They insisted on using their own router and you can verify your radio is sending traffic through it to their Netflix box. I would give them the option of calling TPLink or sending someone out for an $80 charge if the tech finds it's a problem they created.

Ken Hohhof wrote:

I do not relish the thought of having a newbie run ping tests from an iPhone while talking on it.

Also there’s a conversation that never seems to take place out loud:

“I have a list of computer techs you could call to work on the problem.”

“But I’d have to pay them!”

I’d even be willing to pick up the cost of the service call if it is our problem, but the basic issue is customers expect anything they can talk their ISP into fixing will be free. So do I call the guy I have to pay, or the free guy?

*From:*Af [mailto:[email protected]] *On Behalf Of *Simon Westlake
*Sent:* Wednesday, January 25, 2017 12:01 PM
*To:* [email protected]
*Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] customer suddenly can't browse but can stream using apps

My experience from doing tech support for residential users is that 'no websites will load' means 'I tried going to one website and it didn't work.' Or 'I opened my web browser, and there's a message I didn't bother to read, I just don't like it.'

If it's anything related to her gear, I'd guess it must be the router - I can't imagine multiple devices all suddenly refusing to load websites. If it's any consolation, I can get to every website from my PC, phone and iPad ;)

On 1/25/2017 11:48 AM, Ken Hohhof wrote:

    Just checking because I fear getting sucked down a rabbit hole of
    supporting things that are not our responsibility.

    �

    Customer as of about 1 month ago reports suddenly yesterday has
    �no Internet�, yet I see regular traffic graphs and she can
    stream Netflix fine using apps.� This is reverse of usual,
    streaming should be more challenging than just going to a website.

    �

    To make things worse, customer chose to buy own router and has a
    TP-Link, so I have no visibility into it.� Plus she has no
    actual computers, just iPhones and iPads and a Blu-Ray player.�
    Customer is not at all tech savvy (doesn�t understand that
    Netflix uses Internet), and seems to expect we will troubleshoot
    and fix anything Internet related because she (actually her
    parents) are paying us for �Internet�.� She reports the same
    symptoms on all devices.

    �

    Is there anything that�s happened in the past day (other than
    Trump related stuff) that I might be missing?� Like a TP-Link
    firmware upgrade, or something Apple pushed out to
    iPads/iPhones?� It just seems so strange that no websites at all
    would load, but Netflix would stream just fine.� I�d love to
    blame it on Trump�s media blackout but it�s a bit of a stretch
    to connect those dots.



--
Simon Westlake
Email:[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
Phone: (702) 447-1247
---------------------------
Sonar Software Inc
The future of ISP billing and OSS
https://sonar.software

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