
On 10/27/21 12:21, Ivan Kovacevic wrote:
Apart from the "I ought to fix this, it just ain't right" instinct... The practical solution is for the caller to open a ticket with their provider.
Yes, but the caller will experience some pain doing so and needs to be persistent.
You'll go crazy trying to get to the big-carrier engineering team and to someone who knows how to investigate and solve the problem... unless they are lurking on this list....
Truer words were never spoken. It's impossible to reach anyone at [Big Telephone Company] with clue over the telephone. The best you can hope for is a customer-facing rep, hopefully a native English speaker, who then will relay a message to someone who knows someone in the right department and if you're really lucky relay a response back to you. Just try to, on any publicly listed number other than for new sales, reach someone at AT&T who is located within the territory described by the first letter of their acronym. First, be prepared to play the DTMF minuet to their IVR (which has "recently changed" according to Jane Barbe). -- Jay Hennigan - jay at west.net Network Engineering - CCIE #7880 503 897-8550 - WB6RDV