meant to be. In my experience, it has been. My MacBook Pro stopped working a day after I bought it, so I returned it to the store and it was replaced in 10 seconds, no quibbling, no arse. That’s one of the main reasons why I continue to be a customer.

Somewhere along the lines, good old British ‘can’t be f*cked’ customer service has entered the Apple UK psyche. For them to actually turn my father away — effectively tell him to piss off and stop troubling them — indicates that all is not well with the organisation.

I know it’s a slightly different issue with an iPhone. Got a problem with a Nokia? Here’s a new one, replace the SIM card and you’re done. Got a problem with an official o2 iPhone? Well, I’m not quite clear on what jiggery-pokery you need to do in order to activate a new o2 UK iPhone with an existing o2 UK iPhone account. Whatever the challenges, it’s not good enough to leave the customer sat staring at the wall without working service.

Further, it’s the height of nonsense to insist you send your iPhone to Apple to get repaired. This is a TELEPHONE we’re talking about — a critical piece of communications equipment — and a highly priced piece of equipment together with a premium monthly payment.

Absolutely ridiculous.

We will (my brothers and I) in true British blitz-spirit, sort it out. We’ll weather the shite at the o2 shop in the next few days when Martin digs out the receipt and then hopefully get it all resolved.

No thanks to o2 or Apple, at all.

o2 iPhone registration screwed up monumentally; mum annoyed

Remember a while back I was writing about how my mum was loving her Apple iPhone?

Well, she loved it so much that someone at home (could have been her, I don’t know) upgraded the (unlocked American) iPhone as a result of a prompt on screen.

The device — obviously — screwed up and required unlocking again.

Since I’m a million miles away in America, I didn’t fancy having it shipped over here, then spending hours arsing about unlocking it.. and so on.

So I collaborated with my brother Martin to get her a new iPhone from o2. (Incidentally Martin runs Bladewatch if you’re into blades, servers and the like).

We reckoned this would be a piece-of-cake solution. Plug in the iPhone, register it, sorted.

Mum was eager. Really eager. She’d been using her unlocked iPhone like no tomorrow, not only sending texts by the ton but also listening to music, viewing photos, taking photos.. the whole shebang. She’s also been the envy of her friends.

The problem?

Well it wasn’t that easy registering the iPhone. Martin did his best with the activation system on iTunes (and remember Martin is a Class-A blade specialist, and uber-Mac fanboy) but alas it conked out. The handset didn’t want to activate.

Mum is not happy. Neither is Martin, neither am I.

My other brother, Fraser, incidentally, is fiercely loyal to Vodafone and not impressed at the 18-month o2 contract we signed mum up to.

Current status? We’re waiting for Apple to send out a box via UPS. We then have to stick the iPhone in that box, send it off and hope we get a quick repair.

GAHHHH. Did anyone else’s iPhone activation screw-up?

Mum’s now back to using her Motorola RAZR meantime.

AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHH…..

Absolutely ridiculous reporting from the FT on o2, data and the iPhone

Yesterday I went to the gym.  To the sauna, though.  Not to do any excruciating exercise (that starts again tomorrow).   While I’m here in San Francisco, I’ve made an arrangement of the gym at the Fairmont Hotel.  Very nice, good service, all is good.  I picked up a complimentary copy of the FT as I walked through reception and proceeded down to Club One via the shower and into the sauna.

I am well disposed to the sauna experience — I like the dry heat — plus I do enjoy reading something, anything, whilst I’m in there.

There were two problems with my experience yesterday though.   The first was some absolutely donkey reporting from the Financial Times relating to o2 and the iPhone — the kind of reporting that makes my mouth drop open in shock.  The second problem was the guy who joined me in the sauna.  I don’t have an issue with naked men per se.  However this chap came into the sauna, laid his towel down on the top bench, laid face down upon the towel and … slowly… ever so slowly, proceeded to hump the bench.  Thoroughly off-putting.  An exception, though.  I want to be clear that this isn’t something I witness there regularly.

THANKFULLY I was able to use the FT to avoid the action scenery.

And that’s when I read this piece of joyous nonsense:

Link:  FT.com / Mergermarket - iPhone users raise network hopes

Matthew Key, who becomes chief executive of O2 Europe next month, told the Financial Times that 60 per cent of the company’s iPhone customers in the UK were sending or receiving more than 25 megabytes of data a month, the equivalent of 7,500 e-mails without attachments or 25 YouTube videos.By comparison, less than 2 per cent of O2’s other UK customers on monthly payment contracts use more than 25MB a month.

My problem with the above text?  Well, I nearly yelled ‘OBVIOUSLY’.  (I didn’t want to put off the humper opposite or call unnecessary attention to myself, hence ‘nearly‘).

OBVIOUSLY less than 2% of o2’s other UK customers use more than 25mb a month of data. OBVIOUSLY!  Because they’re WHACKED for FOUR QUID a MEG.

OBVIOUSLY.

So either it’s the reporter who didn’t quite get this.  Or it’s Mr Matthew Key, newly crowned Chief Exec of o2 Europe, who thinks our heads button up the back.  And clearly they do if you’re an FT staffer.

Come on!  The only reason o2 iPhone customers are ABLE to enjoy using the web is because it’s unlimited.  Their other customers — the CHUMPS who’re sat there paying stupid amounts per meg for their data — are trained not to use the internet via their handset because of bill shock.

In fact I don’t quite know if unlimited data is available to non-iPhone customers on o2 as yet.  I think it might be, if you really, really complain to customer services.

o2’s ‘Memova’ service offers email-to-phone by MMS; synchronisation

Well I like the sound of this. I might be a bit of a real-time email snob with my reliance on the likes of Good Mobile Messaging but I’m a fan of any service that helps make mobile email simple for your average normob (”normal mobile user”)…

Link: PC Pro: News: O2 pushes email to mobiles

O2 broadband subscribers can now pick up email on their O2 mobile phones, as the operator looks at ways of converging services.
According to O2, the “Memova” technology works with any MMS-capable phone and allows subscribers to “mobilise” their O2 Broadband email accounts without having to install or configure email software on their mobile phones.

Memova also allows users to synchronise contacts, diary and task information between devices. Automatic updates are also routinely synchronised across all mobile and fixed-line services.

So if you’re an o2 fixed-line broadband customer, you can get your email on your mobile without any configuration. Smart. Obviously all they need is your mobile number to get you connected as emails are sent by MMS. And since you’re using o2 infrastructure — broadband and mobile — the cost, one imagines, for transmitting emails to picture messages on your o2 handset is next to nothing as there are no interconnect fees.

I particularly like the sound of the contacts, calendar and task synchronisation. That sounds fantastic.

Good job o2.

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