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[Dec. 8th, 2006|05:35 pm]
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[mood |annoyedannoyed]

I bought a HD TiVo and wanted to hook it up for use with my cable company, Mid-Atlantic Cablevision Cablevision of Loudoun Adelphia Comcast. To do so, I need a "CableCard", which enables the TiVo to receive encrypted programming. I went to the cable company's web site, which informed me that I would have to schedule a tech to come install it for me. I called to do so, and fought with the automated attendant*, finally reaching a person who informed me that I could just go by the office and pick one up, saving a $25 trip charge and scheduling nonsense. I went by the office, where I was told that a tech had to come install it, but there's no trip charge. They had a hard time getting it onto my account correctly, the computer kept trying to charge me 4x the monthly amount. I got an appointment for the next morning, which was okay, since I'm working the late shift. When I got home, one of my cable boxes had been turned off. In order to test it out, I had the TiVo try to get the correct channel line-up. But without the CableCard, it only would offer the analogue lineup, which was wrong. In the midst of retrying this, the tech showed up. We had to wait for it to finish its procedure before he could get the numbers and call the cable company to activate it. It turns out they can't activate it, because their system has six number slots for equipment. And a HD box and a CableCard can only be in one slot. So I told the tech to take away the HD box, as the CableCard would provide essentially the same functionality. Then the TiVo tried to get the channel lineup from the card, which took a long time. The tech finally decided that he'd made the call, the TiVo saw the card, so everything must be okay. It wasn't. The TiVo finally gave up and couldn't get the channel list. So I went back through the manual process, and finally got the right one. But I can only get channels 3-79. The rest are all blank.

So I called the cable company again*, and was routed to a busy signal. Lather, rinse, repeat × 2. So I called a fourth time, and pressed the "I wanna give you money" button, and abused the person who answered into trying to fix my disabled box. He said he updated it and all would be fine, but no dice. He wouldn't even try to fix the CableCard. But he made an appointment for a tech to come out on Sunday. We shall see.

* Side rant on automated attendants. If I key in my phone number, I'm annoyed when I have to key it in again, and then say it to whoever answers. Worse, some attendants won't LET me key in information. I have to SAY it. Since they're only available during business hours, I have to call from at work. Since I work at the customer's site, I have no privacy. And these automated attendants get more and more creative about the stuff they want you to say out loud in a crowded room. I imagine some nut like baronmind works for them, coming up with progressively more bizarre things you have to say out loud to get anything. Reading a credit card number is bad enough. Saying things like "YES ...... YES ...... CUSTOMER SERVICE ....... CUSTOMER SERVICE! ..... FIVE SEVEN BAKER THREE ALPHA OMEGA ZERO ZERO ....... YES ...... NO ....... CABLE ....... NEW SERVICE ...... YES ........ SEVEN FOUR ZERO DESTRUCT ZERO ..... PAPA INDIA MLENDY GRACKLE BORGWARD ONE ...." tends to garner some interesting stares. What's next?

"To access customer service, say `I'm a big nancy boy.'; for billing, sing `I'm a little teapot'; for new service, say `I like alligator clips on my NIPPLES'; to speak to an attendant, say `Pauly Shore is my GOD, I must stalk him with Crisco'"?

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Comments:
[User Picture]From: madbodger
2006-12-09 04:00 pm (UTC)

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When I realized my ZyXel modem could play back CLEP voice clips and decode touch tones, I
thought of writing my own automated attendant. It would say "please listen to all options,
as they have been updated", and then give 10 randomly generated choices. Pressing any
of them would give 10 more. Only people who knew the sekrit sequences could actually
get through to me, and different people would get different abilities to override "watching
TV", "sleeping", "eating", and various other conditions. But I punted it because I didn't want
to wear an EEG rig to bed.
[User Picture]From: gravitrue
2006-12-09 06:26 pm (UTC)

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For many years I have wanted to make a voicemail system as a piece of art. It would include the maze from Adventure.

"You are in a maze of twisty little passages. To move forward, press one. To move back, press two [...]"

It would also somewhere include options like:

* "To hear a strange series of buzzing and clicking noises and then be disconnected, press 7"
* "To be connected to your party, please enter the fourteenth thru twenty-eighth digits of pi"
* "To hear Metallica's immortal 'Master of Puppets' press 665, to hear 'Crazy Train' by Ozzy Osbourne, press 667"
* "To hear the sound of John Denver being strangled, press 5"
* "To listen to these options again, please enter 5206758392467912312376448923 or hit the pound key"
* "The number you have reached is imaginary, or trapped in an alternate dimension. Please hang up, rotate your phone ninety degrees, and try again." (this one would have caller id attached and would behave differently when redialed)

[Hmm. I think I'll repost this in my journal; if I'm not going to get around to doing this, I might as well propagate the idea...]
[User Picture]From: killergoatj
2006-12-10 05:30 pm (UTC)

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don't forget "to acheive nirvana, press the heart key."
[User Picture]From: killergoatj
2006-12-10 05:31 pm (UTC)

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p.s.

here from metaquotes. loved the post.
[User Picture]From: madbodger
2006-12-10 10:54 pm (UTC)

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Why thank you kindly!
[User Picture]From: wonapalei
2006-12-10 09:50 pm (UTC)

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There was once (and may still be) an insurance company who had as one of their choices on the automated menu, "To hear a duck quack, press 6." I want to say AFLAC, but that may just be because of the commercials, as I'm pretty sure we never had reason to call AFLAC, and would thus never have heard the menu.
[User Picture]From: madbodger
2006-12-10 10:59 pm (UTC)

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