July 25, 2008

Fios - The Aftermath

Filed under: Verizon — Ryan @ 4:13 pm

I have been putting off writing this post intentionally. You see, I was still basking in the glow of a fantastic install experience. I didn’t want to dredge up, and subsequently address, all the problems that have occurred since the fiber was lit. Over the past week and a half, I have been living the fantasy of being an “ordinary consumer”. The average Fios customer would most certainly use Verizon STB’s, would not be porting their phone line from a Voip provider (silly me!), and would be thrilled that their internet “still worked”. But lets be honest, we all know that I’m anything but ordinary. I seek perfection. I expect things to “work”. I complain. I write letters. I am the equivalent of a technological obsessive compulsive. Ladies and Gentlemen, I bring you the “post-install experience”…

As instructed, I visit the activatemyfios.verizon.net website. What an exciting URL! Let me take a moment to explain what this site actually does. It is a revenue generator for Verizon. Force feeding you data protection plans, antivirus, spam filtering and rustproofing. But I couldn’t even get that far. Before you begin down that journey of “No thanks” and “I’ll install it later” you have to pass the dreaded account setup screen. What happened next infuriated me. The account setup progress is obviously too complex to be handled by a web browser alone. It attempts to install a Firefox extension. OK, I’ll play along. I allow the extension to download only to find out that it is incompatible with Firefox 3.0. Wonderful… Let’s try Safari. Well, not so fast Mr. consumer. We DEMAND that you allow us to ruin your life. It recognizes that I’m on a mac and instructs me to download and run an application! I’m desperate to finish this process, so I actually allow this to happen. The app loads, and freezes. It is at this point where I see just how clever the Verizon development team is. The application apparently has some sort of “reload on quit” setting. Ah, fun! I quit, the icon bounces away and start right up again. Force quit… no luck, it relaunched and haunts me over and over. Shut down and restart the system. “I’m sorry, the system can not be shutdown at this time because the application ‘Verizon Fios Installer’ is still running.” Are you kidding me?
I can’t believe I’m now booting up Vista to do something my Mac couldn’t handle. This is embarrassing and it’s all Verizon’s fault. Now, I know I can just skip the Firefox step, as I’m running the same version here on Vista. I punch in the URL in good ole Internet Explorer. OK, kiddies, can we guess what it wants to do now? The IE warning bar slides down to alert me about an ActiveX Control installation. (Now that I’ve actually completed this ridiculous step, let me point something out. NOTHING that I did required any of these advanced controls and software installations. I created an account, answered a few questions and watched a fancy “Welcome to Verizon Fios” video. This is clearly a case of over-development by Verizon. Even if software needed to be installed, you can provide download links. A simple web guided setup and intro would have been more than enough, and it would have worked right out of the gate, regardless of OS and browser.)

Once that nightmare is over, the first thing you are required to do, is create a verizon.net email address. Now, maybe it’s just me, but do we really still rely on our ISP’s to provide email services? I can remember a day when things like Yahoo Mail and Hotmail were shunned. But in todays internet, webmail providers, whether free or fee, are far superior to the slim offerings of our Cable and DSL providers. Anyway, I proceed to setup the account, thinking this is the only conduit to seeing my account management and billing screen. I find a few more errors along the way but finally… I’m in! I click over to “My Account”. Humm… Nothing really here, just shows that I have internet and no email waiting. There’s various settings for Spam filtering in addition to some widgets about the whether and todays news. How do I check my plan, my upcoming bill, etc? I’m puzzled. I’m on the horn with Verizon the following day.

Me — “I’ve logged into the ActiveMyFios site, but I can’t find my account info”
Verizon Rep — “Oh, billing is not on this site, you have to go to Verizon.com”
Me — “So, what the hell did I just sign up for?”
Verizon Rep — “Thats just the internet home page”

Are you freaking kidding me? The last thing I want is multiple accounts to manage my Fios. I then find my way to Verizon.com (we were on .net before). I do the account setup dance again. Yes, another login id, another password. This site is much cleaner, but still has its own errors. To this day, I can’t see that I have anything installed. An “ecenter” rep told me that I won’t be able to see anything on this site until my first bill generates. I am actually laughing at this point. I’ve been able to sign up for Sprint at the store, and by the time I got home, all my plan details were on the website. I guess Verizon isn’t as advanced?

