Major Problems with Cingular Network 382
Wabin writes "It looks like the Cingular GSM network is having serious trouble. My phone stopped working today completely, though my wife's was still able to make outgoing calls. Talking to tech support, they claimed some kind of massive failure across the country starting around 4PM yesterday and possibly a virus attack. Howard Forums is all abuzz, but there really doesn't seem to be any hard info. Glad I haven't totally given up the land line yet... redundancy is good."
rolled over (Score:5, Funny)
Re:rolled over (Score:2, Funny)
They also now provide service in central africa.
You know, cause of the new name.
Okay I'll just be going now.
Ack! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Ack! (Score:2)
Unfortunately, this won't happen while these namby-pamby virus attacks continue to merely disrupt things. Virus writers need to start making their viruses destroy the computers they infect after spreading. Maybe consumers or Microsoft will actually start doing something if their computers get destroyed every damned week.
Re:Ack! (Score:2)
Yeah, but probably the wrong things. Think about how "security" increased after 9/11 in the US. Lots of new hassles, civil rights trashed, privacy eroded even more, but very little true security. I dread the day virus writers get really destructive. I'm sure M$ would use such an attack to come up with even more "not interoperable" techniques. But now they can do it openly in the nam
Can you hear me now? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Can you hear me now? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Can you hear me now? (Score:2, Interesting)
Maybe there's something wrong with your phone on VZW? Or maybe you're in some rural locality I haven't been to.
Re:Can you hear me now? (Score:2)
Hello!
Are you there?
Hello!
I called you up
to say hello.
I said hello.
Can you hear me, Joe?
Oh, no.
I can not hear your call.
I can not hear your call at all.
This is not good
and I know why.
A mouse has cut the wire.
Good-by![sic]
- Geisel, Theodor S., 1960, pp. 24-25, "One fish two fish red fish blue fish"
cingular (Score:5, Funny)
Re:cingular (Score:3, Funny)
Service completely out... (Score:5, Funny)
Help, Pol...............has a gu............ill us all ........... address is 3 ..........Street....
What the message actually is... (Score:5, Funny)
Help, Polly - your receipe for turkey goulash has a gummy taste to it. Can I double the ingrediants so it will fill us all up? Oops, I've got to go, Bill is complaining that the computer's printer port's address is 3bc and I have to show him how to change it. Oh and you were right, Robert Ulrich played Jim Street in the original "SWAT" TV Show. Goodbye
myke
Re:What the message actually is... (Score:2)
Help, Polly - your receipe for turkey goulash has a gummy taste to it. Can I double the ingrediants so it will fill us all up? Oops, I've got to go, Bill is complaining that the computer's printer port's address is 3bc and I have to show him how to change it. Oh and you were right, Robert Ulrich played Jim Street in the original "SWAT" TV Show.
Works here... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Works here... (Score:5, Funny)
I'm sure a phone slashdotting will help their network out a lot. =)
Slashdotting phones... (Score:5, Interesting)
We sold transcripts of TV shows, including the old "Phil Donahue" shows in the early '90s. There was a lady on the show who called herself "The Recipe Detective." She had a column in a small-town newspaper which was pretty popular there. She took famous foods and tried to figure out how they were made: Twinkies, Oreos, Kentucky Fried Chicken, things like that. Then she published her recipes so you could make them yourself. Donahue thought this would be popular on his show.
Oh, boy, and howdy.
The Recipe Detective made the same offer on the show that she did in her newspaper column: "Send me a self-addressed, stamped envelope, and I'll send you whichever recipe you want." This turned out to be the biggest mistake of her life. She got over a million replies. Just sending the envelopes back with an apology would have bankrupted her. So, the next time she was on the show she apologized to all the nice people who had written her and told them they could get the recipes and transcript by calling our company. And she gave our 800 number and address.
Thirty seconds later our phones began to ring.
We had two T-1s for our phone lines because the calls tended to come in spikes right after our number appeared on national television. (And you thought Voice Over Internet Protocol was a new thing.) The T-1s were maxed out within five seconds and stayed that way for a week. It turned out that not only had our own lines been overloaded, but our long-distance provider's cross-country fiber-optic lines had not had the capacity to carry that many calls. (Not that it mattered to our customers. A busy signal is a busy signal.)
