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JTS33

join:2003-05-03
USA
Reviews:
·AcroVoice

Acrovoice and Trevor

...are totally awesome! We switched our business VoIP to Acrovoice when DSLReports was down (which gave both Trevor and I withdrawal symptoms), and it has been sooo much better working with him than our previous VoIP provider. Call quality is great, and he got us up and running with unsupported phones (Panasonic KX-TGP551 because we wanted the Panasonic cordless phones as part of the system). Besides being an all-around nice guy, Trevor has gone out of his way to get things working for us and responds to requests very quickly.

Given his excellent reputation in the forums (which is how I found Acrovoice in the first place), I'm surprised to not see any reviews of Acrovoice in the reviews database. I just submitted mine (not showing yet though).

Anyways, props to Trevor for running a great service!

PX Eliezer
Premium
join:2008-08-09
Hutt River
kudos:13
Reviews:
·callwithus
·voip.ms
·Optimum Voice
·Vitelity VOIP
·Gizmo5

said by JTS33:

Given his excellent reputation in the forums (which is how I found Acrovoice in the first place), I'm surprised to not see any reviews of Acrovoice in the reviews database. I just submitted mine (not showing yet though).

Anyone else wishing to post a review of Acrovoice or any other company not yet included on the review lists, should follow option (B) or (C) from this page:

»/reviewit


Trev
IP Telephony Addict
Premium
join:2009-06-29
Victoria, BC
kudos:4

reply to JTS33
Thanks for posting this! Look forward to seeing the review once the mods approve it
--
Wondering what I do? Find out at »www.digitalcon.ca


JTS33

join:2003-05-03
USA

reply to PX Eliezer
Seems it may take some time for approval (probably due to the site getting back up and running) I don't see my review yet.


PX Eliezer
Premium
join:2008-08-09
Hutt River
kudos:13
Reviews:
·callwithus
·voip.ms
·Optimum Voice
·Vitelity VOIP
·Gizmo5

said by JTS33:

Seems it may take some time for approval (probably due to the site getting back up and running) I don't see my review yet.

AFAIK it can take weeks for a Review of a company not yet listed on the "master list" to be processed even in "normal" times.


Trev
IP Telephony Addict
Premium
join:2009-06-29
Victoria, BC
kudos:4

said by PX Eliezer:

AFAIK it can take weeks for a Review of a company not yet listed on the "master list" to be processed even in "normal" times.

I wonder if reviews for "unheard of" providers just go into a black hole. In the past I've had a couple customers tell me they were leaving reviews, but have never had anything show up.

Of course my main user base isn't the kind that frequents a tech forum like this (I mostly come here because I appreciate the occasional technical discussions), so a scarce quantity of reviews is to be expected, but it's somewhat disappointing when I can't even get the few reviews that are being left!

</rant>
--
Wondering what I do? Find out at »www.digitalcon.ca
Get your Obihai ATA in Canada.

PX Eliezer
Premium
join:2008-08-09
Hutt River
kudos:13

1+ to that Trev, and I hope that they add [AcroVoice] soon.



Trev
IP Telephony Addict
Premium
join:2009-06-29
Victoria, BC
kudos:4

Just a follow up that JTS33 See Profile's review has at last been posted, and the mods have officially created a page for AcroVoice.

»Company entry - AcroVoice

I'd like to invite any other satisfied customers to write their reviews. The unsatisfied customers... well... they don't exist so no instructions are needed
--
Wondering what I do? Find out at »www.digitalcon.ca
Get your Obihai ATA in Canada.


PX Eliezer
Premium
join:2008-08-09
Hutt River
kudos:13
Reviews:
·callwithus
·voip.ms
·Optimum Voice
·Vitelity VOIP
·Gizmo5

Great news, Trev!

------------------------------

But NOW you will have to watch out for those who would carp,
objurgate, and cavil.

Amazing how many of [them] will be anonymous or first-time posters.

------------------------------

HERE is a Reginald Bretnor story that illustrates the problem.

Ambrosius Goshawk was a starving artist. He couldn't afford to starve decently in a garret in Montmartre or Greenwich Village. He lived in a cold, smoke-stained flat in downtown Pittsburgh, furnished with enormously hairy overstuffed objects which always seemed moist, and filled with unsalable paintings. The paintings were all in a style strongly reminiscent of Rembrant, but with far more than his technical competence. They were absurdly representational.

Goshawk's wife had abandoned him, moving in with a dealer who merchandized thousands of Klee and Mondrian reproductions at $1.98 each. Her note had been scrawled on the back of a nasty demand from his dentist's collection agency. Two shoddy subpoenas lay on the floor next to his landlord's eviction notice. In the litter, unshaven and haggard, sat Amrosius Goshawk. His left hand held a newspaper clipping, a disquisition on his work by one J. Herman Lort, the nation's foremost authority on Art. His right hand held a palette-knife with which he was desperately scraping little green crickets from the unfinished painting on his easel, a nude for which Mrs. Hoshawk had posed.

The apartment was full of little green crickets. So, for that matter, was the Eastern half of the country. But Ambrosius Goshawk was not concerned with them as a plague. They were simply an intensely personal, utterly shattering Last Straw -- and, as he scraped, he was thinking the strongest thoughts he had ever thought in his life.

