Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Thanks for your replies .. I upgraded last October 2010 to virgins extra large most expensive

Package 50mg ( which I need for sending work files) and the service

Is totally unreliable - you can never depend on a fast upload which makes

Guaranteeing delivery of files impossible.


I have monitored this constantly via broadband speed tracker

and the 50meg service is a ripoff to the point of being a joke


I have also got a file/ record of calls I made and end saying the

Same thing and doing the same system tests from some remote

Call centre abroad.


I have never been able to speak with an engineer that

Actually has local knowledge of the situation here in

East dulwich


I would appreciate if anyone local who uses virgin media

Can add info to this situation

I've got Virgin broadband, the ?25 per month option which I think is either 10 or 20MB. Works pretty well most of the time & I use Sendspace to transmit large files which it handles easily. Can be slower at peak times, like 4pm on a weekday (millions of kids logging on after school) and Saturday mornings but otherwise quite quick. I know it's a cliche but turning the modem & your wifi router off for a minute or so usually reboots effectively and speeds things up if it's grinding to a halt.
Am also on VM ADSL broadband, get about 3.5mb/s but expect upto 10. Generally ok, but when it goes wrong trying to get info from VM can be difficult and they tend not to have answeres, so far has always been a problem at their end. They migrated all mail to Google which during transition was problamatic, however recently has been ok including deleting mail.

Just got through for a second time today to Virgin Media

- the same answer as this morning:

" the 'Application' for checking out customer details is down

And we cannot perform any tests on individual customers' lines"


In a previous phone call on 7th June I was told

"there is a problem with the frequency of the server

which is too low" and that it would be sorted by 16th June


And that once the problem was over I could claim a rebate

Of ?26


then received a non human computer call which left a message

Saying the problem was fixed and I could now claim the rebate


Which is negligible in relation to months of irregular service


***


I suspect that they have oversold their capacity

and too many people are competing for their available broadband space


Expert opinion would be much appreciated in reply to this


( BTw am involved in this thread thanks to a smart phone )

Mine didn't work at all from noon to midnight yesterday. I'm on Lordship Lane near the police station. It's a bit odd that mine didn't work yesterday and yours today - maybe they're doing maintenance or something. I haven't rung them yet as I really wasn't in the mood to be moan at some poor sole on the other end of the phone. I will email though as unless you log each fault you can't be/is extremely hard to be compensated when you get really peeved off and ask for money back.
Same problems as reported above. Intermittent service, sometimes no service at all. Thinking of switching to another provider. The box knows something is wrong because when we lose the internet it always has a blinking led. No internet this eve (using 3G) but telly ok.

>I have intermittent connectivity with the Virgin ADSL service which is definitely made worse during poor weather.


I've had that. It's quite possibly not attributable to Virgin but to a bad joint in the BT wiring near you. The problem is it's often not bad enough to cause degradation below BT's standard of acceptability for voice calls. If your modem interface permits it, you could monitor your connection statistics, particularly for the number of line drops, errors reported, and the value of your download signal/noise ratio margin. Connections are liable to be dropped when the latter gets too low (less than six or so), as will happen if the line gets noisier because of damp or corrosion. It gives you something to pass on to the Virgin help desk. Noting times and conditions may also help provide clues as to the cause: sometimes signal degradation can be due to intermittent electromagnetic interference in the home.

No offense but I think the rain as excuse won't wash - Virgin

Has highly touted dedicated cables laid in the days of

NTL completely independent from the phone network


This is why they claim to offer ( rightly in principle) such

Massively superior speeds.