Even the post office was slashdotted: The trays of mail (boy, did our delivery guy hate us!) filled up all the halls on one floor of our building.
We switched to MCI because they had special ways of dealing with these kinds of problems: They could put our overflow into a voice-mail service on which customers could leave a call-back number. If their cross-country capacity was exceeded they could take the calls in the every local region and store them in voice-mail there.
When Donahue reran the second Recipe Detective show, he gave us a heads-up it was coming. So we told MCI it was on its way. And we had extra people ready for the onslaught. It happened again, but we had all the special procedures in place. After 24 hours MCI called (we had set up a special line so they could get through). It seems their hard drives were almost full and could we please start listening to and removing our voice-mail messages? Well, not very easily since all our lines were still jammed with incoming calls (and MCI's voice-mail system was accessed by phone). So we hired people to work out of their own homes to listen to the voice-mail messages and compile gigantic lists of call-back numbers.
Re:Slashdotting phones... (Score:3, Informative)
Was?
For information and 20 free recipes, send a SASE to:
Gloria Pitzer
Box 237
Marysville, MI., 48040
Ms. Pitzer publishes a number of cookbooks, all of which you can order directly. Information here [askyourneighbor.com]. She also publishes a quarterly newsletter for $16 per year, send it to the same address.
Ms. Pitzer is on WNZK 690AM out of Detroit every Tuesday from 10:30am to 11:00am. You can listen to the program that she appears on over the i
Have you considered using bongo drums... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Have you considered using bongo drums... (Score:2, Funny)
KFG
Re:Have you considered using bongo drums... (Score:3, Funny)
And if that doesn't work, the customers can always join the Ukrainian Cellphone Destruction Championship [slashdot.org].
Re:Have you considered using bongo drums... (Score:5, Funny)
Can you imagine the mindless din created by a beowulf cluster of bongo drums doing a DDoS attack?
Re:Have you considered using bongo drums... (Score:3, Funny)
Sorry it took so long for me to follow up. My bongo packets were echoing off the walls and causing massive dupes, so i had to move outside.
Re:Have you considered using bongo drums... (Score:2)
Re:Have you considered using bongo drums... (Score:2)
Re:Have you considered using bongo drums... (Score:2)
Re:Have you considered using bongo drums... (Score:2)
The end of the world is upon us... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The end of the world is upon us... (Score:5, Funny)
Obligatory Dusty Baker troll (Score:2)
Last month (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Last month (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Last month (Score:5, Interesting)
I actually cut a CEO's network cable in half (in front of him and his just-about-to-faint secretary) for doing something quite similar.
I told him he could have his network connection back in 48 hours after he had thought about his sins.
When he got back from his weekend business trip, I never again had network problems originating from his office.
Believe it or not, the CEO kept my manager from firing me.
Re:Last month (Score:4, Insightful)
just my 2 cents though
Re:Last month (Score:4, Interesting)
While that may be the case in a 'civilian' setting, I'd venture a guess that this was an oh-so-common case of the CEO thinking that the rules he signed for the rest of the company to follow, didn't apply to him. I mean he's the CEO after all.
Virus infestation or Enron scandals abound as a result.
Re:Last month (Score:2)
As told, the action does sound a bit silly, but the story is short enough on details that it makes it just about impossible to really decide either way from the context. The only detail that might lead one to make a judgement is that the CEO decided that he liked the behaviour enough to keep the guy around.
Believe it or not, some CEOs actua
Re:Last month (Score:2)
You say that like it's a bad thing. I think a healthy dose of fear of geeks can be exactly that - healthy. It keeps me from having to pull out the cattle prod and KY Jelly to get my point across.
Keep up the good work GP!
Re:Last month (Score:3, Informative)
The trick is to choose your targets, and do it all with good grace and a sense of humour. If you've done it right, not only will you keep your job, but you'll probably be known as that guy who knows his stuff and can
Re:Last month (Score:5, Insightful)
If you can't deal with a CEO plugging his virus-infected laptop into your network, that only goes to show that your internal security and antivirus measures suck. Your network won't be secure and reliable unless you can prevent virus infections from spreading internally.
