Thursday, 2 June 2011

10 Complaints About Verizon’s FiOS

When this bundled home communications service was introduced people were excited about the fiber-optics to home operating network. Verizon had the first broadband internet access to use this technology and offered more HD channels than anybody else. However, bundling internet, telephone and television is never without problems and Verizon FiOS has had its share.
  1. Billing problems – The best way to get people hopping mad is to mess up their monthly statement. People were quoted one price for all their services and then were being billed separately, which of course was more expensive.
  2. Poor customer service – Besides the standard complaints of being put on hold forever, call transfers dropped, and bad customer service hours. Many also complain of having to call back several times to resolve the same problem.
  3. Terrible technical support – Other complaints are about the poor service from the technical support. Most are hard to understand on the phone and don’t have good listening skills.
  4. Lack of communication – Because there are so many different areas to coordinate between the television, telephone and internet service, plus the billing and customer service, often the right hand doesn’t know what the left is doing. This inevitably ends up causing headaches for the consumer.
  5. Deceptive marketing – People were enticed to switch all their communication services to Verizon for one low price and were disappointed with the results. Instead of making their lives simpler, they had some services that didn’t work properly, if at all, and plenty of frustration trying to get it all straightened out.
  6. DVR recording – Most customers were happy with the DVR feature of their television at first, but then started to notice problems. There are reports of programs being recorded randomly and mysterious programming changes.
  7. Poor internet – Complaints in this area range from problems with email to router troubles. The wireless internet router doesn’t work well at all and defective equipment was installed.
  8. HD problems – The HD television was the main selling point for Verizon, but that’s also come under scrutiny lately. Customers were promised full HD service only to find out more HD channels were added later for an extra charge. Some found out too late that some of the HD channels were not available in their area.
  9. Phone numbers – There seems to be a recurring problem for people to retain their home phone numbers when switching to the FiOS service. The technicians will hook up a second line with a new number instead of keeping the existing one and the customer gets stuck with the bill for another line.
  10. Some features not available – The lack of franchise agreements in some areas limits the features available to some customers. This could be the underlying cause of many of these problems, and the customer service and tech support may be unaware of it.
People loved the promise of the latest technology combined with the convenience of bundled services, only to be disappointed with the end result. It’s probably more prudent to wait until the kinks have been worked out before signing on to an all-in-one communications system that’s just come on the market. Let someone else work the bugs out first.

Computex 2011: Gigabyte G1 Assassin, Aivia, More


Gigabyte showcased its entire portfolio at Computex with some killer notebooks and beefed-up graphics cards. Unfortunately, other than motherboards, power supplies, and a few gaming peripherals, we won't be seeing most of the products displayed here. So let's start off with what's relevant to us.

North Korea hacker threat grows as cyber unit grows: defector

SEOUL  - Secretive North Korea is scouring its universities for computer prodigies to send overseas for training as part of a plan to expand its cyber warfare unit, a defector said on Wednesday, underscoring the increased risk of cyber attacks.
The South has accused the North of being responsible for a number of computer hacking incidents this year, including an "unprecedented act of cyber terror" in April that brought down the network of a leading South Korea bank.

Taiwanese "one girl band" gains fame as video goes viral


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TAIPEI  - Though Asian girl bands such as Japan's AKB48 and South Korea's Wonder Girls are gaining fame around the world, Taiwanese performer Shara Lin goes them one better -- she is her own band, playing violin, zither and piano.
Now her musical multi-tasking is on global display in a training video of her performing Taiwanese artist Jolin Tsai's song "Dancing Diva" that has racked up more than 4 million views on YouTube within three weeks.

The punishment in a Malaysian defamation case? An apology, tweeted 100 times

A Malaysian social activist will apologize 100 times on Twitter in an unusual settlement with a magazine publisher in a defamation case, his lawyer said Thursday.

The penalty has sparked debate among Internet users about the pitfalls of social media in Malaysia, where authorities have repeatedly warned people to be more cautious about they write on blogs, Facebook and Twitter.

Fahmi Fadzil, an opposition politician's aide and respected commentator on social issues, claimed on Twitter in January that his pregnant friend had been poorly treated by her employers at a magazine run by BluInc Media.

First Indian-Made Tablet Goes On Sale Again

India's first home-made tablet is up for grabs again, after being sold out the first time round. Bangalore-based Notion Ink have started taking orders for 'Adam', which they claim was sold out after they started shipping in January 2011. Signing up for a tablet is through a tedious registration process and it does not guarantee you a tablet it as Notion Ink reserves the right of refusal and will decide who to sell Adam to.

