Has anyone found any Ts&Cs for Tesco yet?
Do they have a POP3 email server?
Cheers.
Dave.
Don't know but the price looks good. Got to be something wrong with it. ;-)
>
> Has anyone found any Ts&Cs for Tesco yet?
http://www.tesco.net/terms_conditions.asp
If it's any consolation, I couldn't find them either until I phoned up and
got told that they're on the tesco.net home page, *not* the broadband page.
It looks to be the standard(ish) 12 months minimum contract with £70
cancellation charge if you want out within the first year. Uncapped at
present although they reserve the right to cap if necessary in the future.
I happy with Zen at the moment but I've a friend who want to get connected
and on-line at the least cost possible so it looks attractive with the free
connection and low monthly charge. The free modem is of no interest to me or
my friend but I suppose it might interest some.
Tim
>
> Do they have a POP3 email server?
>
> Cheers.
>
> Dave.
--
Remove the obvious to reply by email.
I imagine that you end up with an email address that includes the name Tesco.
Is that something that you would want?
Michael Chare
What's that mean?
You can sign up now with unlimited bandwidth but at any point they may
decide to cap your bandwidth?
And (then) leave you with the remainder of your 12 month contract to fulfil?
Martin.
Tim Downie responded:
> http://www.tesco.net/terms_conditions.asp
Para. 1 of the Conditions says (my emphasis):
"We will provide you with the online services available *from time to
time* via Tesco broadband, which *may* include the use of email,
webspace, usenet newsgroups and access to the www.tesco.net website (the
"Service")".
Sounds very dodgy, and might be *very* intermittent! <g>
Yes, I know that it's lawyer-speak. I write as someone who's been on
Tesco 'Anytime' for a couple of years - I've been very happy with that
service and have just signed up for their broadband
--
DB.
.
>Sounds very dodgy
sounded more like "we expect it to work, but don't guarantee 100%
uptime" which is pretty much what every ISP suggests :-) Peter M
I imagine that to the lawyer "from time to time" means something along
the lines of "between the dates agreed", whereas to the ordinary punter
it means "occasionally". Having signed-up for Tesco's broadband service
I'm trusting that it will be available more often than "occasionally"!
--
DB.
Be sure to let the group know what you think of it once its up and running
:))
Or even more to the point, what residential user cares whether a email
address contains 'tesco' or 'bt' as long as it works and is reliable.
>Or even more to the point, what residential user cares whether a email
>address contains 'tesco' or 'bt' as long as it works and is reliable.
It becomes something of a pain when the user changes ISP, or the service
provided is painfully unreliable, and lots of people know that address,
so the user wants to change ISP but fears losing contact. I'd say the
sooner the better for one to not be tied to an ISP's mail address!
> Or even more to the point, what residential user cares whether a email
> address contains 'tesco' or 'bt' as long as it works and is reliable.
Well, tht 'bt' one looks naff to those in the know, and 'tesco' looks
naff to most people? :-)
--
Bob Eager
begin a new life...dump Windows!
It looks a naff address, but so do most ISP email addresses, my point is as
long as it works, most people aint gonna care if its got tesco or anything
else in its title.
If people didnt want to email me just cos my address had 'tesco' in it,
then to be honest id rather not get any mail from those types of people.
>
> --
> Bob Eager
>