Re:Last month (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Last month (Score:5, Interesting)
These days I never go into a client site without my OWN firewall/NAT, which has it's own little 4 port switching hub. I use a Dlink DI-604, which cost me a whole $20 after rebate. The firewall/NAT lets me connect both my laptops and set up a "Whitelist" of client systems and internet sites I need to access. Thus one can avoid needless exposure of one's own systems to Client/Internet and vice a versa without some extra protection.
A side benefit is that I don't have to change the network settings between Office and Client work sites. :-)
Saves a lot of headaches about installing the client's latest XXX corporate anti-virus whatever. Note: Installing the client's site licensed AV Software would make me a pirate the moment my laptops left the job site. Never did use M$ security hole infested email programs. I also recently retired IE to backup browser status, it's no longer worth the patching nightmare. I now use Firebird as my default browser.
All in all, a few extra steps.. but worth it..
Re:Last month (Score:2)
well (Score:5, Funny)
Re:well (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, but we need to start an RFC for Secure Smoke Signal Protocols. This might require Particle Hopping and encrypted blankets.
Re:well (Score:3, Funny)
Re:well (Score:2)
AT&T Network having similar problems... (Score:3, Informative)
If you live in the US, avoid GSM like the plague. Especially in Southern California. I was effectively unreachable when I had GSM. Now that I'm back to traditional service, I can almost see dropping the land line.
And of course, to make matters worse, my Motorola T720 would only try for so long to sign back on to the netowrk when it went out of range. After that it just stops, displays "Unregistered SIM", and is effecitvely shut off. So if you're out of range for 30 minutes, you're out of range all day!
</rant>
Re:AT&T Network having similar problems... (Score:2)
Any good ideas?
Regards,
Ross
Re:AT&T Network having similar problems... (Score:4, Insightful)
I havnt seen any good benchmark sites for phones, but seems there would be a need when you can pick 20 types of phone for each carrier. Even nokia alone has 50+ phones that might work on a carrier, and each have different problems, battery life, attenna strength, etc.
Re:AT&T Network having similar problems... (Score:2)
Re:AT&T Network having similar problems... (Score:2)
You're the perfect example of why I rarely post on Slashdot anymore. It's just not fun anymore. Of course it is different! Hasn't anyone ever heard of sarcasm?
And I think if it couldn't find service and shut off maybe power cycling your phone would help...
You know, I figured that out
Apparently this started in Atlanta (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Apparently this started in Atlanta (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Apparently this started in Atlanta (Score:4, Informative)
Cingular... (Score:5, Funny)
Marketroid 1: We need to come up with a name for our company.
Marketroid 2: Yeah, and it needs to be snazzy... catchy... possibly spelled wrong.
Geek (sweating heavily): Big problem. We can't go live yet, our network has way too many singular points of failure. (A geek with poor grammar, who knew?)
Marketroid 1: That's awesome! Singular it is!
Marketroid 2: Or Cingular.
Marketroid 1: Genious. There's a new BMW for both of us for this one...
[wavy lines forward to present day.]
Re:Cingular... (Score:2)
Yeah, I know. It is kind of funny though, when you think about it. Now that they have the registered trademark Cingular, another company (in a similar or related industry) couldn't name themselves Singular even if they didn't want to trademark the ordinary english word. It's too similar to Cingular.
Stuff from Cingular tech support (Score:5, Informative)
I'm still without a connection, and when people call my number, they don't even get my voicemail... just a fast busy signal.
Damn you Cingular! I'm switching providers! Wait, I'm locked into a two year contract :-/ I knew that was a bad idea.
Re:Stuff from Cingular tech support (Score:4, Informative)
People cannot even reach your voicemail. This would cost me more money per day than the penalty for axing my Sprint contract, anyways.
Call them. End your contract. Get a better provider.
(FYI: Sprint is NOT one, as soon as number portability kicks in I'm out).
