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That'll do, not going to bang on but that's pretty much the standard here....

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Joeboy wrote: ↑Thu Oct 13, 2022 4:54 pm SWMBO and myself bought a tidy wee 55" TV for the Turkish house last week. Response time from purchase to fitting was 5 hours. I then bought into a 12m/bit Internet contract to wake the smart TV up today. Under two hour response time from query to fitting. The contract is about £9 a month.
That'll do, not going to bang on but that's pretty much the standard here....![]()
The UK has been in decline for such a long time. 80 years maybe? Here in the near East they are in a growth phase on a long comparative timeline. The Turks are game to make money and don't have that 'the state will catch me' attitude. That's the least of my thoughts on it. Would bore you banging on... off out for a pint and a pie then up to Aiyden for a new visual experience tomorrow.Oldgreybeard wrote: ↑Thu Oct 13, 2022 5:07 pmJoeboy wrote: ↑Thu Oct 13, 2022 4:54 pm SWMBO and myself bought a tidy wee 55" TV for the Turkish house last week. Response time from purchase to fitting was 5 hours. I then bought into a 12m/bit Internet contract to wake the smart TV up today. Under two hour response time from query to fitting. The contract is about £9 a month.
That'll do, not going to bang on but that's pretty much the standard here....![]()
Does make you wonder why customer service in the UK is pretty universally dire. The only time in recent memory that I can recall getting very good service was from a company that had given unbelievably poor service a few years earlier, and that was SSE. They really did pull out all the stops to both fit a smart meter quickly, turned up at the exact time they would, did a neat job and when the thing wouldn't work they came out and tried changing several things before giving up and fitting a new E7 meter.
As for the £9 contract, just had an email from Plusnet telling me that our broadband and phone (although calling it broadband is a bit of a stretch) will go up from from £28.57 to £41.75 per month in November. They claim average broadband speeds using their service of 36Mb/s. Fastest I've ever seen on a speed test has been about 12Mb/s down, 4Mb/s up. Most of the time it's around 9Mb/s down, 3Mb/s up. That's faster than it used to be when were were on ADSL (we're now on FTTC VDSL). In the ADSL days we were lucky to get 4Mb/s download speed.
Why do you think Turkey has so much better services like this?
Overnight, a quick check tomorrow morning at 9am then I'm outta here. It has been a very simple process for such a miracle result.
SWMBO is standing by until Spring for eye 2, her choice as current eye is still bedfing in. Dec is for No1 son to see if he is within parameters for lens replacement. Had a quick look out of eye while a dressing being changed and it's great.Bugtownboy wrote: ↑Fri Oct 14, 2022 6:51 pm Excellent - hope everything as good as the last procedure. Has Mrs JB got another eye to be done or was it just you ?
DS over Christmas isn’t it ?
Which reminds me, we lost Daw Mill colliery here due to an underground fire when HSE had apparently been warning of the risk for months but been ignored by the owners who thought it was unnecessary over-regulation...There have been a number of high-profile mining disasters in recent memory, drawing questions about whether the state has done enough to protect workers in a dangerous industry.
The head of one Turkish mining union told the local Cumhuriyet news outlet that increasing safety measures after disasters was insufficient. “The important thing is to value people while they are alive,” he said, referencing two major mining disasters in Turkey in 2014. “There are mines all over the world, but these disasters always occur in mines in Turkey,” he said.
A prolonged fire inside a mine in the town of Soma in western Turkey in 2014 caused the worst mining disaster in the country’s history, where 301 miners died from carbon monoxide poisoning and at least 162 others were injured.
That incident drew widespread public outrage, amid questions from families and observers about what they said was insufficient government oversight and lack of safety precautions at the facility.
“Prosecutors found that the mine company had been informed of but apparently ignored clear warning signs of dangerous gas [firedamp] levels and rising heat in the mine, all of which contributed to the deaths,” said Human Rights Watch. Prosecutors later said a second deadly mining incident in 2014 that killed 18 people was preventable.