
“They should be able to deliver minimum Internet connectivity at par with, if not superior to their advertised speeds,” said Santiago, who was also a former chief of the National Telecommunications Commission (NTC). he further added, “It would be totally unfair, even highly deceptive, for them to aggressively promote their services by assuring this or that Internet access speed, only to fall short of their promise.”
finally, someone has the guts to raise this concern…. hopefully they do something about these false marketing and broadband connection issues…
read more [inquirer.net]
hello… hapi blogging… have a nice day! just visiting here….
LikeLike
Your blog is very complete info and relevant .. happy to visit in your blogI wait for a visit back to my blogThanks info. success always
LikeLike
hello… hapi blogging… have a nice day! just visiting here….
LikeLike
Your blog is very complete info and relevant .. happy to visit in your blogI wait for a visit back to my blogThanks info. success always
LikeLike