See the following post for the next exciting chapter - the phone porting issue.

Fios Add Ons
ARGH! Leave me alone!!!

July 16, 2008

Fios is in the house!

Filed under: Computing, Home Theater, Verizon — Ryan @ 11:34 pm

I woke up bright and early today eagerly awaiting the Fios installers. I counted down the days to my install date, but I don’t see how anyone could forget an appointment. I received no less than 3 phone calls and an email confirming todays date and time. You would have thought Santa was coming in July the way I was patrolling the front door. “Damn, it’s 8:30, and the appointment is at 8.” As I’m wondering how much time should be allotted before I call Verizon, Curtis shows up at my door.

“Where’s the rest of your team Curtis?” I ask as I peer around him to the van parked out front.
“It’s just me”, he says.
“But I thought all Fios installs were done with two people?”
“No, I’m a one mean team. Don’t worry, I’ve been doing installs since we started provisioning Fiber.”
(I guess I don’t have a choice)
“Did you bring the cablecards? I’m supposed to be getting four cablecards”. I’m not much for small talk.
“Yeah yeah, I got the cablecards, are we doing a Tivo install?”
“Yeah, but don’t worry I’ve got all the documentation printed out and ready for you”, I assure him. My idea of documentation was the CableCard FAQ from TivoCommunity.
Despite my enthusiasm for a successful install, Curtis looks down and shakes his head.
“Tivo? … Tivo??”
“Actually, three Tivo’s. I have one series 2 and two HD boxes which will take 2 cards each”
He remains skeptical and admits he hasn’t configured one of those in a while, but assures me he won’t leave until everything is working.
Fair enough…

I give Curtis a tour of the current installation, a Series 3 in the bedroom, TivoHD in the basement and a Series 2 in the Den. I show him the wiring “closet” and explain that I “kind of” have a lot of computers (checking my router showed 15 devices that are pulling IP’s). I explain that I’d like to keep my current network topology, which is comprised primarily of 2 access points, an 802.11n running the show and an 802.11b/g running in gateway mode. Fortunately for me, Curtis is a techie and is nodding along while admiring my random collection of Transformers posed around the basement. I can see we’re going to get along fine.

We make our way to the backyard to see how he’s going to get the fiber to the house. He take a few minutes surveying the neighbors backyards and says he needs to bring the cable over from a house or two away. He’s worried about poison ivy. “How did you know we have a poison ivy problem?” was not what he wanted to hear. I assured him that our backyard is sprayed regularly and he should be fine. “It’s not your yard I’m worried about” and we both glance over at my neighbors unkempt backyard. “Good luck man, I’ll be inside!”

An hour or so passes and Curtis is already patching the Fiber into the house. I asked how he fared on the neighbor’s lawn. He seems to have escaped unscathed and explains that he had to dodge many landmines of dog poop. “Oh, I should have warned you about that!” I then whip out my camera and before I start taking pictures, I explain that I’m going to be documenting the install progress. His eyes light up. “Are you going to post it to a website? Which one?” “Well, I might mention it on TivoCommunity but really it’s just for my blog.” Curtis interrupts; “Let me just say one thing, give me a chance here and I’ll make this look perfect.”

Fios Pre-Install

I can tell Curtis takes pride in his work. He is also unhappy with the job Cablevision has done on my house after I show him the current coax wiring. Wires are cutting across barren walls for no reason and other cables are retracing each other. He struggles to find understanding in their cable runs. “I have no idea what they were doing here, but we’re going to fix it, don’t worry”. I wasn’t.