He had been thinking them for some hours, and they had, of course, travelled far out into the inhabited Universe. That was why, at three minutes past two in the afternoon, there was a whirr at the window, a click as it was pushed open from the outside, and a thud as a small bucket-shaped spaceship landed on the unpaid-for carpet. It opened, and a gnarled, undersized being stepped out.

"Well," he said, with what might have been a slightly curdled Bulgarian accent, "here I am."

Ambrosius Goshawk flipped a cricket over his shoulder, glared, and said, "No, I will NOT take you to my leader," decisively. Then he started working on another cricket who had his feet stuck on a particularly intimate part of Mrs. Goshawk's anatomy.

"I am not interested with your leader," replied the being, unstrapping a super-gadgety spray-gun. "You have thought for me, because you are wanting an extermination. I am the Exterminator. Johnny-with-the-spot, that is me. Pronounce me your troubles."

Ambrosius Goshawk put down his palette-knife. "What won't I think of next?" he exclaimed. "Little man, because of the manner of your arrival, I will take you quite seriously. Seat yourself."

Then, starting with his failure to get a scholarship back in art school, he worked down through his landlord, his dentist, his wife, to the clipping by J. Herman Lort, from which he read the following passage:

"...and it is in the work of these pseudo-creative people, of self-styled 'artists' like Ambrosius Goshawk, whose clumsily crafted imitations of photography must be a thorn in the flesh of every truly sensitive and creative critical mind, that the perceptive collector will realize the deeply-researched validness of the doctrine I have explained in my book "The Creative Critical Intellect" -- that true Art can be 'created' only by such an intellect when adequately trained in an appropriately staffed institution, 'created,' needless to say, out of the vast treasury of natural and accidental-type forms -- out of driftwood and bird-droppings, out of torn-up roots and cracked rocks -- and that all the rest is a snare and a delusion, nay! an outright fraud."

Ambrosius Goshawk threw the clipping down. "You'd think," he cried out, "that mortal man could stand no more. And now" -- he pointed at the invading insects -- "now there's this!"

"So," asked the being, "what is this?"

Ambrosius Goshawk took a deep breath, counted to seven, and screamed, "CRICKETS!" hysterically.

"It is simple," said the being. "I will exterminate. My fee--"

"Fee?" Goshawk interrupted him bitterly. "How can I pay a fee?"

"My fee will be paintings. Six you will give. In advance. Then I exterminate. After, it is one dozens more."

Goshawk decided that other worlds must have wealthy eccentrics. He watched while the Exterminator put six small paintings aboard, and he waved a dizzy goodbye as the spaceship took off. Then he went back to prying the crickets off Mrs. Goshawk's picture....

....The Exterminator returned two years later. However, his spaceship did not have to come in through the window. It simply sailed down past the towers of Ambrosius Goshawk's Florida castle into a fountained courtyard patterned after somewhat simpler ones in the Taj Mahal, and landed among a score of your women whose figures and costumes suggested a handsomely modernized Musselman heaven. Some were splashing raw in the fountains. Some were lounging around Goshawk's easel, hoping he might try to seduce them. Two were standing by with swatters, alert for the little green crickets which occasionally happened along.

The Exterminator did not notice Goshawk's curt nod. "How hard to have find you," he chuckled, "ha-ha! Half-miles from north, I see some big palaces, ha, so! all marbles. From the south, even bigger, one Japanese castles. Who has built?"

Goshawk rudely replied that the palaces belonged to several composers, sculptors, and writers, that the Japanese castle was the whim of an elderly poetess, and that the Exterminator would have to excuse him because he was busy.

The Exterminator paid no attention. "See how has changing, your world," he exclaimed, rubbing his hands. "All artists have many success. With yachts, with Rolls-Royces, with minks, diamonds, many round ladies. Now I take twelve more paintings."

"Beat it," snarled Goshawk, "You'll get no more paintings from me!"

The Exterminator was taken aback. "You are having not happy?" he asked. "You have not liking all this? I have done job like my promise. You must paying one dozens more picture."

A cricket hopped onto the nude on which Goshawk was working. He threw his brush to the ground. "I'll pay you nothing!" he shouted. "Why, you fake, you did nothing at all! ANY good artist can succeed nowadays, but it's no thanks to YOU! LOOK AT 'EM -- there are as many of these damned crickets as ever!"

The Exterminator's jaw dropped in astonishment. For a moment, he goggled at Goshawk.

Then, "Kill the CRICKETS?" he croaked. "My God! I thought you said "CRITICS!"


Davesnothere
No-BHELL-ity DOES have its Advantages

join:2009-06-15
START&Cogeco
kudos:6

said by PX Eliezer:

....But NOW you will have to watch out for those who would carp, objurgate, and cavil....

quote:
....Then, "Kill the CRICKETS?" he croaked. "My God! I thought you said "CRITICS!"

 
Reminds me of an early scene from CADDY SHACK :

Head Groundskeeper (in a thick, 'just off the boat' Scottish accent) : "Now go and kill all those GOPHERS !"

Bill Murray's character : "Kill the GOLFERS ?"

Head Groundskeeper : "NO ! - The GOPHERS, you ninny ! - The GOPHERS !"

Murray : "OH ! - I thought you said GOLFERS !"

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