[citation][nom]darkknight22[/nom]I'm impressed he knew the number for the local police dispatch off hand.Either way, it's a good thing nobody died because of this, can you imagine how many lawsuits would be going around??[/citation]
The next commercial will be Luke Wilson finding the local dispatch number with the on phone yellow pages while on the phone with 911 hundreds of miles away.
Typical AT&T we fixed it but don't know what the problem was...I get that every time they fix one of my T1s...WTF...What ever you did to fix it was the problem!
[citation][nom]haljordan[/nom]AT&T doesn't know what caused it, but they fixed it...good enough for me![/citation]
That should hardly be good enough for anyone. If they don't know what caused it then they cannot prevent it from happening again. AT&T needs to get their sh*t together here. This is no, "Whoops, tried to call Gramma down the block and was connected halfway across the country" situation.
They knew what the problem was when they fixed it.
Saying what the actual problem was would make them look more stupid than giving the answer that they did.
I think this violates their agreement with the FCC as a phone service provider. There will probably be an investigation by the authorities on this matter. Of course, nothing will come of it, but that's just life for you.
[citation][nom]thebigt42[/nom]Typical AT&T we fixed it but don't know what the problem was...I get that every time they fix one of my T1s...WTF...What ever you did to fix it was the problem![/citation]
They treated the effect and are still trying to figure out (or don't care) what caused it. It's pretty easy to correct a problem but not so easy to figure out why it happened.
[citation][nom]mavanhel[/nom]That should hardly be good enough for anyone. If they don't know what caused it then they cannot prevent it from happening again. AT&T needs to get their sh*t together here. This is no, "Whoops, tried to call Gramma down the block and was connected halfway across the country" situation.[/citation]