If I find a telecommunications or cable company that I like, I'll be sure to let ya know.
AT&T Is horrible for telephone or internet service though, overpriced too. My parent's actualy dropped them for their house line and via Time Warner (another company that has its weak points) finaly converted from standard cable TV to digital TV and picked up their landline-through-cable. They arleady had high-speed internet and standard cable TV, but with all the services they can provide through just your cable line (phone, internet and TV) and their package deals, my parents are now saving over $30 more if they had kept AT7T and things the way they were with TW.
About a month or so after I convinced my parents into that (I've had a TW phone/internet/TV package since I moved out on my own), they convinced my grandparents to drop their AT&T for a DSL and landline phone package from I think Verison, they're now saving $20 a month and finally moved up in the WWW from the AOL 56k era.
I know with Verison and our office (they're our phone and ISP), we have a "buisness" account with them (so you probabley pay a little higher rate), and they handle support calls with a higher level of customer service than if I were calling from home. When I call them in regards to the office, I always get through quickly to a very american sounding young (but knowlegable) person. Typicaly I talk to them for 5-10 minutes, wait 5-10 minutes more as they go bug someone in their network/server department, and then that's it, they reset whatever connection/switch on their end. About 3-4 months ago our email completely stopepd working here at the office. They ended up merging our old mailserver with a new one, but a port we were using for the old server hadn't been opened up yet on the new one. Took about 10 minutes from making first contact until they had some server jockey fix the problem.... honestly, if 20-40 extra bucks a month on "buisness" rates gets you that level of imporved customer service, all residential customers should just pitch in an extra $10 for the better service, but instead we get stuck with a level of customer service that barely speaks our own language.