Update

Mike Mongeau, a forum moderator at Microsoft Answers says as follows, I would point out the error I experienced was with one of the custom fields and not date but I think the date field will be the most common of the two. If this doesn’t work for you move beyond the update section for another potential remedy:

Everyone: I’ve done some digging and believe I know the cause behind the error code. It seems Google contacts allows for birthday fields of many formats, including something like Month, DD, YY. So, a birthday like “October 17, 11″ will cause a sync failure. The phone sees the year not as 2011, but actually as year 11. It naturally balks at this. Here are some other notable findings with this:

What’s odd is that Google doesn’t allow you to enter birthdays in this format (at least, not any longer). Instead, to get myself into a “bad state” I had to import my contacts with the birthday field entered like this. Meaning you guys either (1) imported your contacts or (2) had entered these birthday values in some older interface of Google’s contacts.
This isn’t a regression. Any contacts with this birthday value will, in fact, fail to sync pre-Mango – just the error code isn’t shown.

To fix: simply edit the birthday field of your contacts in this format (or delete) to be MM, DD, YYYY. Finally, remove and re-add your Google account.

3082818 s Sanitize Gmail Contacts For Windows 7 Phone To Avoid Error 80070057The Problem
After installing Windows 7.5 (Mango) on my HTC Mozart Windows Phone all worked well for a couple of days. I noticed that Gmail was sometimes not synchronizing but put it down to poor cell coverage. I began to receive calls showing the number and not the contact, and then, when trying to make a call one day I found all my contacts missing.

I searched for solutions online. I found similar complaints however these were for the earlier version of Windows 7, 7.5 better known as Mango had only just been released and surely, the problems in the older version of the software had not been brought forward to the new?

They had.

I followed several suggestions on forums and blog posts but failed to solve the problem. I raised my question on Microsoft Answers but that, at time of writing this still offered no solution. Strange name for a website “Microsoft Answers” because they never bloody do.

The Solution For Me
To understand the solution it’s best you know what I think the cause is first. That way you may find a better solution for your own particular set of circumstances: I believe the cause is WP7′s inability to understand Gmail’s Custom field used in their contacts list to store miscellaneous information. At first I thought it might be some of the character sets in use in my contacts. I have Asian, Eastern European, Russian, Greek and several other contacts all of whom have shared their Vcards with more information in their own characters, but after summarily deleting these Microsoft remained incapable of importing them.

Some had large quantities of information, so I targeted these next, but still, Microsoft could not import them.

I was left with a few that had HTML tags which I removed and still Microsoft could not import Gmail contacts.

I then removed all Custom fields in Gmail and at last, Microsoft managed to import the records. So this is my solution and these are the steps I took to successfully import Gmail Contacts into my Windows 7 HTC Mozart Mobile Phone.

  1. Export all Gmail contacts to Outlook CSV
  2. Open CSV in your editor (I used Excel)
  3. Delete the Notes column (in Excel click the top of the column and hit delete)
  4. Save your CSV
  5. Import CSV into Windows Live Contacts (this maybe unnecessary but I figure if Microsoft Phone cannot read Microsoft Windows Live contacts then I may as well have bought brick)
  6. Delete all contacts in Gmail (Don’t panic, Gmail has an easy to use recovery feature if you screw up)
  7. Export from Windows Live to CSV
  8. With Gmail Contacts empty, use Gmail’s import utility to import the contacts you exported in the above step from Windows Live
  9. Go to your Microsoft Windows 7 Phone and Synchronise

That did it for me; I hope it helps you.

Epilogue
Chrissakes Microsoft get this sorted. I can see people dumping your phone because of this one tiny-itty-bit of a problem and your choice to ignore complaints exacerbates the rush for alternatives. I decided against iPhone because I have Windows everything around me, I chose not to go for a Galaxy S because a friend complains the O/S and programs often crash. I am happy with the decision but frankly, if I can’t get access to my contacts the iPhone or Android make much more sense.

 

vodafone customer service fail Vodafone customer service attitude sucks, their website lacks logic, fails to communicate and their adverts are innacurateA letter to the Vodafone Group, Investors, Shareholders, Media, Vodafone Press Release Readers, Vodafone Sustainability initiative and the Vodafone Foundation.

Issues experienced today with Vodafone Customer Service, The Corporate Website of Vodafone Group PLC, Vodafone advertising and statements in Press Releases targeting investors and shareholders about Vodafone’s sustainability initiatives and the Vodafone Foundation.

The purpose of this text is to tell the reader of problems with Vodafone’s service, particularly customer service, experienced by a long-term Vodafone customer.

A communication company that fails to communicate and reacts to criticism like a cornered cat is beyond criticism, pity perhaps. Vodafone profits are huge so they get most things right, obviously I don’t meet their cookie-cutter-customer profile any more. I wonder if there are other people like me?

