Dear New Customer,
Mar. 2nd, 2006 01:44 amWhen your technician is trying to make sure your service is up, including your phone line, and your cable modem, he needs to ring Head Office Installations to make sure all the signals are coming through. Without doing that, he can't ensure your system is working, especially the phone line.
I therefore am finding it hard to believe that you want me to reimburse you for the three local phone calls he made, which will have cost a total of about 60 cents.
I therefore am finding it hard to believe that you want me to reimburse you for the three local phone calls he made, which will have cost a total of about 60 cents.
no subject
Date: 2006-03-01 05:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-03-01 05:56 pm (UTC)Just wondering. :)
metred local calls
Date: 2006-03-01 07:51 pm (UTC)Because the phone company can get away with charging you for them?
Local calls have always been metred here in Germany, for example.
no subject
Date: 2006-03-01 07:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-03-01 09:27 pm (UTC)Never really occurred to me that anyone would offer them for free.
no subject
Date: 2006-03-01 10:31 pm (UTC)Local service is unlimited, though.
Then again, we've also got about 2390682309482309 federal and state and county taxes slammed onto every bill we get from every utility and service provider.
no subject
Date: 2006-03-02 12:59 am (UTC)First, the call is a flat rate. It costs the same to talk for 60 seconds as it does for twelve hours. It really helped dialup ISP accounts get started in the 90s.
Second, this means that multiple short-length calls - including those which end up on answering machines - start to cost real money. Thus, telemarketing is almost nonexistent. I think I get perhaps one call a year, and it's usually (a) a political fundraiser, and (b) probably only calling me because I live in the capital city, on a phone exchange where the local demographics shade towards "moderately well-off". When I lived in a really cheap-ass area in the same city, I never got any solicitation calls at all.
On the plus side, it costs us nothing to receive a call on a mobile phone. I hear that's not the case in your neck of the woods?
no subject
Date: 2006-03-02 04:20 am (UTC)Mobile phones...depends on your plan. I pay $45/mo for 450 anytime minutes plus free nights and weekends. If you go over your allotted monthly minutes, you can get charged anywhere from 25 to 45 cents per extra minute. Roaming is super expensive - usually 69 cents/minute, and international calls can cost up to like $3/minute, depending on where you're calling and who your phone provider is.
I definitely like the idea of no telemarketing, though. It's nice that the cost per call is the same no matter the length, though - here, you get raped on long calls with long-distance plans and stuff.
Thanks for the info though - I like learning about how other countries do things. :)
no subject
Date: 2006-03-02 04:24 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-03-02 09:58 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-03-02 01:43 pm (UTC)Iam quite sure it was because someone once sued the phone-company why they bill him for the local call, he also could have gone to the neighbor and TALK to him for free, so why should he pay for using the phone instead >:)
no subject
Date: 2006-03-07 10:09 pm (UTC)