Curtis then started formulating a plan of attack. He tells me we’re going to do an indoor box. It’s much better to keep it indoors and out of mother natures way. I had seen some pics of interior installs but I didn’t think I was a candidate for one; most of what I had seen were outside. The spot was perfect; right opposite the cable drop, next to an outlet on a plain wall. It was practically begging for some kind of box as the other walls already had circuit breakers and alarm panels…. but I digress.

Empty Wall

Box is up

Curtis does his thing

Almost finished!

Completed

I left Curtis for a while as he pulled the cable into the house and placed the box on the wall. I didn’t stick around to watch too much of this, but I can tell you that when he was done, there were more lights lit than when he started. And that’s a good thing. It wasn’t long before Curtis tells me the phones are working and to test them out. I couldn’t believe my old Optimum Voice phone number was ported over that quickly and easily. The phones were working and sounded fine. He also assured me the alarm was configured to assume control of the line as required. Things are humming along. Curtis denies my repeated offers for lunch. He say’s it will only slow him down…

Internet is up and running before 1pm. He says I may need to rebind my devices. Nope, my D-Link already saw the new modem/router and seemed very content, despite being bumped down the chain as it was no longer facing the internet. I verified my networks and everything was intact. I do have some logical cleanup to do and convert my NAT router into a bridge device, but that’s a job best saved for the weekend. Obviously the first thing I do is a speed test. I should mention that the previous night I was able to pull 27MB/4MB (down/up) on Optimum (with Boost). Curtis can see I’m disappointed.

“What’s wrong?”
“I’m only getting 20mb downstream”
“What are you paying for?”
“Good point.”

Verizon is “fast enough” but Optimum felt faster (because it was). I can see an upgrade to the 30MB plan in my future… Curtis recommends the 20/20 plan, but I don’t think I’d take full advantage of it. It’s nice to know that Verizon provides an option like that though.

On to video… Curtis also came armed with the DCT700. This is a small digital box with no frills. It’s missing an OSD and has no VOD option. It has no clock on the front and won’t even show what channel it’s on. It’s exactly what I need for my Series 2. It’s also only $4 a month. I re-run the Series 2 setup guide and quickly reminded why I love TiVo. The program guides are updated and the box is being controlled via IR within no time. Not only that, but I was able to confirm that all my season passes won’t miss a beat. That’s right, even though the shows have moved stations; Tivo just “found” them again and was recording my son’s shows the rest of the afternoon. God bless Tivo.

And now the part we’ve been dreading, the cable card configuration. Curtis wants to blaze forward by installing ALL 4 cards and then provision them simultaneously to save time. I feel somewhat uneasy about this approach, but I’m not sure why. Then I remember reading this line in the FAQ “Do not let the installer do multiple cards at a time”. “Umm, Curtis, I think we should do one card at a time.” He agrees.

CableCards

The cablecards are unveiled like a plate of fresh pastries. Except these pastries are made of metal and you shouldn’t eat them. From here on out, I must warn you. If you’re coming from AVSForums or TiVoCommunity, be advised that I’ve ignored every warning and even the FAQ from here on out.

The Series 3 is still using Cablevisions guide date. OK, let’s remove the cablecards and just put yours in. We navigate around the cablecard menus and finally find the numbers we “think we need”. Curtis starts taking notes. He hooks up his laptop and enters the first launch sequence. Within a few minutes we have picture! All channels seem to be working. “Not so fast” I tell him. I remember reading that the Conditional Access screen should say “Subscribed”. It’s says “unknown”.
Curtis says “Lets give it some time and work on the other Tivo”. Keep in mind I’ve just broken cardinal rule #1.

The basement TivoHD is new. “New”; as in I just opened the box. “Give me a sec, let me activate this thing”. Tivo.com doesn’t let me activate due to a “billing error”. Great, perfect timing. I call TiVo, a human answers on 1 ring to customer service. Incredible. I explain the problem and he offers to activate me over the phone. Problem solved, I wish all companies worked this way.

