File under: Gadgets, Rants, Technology

When is a fix not a fix?

For some reason, my phone suddenly decided to stop sending text messages this morning. It seems to have forgotten the Orange Message Centre number.

So I pop over to the orange site to find the number, and attempt to use the “fixing basic problems” menu to resolve it.

It asks a series of questions, and after each provides two choices: Yes this has resolved the issue, or No it hasn’t.

Are you roaming?

Do you have Line2 selected?

Do you have enough signal strength?

To each I answer “no, this hasn’t resolved my issue” until I get to one which reads

Have you checked the message centre number to ensure this is correct?

The message centre number must be correct in order to send text messages

This is, indeed, the problem I need to fix, but unfortunately Orange provide no way of actually helping me to fix it.

If I click “Yes, this has resolved my problem” I get a message saying “glad we could help” but if I click “No this hasn’t resolved my problem” I get presented with another potential issue (”Is the destination number valid?”) rather than any way to resolve the previous problem.

Please look at that screenshot and tell me how, from that information, anyone is supposed to know:
a) how to check the message centre number
b) whether it’s correct
c) how to correct it.

It seems that “fixing basic problems” is actually “diagnosing basic problems” with no attempt to actually fix them at all. I don’t want sympathy, I want a working phone. Most irritating!

(for anyone else suffering this predicament, I can recommend you find reputable and helpful orange network related answers elsewhere)

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