Re:Stuff from Cingular tech support (Score:2, Informative)
A HLR (home location register) is the node in a GSM network that stores yours subscription data and keeps track of where you are. When you turn your phone on, the MSC (mobile services centre, this is the local switch) will query the HLR to find out your subscription level and get some authentication details. If the HLR is down, you can't get on the network.
Problem started a week ago... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Problem started a week ago... (Score:2)
Cingular. It's happened. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Cingular. It's happened. (Score:2)
Re:Cingular. It's happened. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Cingular. It's happened. (Score:2)
This is why... (Score:5, Funny)
Stupid Carrier... (Score:2, Funny)
No carrier jokes never die. They only go offline for a while.
I haven't noticed any problems... (Score:2, Informative)
Cingular Problems (Score:3, Interesting)
In other news, SkyNet is ready to go on line. (Score:2)
And therefore... (Score:3, Funny)
So does that mean you will be picking up a mistress in addition to your wife?
Re:And therefore... (Score:2)
Cingular... (Score:2)
Of course, the phone isn't GSM exclusively in this area. My phone does GSM and one other (TDMA?) and if the GSM is failing I assume either the phone is still working in the other band, or the GSM in this area is (luckily) not down (yet).
Oh well, not that I care. If someone can't reach me online, they're probably not someone I care to speak to.
And wasn't there... (Score:2)
Expermenting with VOIP is good and all but...
I too have been having problems... (Score:5, Informative)
At first I thought it was the phone, as it started to drop calls, not ring when people called, and then it started to automatically turn itself off. I went in to the the store owned by Cingluar, I was there for 5 minutes and I had a new handset. This was about the middle of August. Now, this handset is having the same problems and my Fiance's phone has had nothing but problems too. (Her's sets off alarm clocks and electronic devices).
I live and die by my Cell phone as I use it as my Only phone, business and personal because I am a consultant and often out to visit with clients on a daily basis and perfer to work from coffee shops when ever possible, and to have people call and the phone not even ring has cost me in terms of business and just generally annoying.
So I finally we both get fed up, so both my Fiance and I walk into store and politely complain about the handsets, and the rep camly states that "They have been having issues with their network and voice mail". I explain, that since this is my one and only phone and I use it for business purposes that I cannot afford to have this type of service and wanted to know about switching handsets. Well, we "couldn't trade in our handsets" and would cost us retail, about $250 - 300 depending on what model, to trade buy something else.
Then I asked him, "How much is it to terminate the agreement?" and he responded studdering $150. And I then replied, "So it would be cheaper for us to break the contract and go to Alltel, then?" and he responded with silence for a few seconds then answered "yes" and then explained that it was problems with the network, not the phones.
I then asked him, "Look at it from my perpective. I am a consulant and if someone can't reach me, I loose money. Even a small contract usually totals several thousand dollars." And then I got the "any time with new technology, system, there is going to be problems" and I said, "This isn't a new system. Europe has been using it for quite sometime. In fact I used it when I was there working/studing abroad this time last year and it was great, I had no problems, so why are you? Why are you requiring all customers trade up for new phones that don't work?" He didn't have an answer.
My Fiance and I then went to AT&T, which isn't much better from what I have heard and way more expensive, and Alltel, which is pretty close to that of Cingular as far as price goes (about $5 difference a month) and for my Fiance is actully a tad bit cheaper.
That was Thursday and I didn't want to make a judgement based on emotion, because I ticked at the rep that gave me the run around on why the network isn't working even though its not his fault, and looked at the fact of the time it would take to call all of my clients and tell them I have a new number and the fact it would cost me about $8.50 more a month with Altell and decided to stick it out for a bit, but things have only been getting worse.
My fiance tried to call me 4 times today, only 1 got through and i continue to drop calls left and right. Before, I rarely had dropped calls unless I was in the middle of the sticks, now I get them all the time.
Bottom line, after reading that this is not just a local problem and speaking with several other providers in the area, that Monday morning my fiance and I are going to go back to the Cingular dealer and break our contract. Yeah its going to cost us $300, but both of us use it for business (she's a wedding planner) and losing just one customer for either of us will be an oppertunity cost of way more than $150. At the very least I go get to expense the cost off my taxes as a business expense so, I guess I break even on paper.