I have used Vodafone since the mid 80′s so naturally, when I needed an Internet dongle for mobile broadband they were the company I thought of.

vod ad Vodafone customer service attitude sucks, their website lacks logic, fails to communicate and their adverts are innacurateI found an offer online, you can see it here. Pay as you go is perfect for my expected occasional use.

Installation was easy, performance was better than I had expected. The trouble began when I checked my account. I expected to see a little under 500mb of data valid for 60 days, instead I see 249mb valid until the end of September which is 30 days, but Vodafone customer service tell me I am wrong, apparently I don’t know how to add (I am not kidding, the customer support representative, on 08700 776655, at 15:27 today, calling himself Scott, actually said that).

When the call began Scott of Vodafone Customer Services denied the offer was 500mb for 60 days. When I read the advert to him he asked me where I bought the Internet dongle. When I told him it was a Vodafone shop he said it must have been a special offer from them and I should take it back to the shop I got it from.

I was lost for words, a little in shock I suppose, when Scott began the preamble for closing the call. I considered the amount of effort and time spent in getting this far and decided I was not ready for the call to end. I told him the advert on the website is clear, he is mistaken and all I want is my account to show what I bought.

voda1 Vodafone customer service attitude sucks, their website lacks logic, fails to communicate and their adverts are innacurateScott of Vodafone Customer Services (call on 31/8/11 at 15:27) began to shout which did not improve my impression Vodafone’s customer service. His claim was this “Your account shows 250mb plus a £5 voucher worth another 250mb, that means you have a total of 500mb”. It was at this point he questioned my ability to add.

I tried to explain, but he failed to hear because he over-spoke again; I agree, 2 x 250mb is 500mb, but the amount of days between today and 30 sep 2011 = 30 not 60, precisely half promised by the advert. I do not want to find on day 40 the first 250mb has disappeared and I am left with just 250mb from another voucher because I failed to use the first 250mb in 30 days; I want what the advert promises “comes with 500MB UK data lasting up to 60 days”.

If picky you could say just one day is “up to 60 days”. Reasonable people would expect 500mb to last the advertised 60 days, if they do not use all 500mb the rest still available on the 60th day.

The “up to” part means if you use all of it before “60 days” then it has run out and you need to buy more if you wish to continue using it. It means if you have not used it by 60 days then they take it back. That’s my interpretation of the advert which differs with Vodafone’s.

Scotts rants continued, only when he stopped for breath did I get the chance to ask him to put me through to his supervisor.

Say hello to Natasha, Vodafone’s Customer Service Supervisor

Scott transferred me to Natasha. I asked if Vodafone record customer service calls.

“Yes”, Natasha replied.

“I suggest you dig the tapes out and listen to my conversation with Scott which will explain why I will use the remaining credit on this Internet Dongle, bought from you today, and then never willingly use a Vodafone product again.”

I didn’t mean to sound rude though I realise now I may have been hasty with my decision. It is not correct to blame the entire company for the failings of one person. The advert and customer service culture also share the blame.

I confess I did not wait for her reply. This was not due to decisive action or slamming the phone down in anger. What could she say? How could she help? I had informed her of a problem within her team, if she decides to act upon it she may help her paymaster keep more business, if not so what?

What is wrong with Vodafone’s Website

Originally I tried to buy the dongle online. This resulted in two failed attempts with my business card. Vodafone was “unable to identify me” yet still managed to take TWO payments from my bank. They did return them a few days later however no refund of bank charges or difference in exchange rate. It’s only a few pounds but how many people do they do this to? How many people have been unable to complain because of the impossible logic and validation rules required to use the online contact form?

Because I have a foreign bank I have to pay fees for each transaction, I also have to cover the margin on exchange rates. Vodafone duly pay back what they took but not the extra charges. Why should they? One reason is the unauthorised charges taken from my bank. That’s the actus reus of theft isn’t it?

It appears they make a charge of £1 to “validate” your identity and presumably refund this after they take the authorised payment. Since when have banks allowed websites to take bank details and payments WITHOUT the account holders permission?

Trying to contact them over the web is difficult. Calling them is easy but what if you need to send an attachment or serial number? To email them you need an account and you must be logged in; but why ask registered customers to complete same information again on the contact form? Even my local florist understands RDBMS (See Codd’s 12 rules).

It is a bizarre situation: To create an account you need a verify code sent to your dongle via SMS. What then if you cannot install your dongle? What if your dongle does not receive the SMS? What if the software refuses to work or give access to SMS messages? I had to wait an hour for the message to arrive, I have never had to wait before, for a while I thought the dongle had a problem.

It’s not courtesy or discount I want. For the last quarter century I trusted Vodafone to deliver on their promise and I would like that to continue.

 

..and I was just about to get an iphone. The best bit shows Steve Jobs explaining how to overcome the signal range limitation.

© 2011 Martyn Walker | Software Architect | Hiker And Hacker Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha