I had a mare trying to close my Sky account (I was out of contract) with a woman in one of their Asian call centers. She kept saying that she had to complete "protocols" and wouldn't close the contract unless I revealed who my new supplier was and how much they were charging me. It got quite heated and I hung up. I rang back and got someone else. I told him that my new supplier could offer me 1Gb speeds and I asked if Sky could? When he replied, "No.", we moved onto the next stage and the account was closed.I had bb with sky and seamlessly switched at the end of the contract.
why did you need to call them at all? just sign up to the new provider if you are out of contract.I had a mare trying to close my Sky account (I was out of contract) with a woman in one of their Asian call centers. She kept saying that she had to complete "protocols" and wouldn't close the contract unless I revealed who my new supplier was and how much they were charging me. It got quite heated and I hung up. I rang back and got someone else. I told him that my new supplier could offer me 1Gb speeds and I asked if Sky could? When he replied, "No.", we moved onto the next stage and the account was closed.
Not a pleasant experience.
D.
In the 5 times ive switched over the past 5 years it has ported from one provider to another, same as moving electricity provider, i dont need to cancel with the existing.If you don't cancel, they will continue to invoice you monthly - as you haven't cancelled the contract, they are entitled to do this
You may be "out of contract" but that doesn't mean they can't charge you
If you don't cancel, they will continue to invoice you monthly - as you haven't cancelled the contract, they are entitled to do this
You may be "out of contract" but that doesn't mean they can't charge you
I think it depends on who (or rather what infrastructure) you're switching from/to.In the 5 times ive switched over the past 5 years it has ported from one provider to another, same as moving electricity provider, i dont need to cancel with the existing.
Precisely. My Sky box was still fully functional, so they had every right to keep charging for it, until I cancelled it. This is nothing like gas an electricity where all providers piggy-back on the same infrastructure. D.I think it depends on who (or rather what infrastructure) you're switching from/to.
If old and new provider is coming in through the line managed by Eir then it should be relatively seamless. Likewise if it's over SIRO - I think - processes are in place. However, if by switching you jump between infrastructure (traditional phone line, SIRO and VM) then it gets messy.
As he said it can be, I have ftth which I assume you are on now , in that scenario you don’t need to cancel just switch !Precisely. My Sky box was still fully functional, so they had every right to keep charging for it, until I cancelled it. This is nothing like gas an electricity where all providers piggy-back on the same infrastructure. D.
Ps. I'm not sure what you mean by FTTH. As in, can the cable that Virgin are currently using to supply my BB be used by another supplier? Virgin installed this cable, so isn't is theirs?As he said it can be, I have ftth which I assume you are on now , in that scenario you don’t need to cancel just switch !
your sky broadband wasnt coming via the satellite though. FTTH is fibre to the home. Virgin are usually on their own infrastructure and then a number of suppliers use the openeir or siro infrastructure to deliver broadband.I was on satellite dish with Sky. I’m now on Apollo 360 box (tv via WiFi, like a Google dongle) with Virgin. So, seamless switching back won’t be possible. But, that’s a year away.
D.
Thanks.your sky broadband wasnt coming via the satellite though. FTTH is fibre to the home. Virgin are usually on their own infrastructure and then a number of suppliers use the openeir or siro infrastructure to deliver broadband.
Sorry, Can you explain this. Did VM supply the box and this is their latest BB/Tv package ? as oppose to the TV set top box and separate router option thru co-ax ?I’m now on Apollo 360 box (tv via WiFi, like a Google dongle) with Virgin.
Yes. If you Google the Apollo 360, you can read about it. All you get is that box, which is about the size of a packet of cigarettes, and a remote control. It took ten minutes to install. Like a Google dongle, it takes its feed by WiFi from our VM router which is in my upstairs office. (I leave the router there since I have two computers connected directly to it by cable)Sorry, Can you explain this. Did VM supply the box and this is their latest BB/Tv package ? as oppose to the TV set top box and separate router option thru co-ax ?
So are VM going to streaming and away from co-ax then. That's bad news as most streaming boxes I, ahem, have seen has slight buffering issues now and then which I don't ever remember on the co-ax.I’ve had very occasional buffering so far, even though the signal next to the 360 box is about 45-50Mbps (as measured doing a speed test on my phone) But, it’s really very good.
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