The only thing that sucks, is I just had a new set of business cards printed...always my damn luck...
Re:I too have been having problems... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I too have been having problems... (Score:3, Insightful)
and
So, it's you're business phone, and your livelihood depends on its reliability, but you balk at $8.50 more per month for decent service?
Re:I too have been having problems... (Score:2)
If anything they should be paying you... Definately refuse to pay any cancellation fees due to breech of contract on their part
Now everything is being blamed on viruses. (Score:2)
Their new slogan... (Score:3, Funny)
AMPS is good... (Score:2)
Yes, it's a price and spectrum hog, but it should be there as a backup. The cell companies should not be allowed to have backup systems for something as vital as cellular communication.
Re:AMPS is good... (Score:2)
OMG (Score:2)
Good opportunity (Score:3, Interesting)
KISS MY ASS, CINGULAR!
This company is being mis-managed into the ground. They're so bad that I'm half-afraid to sign up with Verizon (which is very good around here) for fear that I will be part of a herd that overwhelms their network and end up in the same straits.
Avoid Cingular.
Gads. What a commentary upon society (Score:3, Insightful)
Now, ask yourself how many of those people's lives REALLY have been turned upside down.
For a small set of the population, having mobile communications is critical. But that set is MUCH smaller than the set of people who THINK mobile communications are critical. Folks, there are answering machines with remote playback and pay telephones. There is even the idea of WAITING - that this conversation can take place LATER.
I was on a business trip a while back. I was asked by one of our Marketing directors what my cell number was. "I don't have a cell." He was shocked. "I don't need one. When I am not traveling, I can make all the personal calls I want on the local autopatches. Business calls can damn well wait till I am in the office. When I am travelling on vacation, the only calls I need to make are to hotels to book a room, and those are toll free and I can use a payphone at a gas station. When I am traveling on business the company can damn well loan a phone to me."
I'm not a Luddite - quite the contrary, I help design test equipment for cell phone. I know too well what the systems look like. That is one of the reasons I don't have a phone.
For $DEITY's sake folks, unplug once in a while - you will find out that you live quite well without the phone!
Re:Well, I must say... (Score:2)
Re:Well, I must say... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Acts of God (Score:2)
Re:Acts of God (Score:2)
Jason
ProfQuotes [profquotes.com]
Re:Acts of God (Score:2)
Then again every time he looks over his shoulder the Oracle guy has another billion in the bank.
Re:sorry, but t-mobile is crap too ... (Score:5, Informative)
Because the US is 4x the size of Western Europe and has less people.
"It's not like it's cheaper in the US, au contraire."
It actually is. At least when I looked into plans with major providers (Vodafone, T-Mobile) about a month ago, what we get in the US is far cheaper than what is offered in Europe.
For example:
T-Mobile Baisc Plus (USA)
$30
Do pay for incoming calls
300 Peak
Unlimited Off-Peak/Weekend (9pm-6am)
GPRS = $3 / mo for 1MB, $10 / mo for unlimited
No Long Distance In USA
No Roaming In USA, $.49 in North America, $.99 in Europe
T-Mobile Everyone 100 (UK)
21 GBP = $34.87
Don't pay for incoming calls
150 peak first year, 100 peak thereafter
0 Non-Peak
GPRS 0.75UK = $1.24 *per kilobyte*
No Long-Distance in UK
No Roaming in UK, 0.69GBP = $1.14 USD in rest of Europe
Let's recap
US Plan Advantages:
Cheaper
2x as many peak minutes
Unlimited (vs. 0) non-peak minutes
GPRS that's a lot cheaper
No long distance in a larger area
No roaming in a larger area
Cheaper to use in Canada/Mexico (by far) and even Europe
UK Plan Advantages:
Calling Party Pays
Frankly, I think that the US plan is a far better value. For $10 a month, you can even add unlimited calling *anytime* to other T-Mobile phones in the US (e.g. when I call my friends, it doesn't cost a thing).
