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Only 2 month into a sodding 18 month contract aswell.
Been with Orange for 4 or 5 years. We have a shite service, being about 5km and 100,000 people from the nearest digital exchange. But at least Orange would give us a Broadband service - BT said that they couldn't provide a service as we lived too far out in the sticks (for which, read, \"1km from centre of Sheffield\").As I say, the service has always been poor (usually less than 500kBits/s download). But I'm convinced that Orange also tried it on in the early days. For three consecurive years, every April/May, the download speed dropped off a cliff, then we couldn't get a connection at all from 07:00 until the late in the evening. Each time, I had a heated exchange with their technical phone support staff who insisted that the problem was with my PC (only during the hours of daylight apparently). Each time, I threatened to cancel my contract and each time they miraculously found that there was \"maintenance work being done on the line\" which cleared up the next day.If the service has suddenly dropped off from what it was previously, I suggest you write to them giving them notice that you will cancel your contract and report them to OFCOM unless they restore the service that you previously had.EDIT: After that, I suggest that you lock yourself in a rubber-lined room and never have anything to do with the modern world again for the rest of your life.
Anyone with them?Recently switched after reading good reviews.However, on an evening my speed is horrendous. And i'm downloading at dial up speeds.I've rung them and they've blamed it on my distance from the exchange which I know is absolute bull. More like they are throttling the bandwith during peak hours.Whatever, its pretty crap.
MrFrost wrote:QuoteOnly 2 month into a sodding 18 month contract aswell.Unlucky Alf strikes again!
Taken from orange terms and conditionsTraffic management is where we sometimes apply restrictions to the amount of network capacity a customer can use, which can affect your throughput speed. We do this to stop a small number of customers who excessively download during peak times (6pm to midnight), as this affects the quality of service we provide to all other customers. It also means that we are able to prioritise certain types of internet traffic on time-sensitive applications, such as our second line phone service or gaming.We believe we are protecting our customers by doing this and helping to stop a handful of people affecting your service.in amongst the answers on this pagehttp://shop.orange.co.uk/broadband/broadband-explained#traffic-management