First showcased at CES 2010 (Consumer Electronics Show 2010), the tablet has been an object of interest and criticism because of its Eden UI. It was one of the first tablets to feature the Pixel Qi display and was hailed by experts as the thing to watch-out for. But, the company has still not been able to launch its products in quantities that are enough to make a mark.

NVidia's Tegra 250 Dual-Core processor clocking at 1Ghz powers the Adam alongside 1GB of RAM, 10.1 Pixel Qi display with multi-touch support and a resolution of 1024x600, 8 GB of flash memory, a micoSD card slot, a 3.2 megapixel swivel camera and multiple ports including a full sized USB port.

For all the new buyers the company will ship an upgraded version of the 'Eden UI', which has now hit version 1.5. The Adam originally was released with Google's Android 2.2 Froyo operating system but now the company claims that they are working on an Android Gingerbread version, which will eventually be upgraded, to Android 3.0 Honeycomb.

Microsoft demonstrates Windows 8

Microsoft demonstrated the next generation of Windows at the D9 conference today. Codenamed Windows 8, it sports a totally redesigned interface featuring tiles, similar to Microsoft Windows Phone 7.

Windows 8-based PCs will be able to scale from touch-only small screens through to large screens, with or without a keyboard and mouse.

Microsoft also announced that all Windows 7 applications and programs will be supported in the new touch-enabled version of Windows and users will be able to seamlessly switch between these apps.

They also demonstrated for the first time a fully touch-enabled Internet Explorer 10.

No specific launch date has been announced.

Check out the video below for a brief glimpse of the new platform.

WHO cell phone report 'inconclusive': Taiwan's HTC

Taiwan's leading smartphone maker HTC Thursday labelled as "inconclusive" a World Health Organization study that said mobile phone users may be at increased risk of brain cancer.

"While the current WHO research results are inconclusive, we continue to actively monitor for new research in this area," the company said in a statement.

"HTC is committed to providing a quality product and we follow governmental guidelines and regulations pertaining to phone safety."

The statement came after the WHO's International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) announced Tuesday that radio-frequency electromagnetic fields generated by wireless devices are "possibly carcinogenic to humans."

Google hoping other sites like recommendation tool

Google Inc. is hoping other websites will like its recently introduced system for recommending online content and ads.

The Internet search leader has been using a "+1" recommendation button on its own site for two months. It became available to other publishers Wednesday.

The +1 feature is similar to the Facebook "Like" button that has become a staple at thousands of websites.

Google given more time to reach book settlement

A US judge on Wednesday allowed Google and US authors and publishers more time to seek a new settlement over the Internet giant's plan to create a massive online library and bookstore.

US District Court Judge Denny Chin gave Google and the Authors Guild and the Association of American Publishers (AAP) until July 19 to hammer out a deal to settle a 2005 class action charging Google with copyright infringement over its huge book-scanning project.

In March, Chin rejected a settlement calling for Google to pay $125 million to resolve outstanding copyright claims and to establish an independent "Book Rights Registry" which would provide sales and advertising revenue to authors and publishers.

Microsoft lower on Nokia report

Microsoft shares were down nearly two percent on Wall Street on Wednesday amid an unconfirmed report that the US software giant had agreed to purchase Nokia's mobile business for $19 billion.

Microsoft shares were 1.92 percent lower at $24.53 in early afternoon trading in a market that was down overall.

The website Boy Genius, or BGR.com, reported on Wednesday that according to industry insider Eldar Murtazin, Microsoft has struck a deal to purchase Nokia's mobile phone business for $19 billion, a claim dismissed by a Nokia spokesperson.

Netflix shows interest in India

US video giant Netflix, which has more than 23 million subscribers in the United States and Canada, plans to expand to another country this year, founder Reed Hastings said on Wednesday.

The Netflix chief executive, speaking at the All Things Digital technology conference in southern California, said Asia would be "very important" as the company looks to grow internationally.

"China's very tough for US companies,' he said, "but outside of China, I think Korea's a great market, Indonesia's going to be a great market, Japan's a great market, India's going to be a great market."

Twitter launching photo-sharing service

Twitter said Wednesday that it is adding a photo-sharing option for its users, a move that could deal a blow to existing services such as Twitpic and yfrog.

Twitter chief executive Dick Costolo also announced at the All Things Digital technology conference here that the San Francisco-based service was upgrading its search function.

Twitter will begin allowing users to upload pictures and attach them to "tweets" directly from Twitter.com, Costolo said.

Google says hackers in China stole Gmail passwords

San Francisco:  Google said Wednesday that hundreds of users of Gmail, its e-mail service, had been the targets of clandestine attacks apparently originating in China that were aimed at stealing their passwords and monitoring their e-mail.

In a blog post, the company said the victims included senior government officials in the United States, Chinese political activists, officials in several Asian countries, military personnel and journalists.

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