I have found T-Mobile's coverage to be perfectly acceptable. I know that some experience signal issues, but, quite frankly, I have not had any problems. No, it's not universal, but it works damn well.
"why is it that i can go to the middle of nowhere in europe (scandinavia more precisely) with my t-mobile phone and get excellent coverage"
Ever been to Chimayo, NM? It's the middle of nowhere. Literally. There's 1 town within 20 miles. It has 900 people. And yet they have reliable T-Mobile GSM and GPRS service. This is not universal, but it's more common than you think.
One reason Sprint and Verizon phones get better converage is because of CDMA. CDMA *is* a better technology than GSM. It handles twice as many people per cell and the cells can be far larger (3x+). Add to that the faster data service and better call quality, and you begin to understand why CDMA is the preferred technology in the USA.
Post Summary:
- Mobile service *isn't* more expensive in the US. From my experience, it's cheaper in the US. Please show me otherwise.
- CPP is nice, but, quite frankly, it's becoming irrelivent in the US. From unlimited nights and weekends to the 600 peak minutes I get to the free calling to and from other T-Mobile phones, I have *never* run over my minute limit. And I call quite a bit. Also, in the US, calling a mobile phone is just like calling a local phone. It's free locally, and cheap long-distance ($.05/min).
- We have unlimited GPRS. I have yet to see an unlimited GPRS plan in Europe. If you know of one, please show it to me.
- We *do* have GSM. With SIM cards. 3 Providers. And GPRS. And 3G CDMA. The US has the largest 3G CDMA networks (Sprint and Verizon). 1XRTT may not be as fast as EVDO, but it *is* technically 3G.
So stop this line of "the US has primitive wireless". It hasn't been true for quite some time now.
Re:sorry, but t-mobile is crap too ... (Score:2)
Well, prices are one thing. Being in the industry I know that the uptake is poor in the US compared to Europe. I don't have the source I have at work available now. But the penetration of US and Canada combined is only arround 20% if memory serves. Compared to more than 50% in northern Europe (and Italy). With places like Taiwan at 80%.
So even if you say it's not prices (something some of my workmates don't
Crosschecked (Score:2)
I found out as follows:
[KPN-mobile Holland]
Hi 30
30 EUR = $34.44 USD
Don't pay for incoming calls
200h or SMS's at Peak or non-peak (calls or sms's beyond the free minutes cost 0.22 EUR = $0.25 USD per-minute/per-sms)
GPRS 1Mb bundle - 10 EUR = $11.48 USD
No Long-Distance in Holland (i
Re:sorry, but t-mobile is crap too ... (Score:2)
The reason is because European countries actually INVESTED in infrastructure. Here in the States, land lines are so ubiquitous that nobody really cares about wireless comm and cell sites are extremely expensive. These factoids combine to make cell companies attempt to get by with the bare minimum.
If you all only knew how much better things SHOULD be (even in Europe, where coverage stomps its American counterpart) you'd be burning down executive buildings in protest.
Re:sorry, but t-mobile is crap too ... (Score:3, Insightful)
Those billion dollar loans from foreign telcos are for infrastructure. First to cover North America with a high speed data network, wins.
Re:sorry, but t-mobile is crap too ... (Score:2)
Re:sorry, but t-mobile is crap too ... (Score:2)
Re:sorry, but t-mobile is crap too ... (Score:2)
I had a T-Mobile sidekick that, for lack of a better word, sucked. Coverage was spotty, my calls would cut off sporadically and I was unable to make phone calls from my apratment unless I stood in a a certain corner of my dining room. I should add that these problems happened in Chicago- an area where population is no excuse for lack of coverage.
On top of that, the Danger Sidekick is a joke- a pda with no calculator?? come on. But i digress...
Re:Sorry, I must say it. (Score:3, Funny)
First Suspect:You see, I told him to "Stop clowning and see to your work."
Second Suspect: But I thought he said to "Start downing the Cingular network."
Sprint guy just shakes his head.
Re:Re-imbursement for 3 days of lost air time (Score:2)