If you are a subscriber of the WSJ print edition, you might have noticed a quirky ad in yesterday’s edition formed as an open letter to John Stankey, AT&T’s CEO. In it, Aaron Epstein, an AT&T customer for the last 60 years or so (yes, the guy is 90 years old), complains of slow internet speeds.
Well, the issue has become so pressing for this loyal nonagenarian AT&T customer, that he felt compelled to take print ads in the Wall Street Journal, hoping that an AT&T investor or two might notice.
Granted, he also pays $50 extra for Charter’s cable internet but has to use AT&T’s modem in order to use the phone service hence defaults to the slower connection more often than not.
It’s apparently one of those areas where DSL is being phased out by Ma Bell, after doing the minimum to fulfil its merger requirements with DirecTV, but AT&T doesn’t spare resources to expand those last-gen connections or provide an alternative, hence Mr Epstein’s somewhat funny and desperate way to attract its attention with the print ads. That has already happened, so hopefully AT&T will resolve the lowly 3Mbps issues on its way to nationwide 300Mbps from the 5G ether.