Why British Gas are unbelievably annoying

29 03 2007

British Gas one of the worst companies I’ve ever dealt with.

Last year, I signed up for a new service called “Fix and Fall”. As I understood it, my gas and electricity prices were guaranteed not to rise and would benefit from any price falls: hence the name of the product. There was no sign-up charge, no tie-in period, and no cancellation charge. What could I lose? Surely everyone would sign up?

Earlier this year, British Gas (who have been raising prices to ridiculous levels) decided to make a reduction on March 12. “That’s fine”, I thought, “perhaps I’ll give them another chance”.

This week I received a letter asking me to check a web address. Apparently “Fix and Fall” now means just “Fix”, and British Gas have decided not to pass any savings on to me. So, what exactly is the benefit? Well, if I stay on the scheme, then my prices are guaranteed to remain at the high fixed rate until 2008. I may not make any savings but, hey, I know what I’ll be paying.

How do British Gas executives sleep at night? How can a product named “Fix and Fall” not fall? Isn’t this against the Trades Description Act? Even the nice call centre lady was apologetic and admitted they couldn’t understand these stupid schemes.

This is not my first problem with British Gas. I naively signed up for their internet billing to save the environment (oh, and it’s 5 quid cheaper). They never sent me emails when a bill was due, but kindly sent red reminders at random intervals when they were about to cut me off. Even when I signed up for “Fix and Fall” they only applied it to my gas and not the electricity for some bizarre reason.

I’ve had it with them. In the past few years they’ve gone from being a reasonable company (I even had shares at one point), to slightly incompetent, to bumbling imbeciles. I’ve spent hours writing enquiries, making complaints, and calling them.

But no more – can anyone recommend a decent gas and electricity supplier? In fact, they don’t need to be that decent: anyone would be better than British Gas.





Ubuntu and Beryl

8 03 2007

As well as playing with Vista, I also had a go with Beryl on Ubuntu Linux … just to keep the reviews fair!

The good points:

  1.  Wow – it’s fast. I’m testing it on an AMD 2000+ with 512MB RAM and an old ATI Radeon, but it’s still quick.
  2. The effects are gorgeous and are more advanced than Vista’s.
  3. It’s fun!

The bad points:

  1. It wasn’t easy to install and configure. I followed around 12 steps in an article and got it going, but few novice users will do that. The next version of Ubuntu is supposed to address that issue.
  2. It has a lot of options, very little help, and can be quite daunting.
  3. Although the effects are fast and great, it does noticeably slow down your machine. For example, scrolling down a web page was awkward, although remember that this is a 5-year old PC.
  4. I had a couple of process crashes, although nothing major and the PC remained usable.

Like Vista’s aero effects, it’s great for showing off but I don’t think I’d use it all day. The good thing with Linux is that you can simply switch it off.





My first play with Windows Vista

8 03 2007

I’ve just had my first experience of the final version of Vista Home Premium on a new laptop. The good points:

  1. It looks pretty.
  2. Aero effects were faster and better than I’d imagined.

And now for the bad:

  1. It was slow. Booting seemed especially cumbersome.
  2. The Start menu was impossible to use. It just lists all the applications in one big folder. I’m sure there are plenty of options to configure that, but I didn’t find them quickly.
  3. The user confirmation messages are irritating. I was trying to configure Norton and a prompt appeared at EVERY change I made.
  4. What looks like the ‘off’ icon puts the machine into sleep mode.
  5. It wouldn’t let me run the application I was trying to install.
  6. I couldn’t find Windows Explorer or any decent equivalent. Maybe novices don’t need it, but I did!
  7. It crashed and it wouldn’t let me shut down.

Now, I only spent half an hour with Vista, so I’m sure that I’ll reconsider my opinions at some point. But, this is the first time I’ve used a new version of Windows and actively wanted to return to the previous version.