But the fact that their service is still so dire Cannot

Be Attributed to the odd rainstorm or flooded green roadside box



I will bet that they have oversold their capacity

On the basic servers that supply this area


If you do an online broadband speed test - you get a good result


If you choose a far away server like ashford Kent or somewhere exotic


The worst thing is that there is no reliable source of information

About when the system will be down and this turns running

An internet dependent business from home into a nightmare

Update 12.00pm 21 jun 11


There are number of positive outcomes here objectively

Speaking a about Virgin Media:


1 - i discovered a direct freephone number for tech support

With no mindless gok voiced menu of options. You get straight through

On: 0800 052 0431 to clues up helpful call centre people abroad


2 - on the standard virgin modems there are 5 blue lights from left

To right


- a tick ( if this is not lit the broadband connection is dead)


- upload activity arrow

- download activity arrow

- computer ethernet connection ( unplug the cable and it goes off)

- power symbol


----/


Our personal broadband issue appears to be a hardware fault from the street

They are sending a technician within 24 hours


-----/


They acknowledged the broader months long issue of speed and reliability for the whole area

I mentioned the previous deadline thAt hey said it would be fixed by 16th June

The job has been extended and the new deadline is that it will

be fixed by 5.00pm 24th June

I've had Virgin Media at home for years and it definitely seems to have got worse in the last year or so. I've had broadband issues a lot recently, hours or days when I get no service at all. And my cable TV has been getting worse as well, I frequently have channels missing or freezing. I had an engineer round yesterday and he admitted that it was due to the number of Virgin customers in the area... the box that the information flows through can't cope with the demand so some of us are not getting a strong enough signal. I'm very close to ditching Virgin altogether but I get the impression that Sky are not much better. I can only hope that Virgin are taking steps to deal with the problem, especially as they were recently leafletting in the area to attract new customers. I hope they don't have any luck with that.


I also had to take yesterday off work to wait for delivery of a wireless router from them... "any time between 7am and 7pm". Thanks for being so specific.

we have sky and have to admit it sounds pretty similar to all the virgin problems though our TV fares worse than the internet - missing channels, no channels at all, can't record/pause stuff. But internet slow/intermittent and seemingly getting worse. No matter how many times we try to call and rectify the problems there is never any improvement.

Thanks for that update heart108


Our broadband has also been out since yesterday morning and I have learnt more from your post than five years of phone calls to the Virgin techs who in the past, after very long waiting, have told me nothing is wrong (when it was) and that the fault was with my Apple wireless(when it was clearly a problem with them and in the wider area).


At work now which is why I can read this, will check the lights and modem tonight and try that number if they're still answering.


Update: broadband was working again on return home - I will make a note of that 0800 number.

I've heard a lot of bad things about Virgin media, mainly unreliability and poor customer service.


I have also filmed "break-out" groups with Virgin customers talking to Virgin management about these issues. Glad I did because I wouldn't touch them with a barge pole now.


For the record I use o2. Had no problems, quick, good customer service and cheap if you use o2 mobile.

I am also increasingly fed up with intermittent Virgin broadband service. Been like this for many, many months. One minute it's there, the next it isn't.


We had an unrelated visit from a BT engineer last week who said that my connection to the BT grey box was a copper wire. I'm now wondering where, oh where, is the fibre optic cable that is supposed to be giving me faster broadband?!


Interestingly, the BT engineer said that super fast BT broadband was about to be launched in Forrest Hill. 80-100mgs. It's part of the new Infinity scheme. Apparently we'll get it in Dulwich by end of the year. Could be the answer to all our problems?

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • If you don't want foxes constantly visiting your property, the onus is really on you, the homeowner, to fox-proof your garden. They are protected wildlife and beautiful, highly misunderstood creatures that are permanently established in the urban landscape. To deter them, you must focus on prevention: install plastic spikes or similar humane deterrents on the tops of fences, make sure there are no holes, and fill in any gaps they may be using for dens. For a scent deterrent, you can use products containing ammonium sulphate (often found in certain lawn treatments and available on eBay) and spray the area regularly. I've had foxes visiting me for the last four years and have successfully treated three for mange using Ivermectin in targeted bait, observing them safely with Ring cameras. The ones that feed them responsibly with high-quality health food such as raw eggs, raw chicken scraps, or dried and wet dog food actually improve their overall health and discourage them from nuisance behavior like bin diving, eating urban garbage, and digging in the garden for worms. Even if you were to kill a fox that lived on your property, it would only temporarily result in a "vacuum" which another fox would quickly fill. On average, they are lucky to get to two years old, being killed mostly by cars and injuries which, if untreated, often kill them. They are more intelligent than dogs or cats but live short, precarious lives in the dark of night, existing on the edge of human society because we tried to exterminate them in former times when they were a threat to our scarce food. This paranoia and acute survival instinct is bred into them by natural selection.They tend to stay away from where they are not wanted if you make it obvious enough.  Ammonium Sulphate is cheap as chips - get some - or don't oh and don't use bone meal fertiliser that has the opposite effect !      https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/254700292293?_skw=ammoniumj+sulpahte&itmmeta=01K7P00MMT1V5AMR8D9TBENQ4R&hash=item3b4d5208c5:g:ussAAOSwrjtfRj92&itmprp=enc%3AAQAKAAAA8FkggFvd1GGDu0w3yXCmi1fhnp4DjTtHUNe%2BAYGnIWDuSA2kLbS2bPIC7IEg2onglhHOMSUoJzUxMv38IxLKTJErXQHj8c%2FSNLfwiXm5ycJu2aq%2FJTA%2BEmFnhZZPphhLJMS389zG%2BI%2Bn4F%2FCgPygQrw%2FFgm%2BpHTBZ2ybbRBdaHgmrSyQElrbIDrJ6r7WbUwSWpVHBEsut1w36hGngeldoniAbxBzRlmhz4fg3ZblkYyx62nUyDXhUwbHTcjCqjVGOYlgKtYpy2YuTfs0LRf42yG6I58t%2BXt4MW6fh5QTLuYk1t%2Fn0Fak6Edo8MOH%2B%2FUVCA%3D%3D|tkp%3ABFBMgMyCwL1m   Ammonium sulphate is used as a fox deterrent primarily by utilizing its **strong, pungent odor** when it gets wet, which mimics the smell of a predator's urine or a contaminated area that foxes naturally avoid for safety and territorial reasons. Here is a simple breakdown of how to use it: ### 1. The Principle Foxes rely heavily on scent to communicate and navigate their territory. They instinctively avoid areas that smell like they have been marked by a rival fox, a predator, or are contaminated and unsafe. Ammonium sulphate, often sold as a lawn or garden feed, releases a foul, sharp smell (often compared to ammonia) when damp, which foxes perceive as a warning signal. ### 2. Application Method The most common method for using ammonium sulphate as a deterrent is direct scattering: 1.  **Identify Target Areas:** Locate the specific points where the fox enters your garden (under a fence, through a hedge), where it digs, or where it rests. 2.  **Apply the Granules:** Liberally **scatter the ammonium sulphate granules** over the target areas, focusing on entry points, around bins, and over disturbed soil. 3.  **Frequency and Activation:** The deterrent works best when the granules get damp (from dew or rain). For best results, **reapply regularly,** especially after heavy rain or if you notice the fox returning. ### 3. Key Considerations * **Sourcing:** As you noted, the chemical is often found in commercial lawn products like "Scoot" or can be purchased as pure **ammonium sulphate** fertilizer from garden centers or online. * **Lawn Safety:** Since it is a nitrogen-rich fertilizer, avoid dumping large, concentrated piles on your grass, as it can cause **chemical burns** and yellowing. Scattering it thinly and strategically is key. * **Humane Method:** This method is considered **humane** as it relies solely on scent and irritation to deter the fox, not physical harm. The fox simply chooses to go elsewhere.
    • hope the feedback goes to the library teams to encourage more libraries and more library use
    • and even since Tory austerity, they've been opening new build modern libraries - Canada Water, Camberwell, Una Marson, Grove Vale. 
    • Agree! I feel very lucky to live in a borough that has such great libraries. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...