Hahaha. Now I remember having to go the Cyta exchange to pay the landline bill in cash!
rivertorain- on
I did mine fully online with Cyta after calling them. Try calling their support?
CypLeviathan on
I didn’t even call them, i just converted to an e-sim using Cyta’s application. Took about 5 minutes, was billed 5 extra euros and that was it.
Otherwise-Layer8071 on
You will learn it the way we all did, either the easy way or the hard way. The golden rule in Cyprus is that if you don’t physically go to the store/office, your job won’t get done. It’s the law, whether it’s the private or public sector, a service or a product; if you don’t drag your carcass (or butt) down there, you won’t get your business done.
Honest_Hair2856 on
I remember years ago Primetel introduced e sim we went with a friend from Poland to help him as he already had 1 sim inside the polish one . The dude in Primetel, printed on a A4 paper the qr code , scanned it never got any reception then printed another page again the same 3 times then he said it’s better to switch to physical sim hahahahahahahahaga it’s too new to work
eidololatris on
To be honest, I’ve been trying to move my UK eSIM from one phone to another and EE, one of the largest providers in the UK, has been unable to resolve the issue for four weeks. They are estimating a solution at the beginning of December, so I’d take Cablenet over that any day.
Scampzilla on
Surely they could send it in an email
FreshBiskit on
Even Cyta does it online. You pay, but you don’t have to go to a physical store.
TwitchTvOmo1 on
This is what happens when several orgs are still ran by boomers. Give it a couple more decades.
ionhowto on
Cyta will do it all online but your rain voucher is valid once. The Cablenet voucher is valid 6 times from what I remember so you can move it from one phone to another without having to pay for the eSIM
Voucher again.
I compared them on my channel
CokeBottless on
Your first mistake is choosing cablenet
danieljamesgillen on
This is like in Athens Greece. They used to have an old paper ticket system for the metro, but there was an app you could use to buy a paper ticket on it.
But then they decided to modernise and introduce an ‘electronic ticket’. The electronic ticket was a paper ticket with a nfc thingy. You could only buy them from the machines, of which there were much less than old ‘paper ticket machines’ and you could no longer buy them from an app.
The ‘electronic tickets’ were less digital than the damn ‘paper tickets’!
Now 7 years later you can finally use your bank card like London has done for 20 years.
12 Comments
Hahaha. Now I remember having to go the Cyta exchange to pay the landline bill in cash!
I did mine fully online with Cyta after calling them. Try calling their support?
I didn’t even call them, i just converted to an e-sim using Cyta’s application. Took about 5 minutes, was billed 5 extra euros and that was it.
You will learn it the way we all did, either the easy way or the hard way. The golden rule in Cyprus is that if you don’t physically go to the store/office, your job won’t get done. It’s the law, whether it’s the private or public sector, a service or a product; if you don’t drag your carcass (or butt) down there, you won’t get your business done.
I remember years ago Primetel introduced e sim we went with a friend from Poland to help him as he already had 1 sim inside the polish one . The dude in Primetel, printed on a A4 paper the qr code , scanned it never got any reception then printed another page again the same 3 times then he said it’s better to switch to physical sim hahahahahahahahaga it’s too new to work
To be honest, I’ve been trying to move my UK eSIM from one phone to another and EE, one of the largest providers in the UK, has been unable to resolve the issue for four weeks. They are estimating a solution at the beginning of December, so I’d take Cablenet over that any day.
Surely they could send it in an email
Even Cyta does it online. You pay, but you don’t have to go to a physical store.
This is what happens when several orgs are still ran by boomers. Give it a couple more decades.
Cyta will do it all online but your rain voucher is valid once. The Cablenet voucher is valid 6 times from what I remember so you can move it from one phone to another without having to pay for the eSIM
Voucher again.
I compared them on my channel
Your first mistake is choosing cablenet
This is like in Athens Greece. They used to have an old paper ticket system for the metro, but there was an app you could use to buy a paper ticket on it.
But then they decided to modernise and introduce an ‘electronic ticket’. The electronic ticket was a paper ticket with a nfc thingy. You could only buy them from the machines, of which there were much less than old ‘paper ticket machines’ and you could no longer buy them from an app.
The ‘electronic tickets’ were less digital than the damn ‘paper tickets’!
Now 7 years later you can finally use your bank card like London has done for 20 years.