Being that this is a new Tivo, it hasn’t received any service updates and has been sitting boxed for a few months in my house. A few steps into the guided setup it suggests we configure the cablecards. OK, off we go. We follow the same procedure as before and essentially arrive at the same result. Picture is there but still no “Subscribed” tag in the Conditional Access menu. Curtis sends the activation signal again. Nope, no good. Test channels again. They work. Then the moment I was waiting for… “Subscribed” appeared in the menu! At this point, we think we’ve figured out the pattern.

1. Insert Card
2. Add to system (I don’t know what happens here, but it involved a laptop and a field technician)
3. Test some channels
4. Provision
5. Test some channels (Wait 30 seconds or so)
6. Confirm SUBSCRIBED

We repeated this dance 4 times and not all went as smoothly. Curtis had “fat fingered” one digit resulting in an error that scared us so much we rebooted the Tivo Series3. And what do you know, I had a pending service update. The Tivo now updated its software right in the middle of our cablecard installation. “Oh crap, the menu looks different, I think Tivo just revved the software”. Both our faces turned white. We’re now batting .500 with only one card in each TiVo showing subscribed.

Eventually, all cards were showing subscribed. All Tivo’s had the Fios guide data and it was only 4pm. Curtis is satisfied and seems happy since he recieved some on-the-fly TiVo training for his future installs. After we clean up, Curtis tells me more stories about Cablevision and Verizon. It’s getting pretty ugly, petty stuff now. He points out how he properly terminated and grounded the cablevision line to my house. “If I didn’t do that, they could fine us for damaging their equipment.”

Since it’s early enough, I planned on bringing my Cablevision equipment back to the walk-in center for an in-person cancellation. “Make sure you tell them to remove their line from your house, make them do some extra work”. Thanks for the advice Curtis, and a great overall installation experience.
Later that evening…. My smile quickly fades when I visited the “post-install” setup website, but that’s a story for another day…

July 14, 2008

Apple Syncs to Windows, Vista still sucks

Filed under: Apple, Microsoft — Ryan @ 2:17 pm

Apple recently re-branded their .Mac program to MobileMe. MobileMe provides a lot of updates to .Mac, not the least of which is a newly enhanced web interface. But what caught my attention was that you can now sync your contacts and calendar to “the cloud” and then keep your PC, MAC, web and iPhone in seemless synced up harmony. If only if were that easy…
Despite my love for Mac, I am still cross-platform. I use my Sony Vaio (with Vista Business) quite often and appreciated this new feature to keep Vista up to date with the latest contact info. In order to get the Windows “Sync” client, you need to updates to iTunes 7.7, which wasn’t readily apparent to me. I enabled the Sync on my mac and confirmed that the website did indeed have all of my contact info. iTunes 7.7 adds a new control panel applet called MobileMe and I immediately told it to sync down (and overwrite my local) contacts in the Vista Contacts shell. Much like the Mac, Windows Vista has a default handler for contacts and keeps a system-wide address book. Since I already use the default Windows Live Mail client, I should be all set. Now, we are talking about Vista after all.
I go to Windows Live Mail and create a new mail message. Humm, the contact info looks stale, let me try and search. Nothing, lets expand the contact list in Live Mail…. Windows Live Mail seems to be using my contact info from Hotmail (which i use as an alternative to .mac from time to time). I’m sure there’s a setting to choose my default contact directory. Nope, can’t find it. It appears as though Windows Live Mail by default does NOT use the local Windows Vista contacts. It gets everything from your “Live Contacts” managed on the web. So, now’ Apple has helped me sync my contacts down to my PC, but I have no way to use it. This is most likely to different departments of Microsoft once again NOT working together. The OS team and the Windows Live Mail people just never synced up to see how they would handle this.

And this is just another reason why Apple rules the roost…

This link over at Microsoft confirms this ridiculous anomaly and offers a hack to work around it. I wont be messing with my contacts and adding subfolders. I’ll turn off the Windows portion of sync until Microsoft gets their act together.

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