gadgets / tech

BT Home Hub - There was an error joining the Airport network

10 November, 2007  |  Tagged with gadgets / tech

BT Home Hub A couple of times one of our Macs has inexplicably dropped the Airport wireless connection to our BT Broadband HomeHub, and refused to rejoin it (even though the other Mac remained online).

The error message when attempting to reconnect to the network says something like:

There was an error joining the Airport network BTHomeHub-XXXX
[Try again] [OK]

I have the simplest of fixes:
put a $ in front of your password

I’m taking a moment to document this here as I couldn’t find this info anywhere else online. It’s not in BT’s troubleshooting guides or FAQs, and I ended up phoning their helpline for advice.

If you found this page when searching for a fix, please let me know if it works for you!

UK iPhone carrier O2, doesn’t support Safari

19 September, 2007  |  Tagged with thoughts, web design, gadgets / tech

I’ve never met anybody who sings the praises of O2, the phone network Apple have disappointingly chosen to exclusively offer the iPhone in the UK. Once upon a time I was an O2 customer, but the experience was so bad that not even the iPhone will tempt me back. I was an ‘online’ customer, which meant suffering their awful, error-riddled website, because no in-store representative could even talk to me about my account, and I refused to call their premium-rate customer support number to talk to an incompetent call centre buffoon.

It doesn’t fill me with confidence that even after the iPhone launch has been announced, O2 have such disregard for Apple’s customers that the left-hand navigation on their website is missing when viewed in Apple’s Safari web browser (the browser built-in to the iPhone). If you do get an iPhone in the UK, don’t expect to use it to check your bill online*.

Even more annoyingly, when I filled in their contact form to report this issue, I received the following email:

Thanks for getting in touch.
We’re really excited about the iPhone - for the most up to date information we recommend you visit www.o2.co.uk/iphone or www.apple.com/ukstore
If your query doesn’t relate to the iPhone, please reply to this email and we’ll help you further.

…so, essentially: “Nobody will read your message. If you really want us to read it then try to remember what you typed in our online form, and type it up again in an email.” - thanks O2, how helpful of you.

o2 website, broken in Safari

* I’ve just installed a beta version of Safari 3, and discovered that the problem doesn’t happen. Safari 3 will only be on a very few web developer’s Macs at the moment, so most of the world still sees the broken site - and it wouldn’t even be a hard thing for O2 to fix.

Nokia moblog marketing mess

30 March, 2006  |  Tagged with gadgets / tech

About a month ago we upgraded my wife’s mobile phone to a Nokia 7370. Since we both send photos from our handsets to Flickr, one of the main features we had been looking for was a good camera, and the 7370’s was fairly good, though I think it was the flowery pattern that really swung the decision.

We tried out the camera and all was well (much better than my phone’s miserable excuse for a camera). Now, sending the pictures to Flickr should be easy, right?…

Wrong! Sending by photo-message doesn’t work, as the picture is larger than the Orange network’s 100k MMS filesize limit. The camera wants to shrink the picture to send it but where’s the point in upgrading to a phone with a better camera if it then shrinks the photo before sending?

Fair enough, we’ll send it by email. Except that now the phone’s saying ‘file too large to attach’. This can’t be right - Nokia encourages moblogging in it’s marketing material so you’d think it would be possible to send photos from your phone to a moblog. But no.

I spoke to a lovely helpful lady called Paula at Orange tech support, who told me it’s not a restriction put on by the network, and agreed that it would be ridiculous for the phone not to be able to send the photos it takes. Since they couldn’t fix the problem immediately, they said they’d look into it and call me back. Two weeks later Paula called to say that Orange had no documentation of a filesize limit on Nokia phones, and I should try contacting Nokia direct.

I called Nokia and they couldn’t resolve the issue either and agreed that it would be ridiculous, but “you’d be surprised how often that sort of thing comes up”. A few email exchanges later (after fishing their replies out of my junk mail folder each time), Nokia customer care confirmed that there is a filesize limit of 100k on email attachments for that phone!!

That’s ridiculous! Why have a phone which can’t send the pictures it takes? If I’d wanted to download the photos to my PC then upload them to my moblog I’D HAVE USED MY FUCKING DIGITAL CAMERA.

Apparently most Nokia phones have a 300k email attachment filesize limit, which is set because “it’s higher than the limit set by most network providers”. That seems odd, since I already know Orange don’t set a limit.

So I emailed T-Mobile, Vodafone, and O2.

T-Mobile don’t limit the filesize of email attachments, but helpfully pointed out that the larger the file the longer it would take to send, so the more risk there was of losing the connection before the send was complete.

Vodafone have yet to get back to me (I’ll update when I hear from them).

O2 are possibly the least helpful company in existance. They sent me an automated email response to tell me that my question couldn’t be answered by their automated help system (I knew this, I’d already checked it on their website), and that they don’t actually employ humans to answer customer questions so I won’t be hearing from them again.

Once I’ve collated all my results I’ll go back to Nokia to get their thoughts, and I’ll keep you updated here.

eXTReMe Tracker