Phone Numbers Go Locationless 233
flipper65 writes "Well, it looks like one of the last bastions of the regional Bells is under attack. Now your VoIP provider can give you their own area code and exchange. With the proliferation of broadband and voice services, your land line is now as mobile as your cell phone, and cheaper. Look for this to turn in to a battle royal. The regional bells will not go quietly into that good night."
How can I say ? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:How can I say ? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:How can I say ? (Score:2)
Re:How can I say ? (Score:3, Insightful)
I Wonder... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I Wonder... (Score:3, Insightful)
If not that, I suspect the telcos will lobby for government subsidies.
Re:I Wonder... (Score:4, Informative)
Selfpreservation is a natural law, the lies and hypocricy is what bothers me really.
It will take a while until we see that next digital revolution...
Re:I Wonder... (Score:5, Interesting)
I read the article (!). And it didnt say anything about area codes. It just said it would be easier to get phone numbers for VOIP phones.
Here in the UK you can now relatively easily get VOIP terminated phone numbers but only in the area code where you live (you need a billing address there). Now within the UK long distance calls are barely priced differently from local calls any more so this is ok.
What we actualyl need is a decent secondary market in VOIP phone numbers terminated in other countries...
I will exchange a London number for a New York number... any takers...
Re:I Wonder... (Score:2, Interesting)
VOIP SWAP
Trade numbers in countries to effectively get free/cheap(er) calls in that country. I too will swap a london VOIP for a new york one.
jpc, want to go into business? I'm sure people would pay to use the service, kinda like dating but for phones. Phone dating if you will
Re:I Wonder... (Score:2)
Re:I Wonder... (Score:2)
Contact me via email (as seen above) if you want a free month.
Re:I Wonder... (Score:3, Informative)
The small print for packet8 says you can only use the "International plan" from outside the US. Which is $49.95 a month, which is a bit steep.
Re:I Wonder... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:I Wonder... (Score:3, Informative)
I've heard rumors that Vontage is none too hip to this idea. While the advertise the fact that you can make a call from *anywhere* with an internet connection I've been told they crack down if you use the service too much i.e. if you were to buy a box with a New York number and use it only in London.
Assuming this is correct, which wouldn't shock me, you would need an IP that looked like the area you're getting VoIP service. When I ge
Re:I Wonder... (Score:5, Informative)
<<I will exchange a London number for a New York number... any takers...>>
I've heard rumors that Vontage is none too hip to this idea. While the advertise the fact that you can make a call from *anywhere* with an internet connection I've been told they crack down if you use the service too much i.e. if you were to buy a box with a New York number and use it only in London.
I've got to say that this is not true at all. I use Vonage from France with a U.S. phone number (about 3 hours of phone calls every weekend). When Vonage found out about this, not only weren't they bothered, but they asked to me to do an interview with the Wall Street Journal [vonage-forum.com]. Also, they now happily offer up the virtual phone numbers in all of their countries to any customer for around $5/month. If I want, I can add a UK, US, Canada, or Mexico phone number.
Re:I Wonder... (Score:2)
Vonage's web site does offer a $4.99 a month service that lets you receive incoming calls on an international number, but not make outgoing calls.
Also their basic service requires a US shipping address and credit card, which I dont have.
Re:I Wonder... (Score:2)
Re:I Wonder... (Score:4, Interesting)
You're confused about what pisses Vonage off. They get mad if you use too many minutes on a so-called "unlimited" residential plan. They don't care at all where you use your minutes or where you plug in your box.
Re:I Wonder... (Score:2)
You can get VOIP numbers in pretty much any area from a number of suppliers. I don't have the details now, but a colleague of mine has a London terminated number which he uses from our office in Warwick. Or would do, if we could get the damned thing to work through an NAT-ing firewall.
Re:I Wonder... (Score:4, Informative)
You can also get a free US number to forward to any SIP phone from http://www.ipkall.com/ [ipkall.com]
Re:I Wonder... (Score:2)
ipkall looks useful to receive calls, but you cant make US calls from it, which is a disadvantage.
Re:I Wonder... (Score:2)
If you often have to call the US then you should look at http://www.call1899.co.uk/ [call1899.co.uk] who charge exactly 0p/min! There is a connection fee of 3p though. 1899 are about to launch a VOIP service (existing customers already have it) which lets you set the caller ID, maybe that will work with a US number.
Re:I Wonder... (Score:2)
He took his Vonage router with him, got broadband in India, and kept his CA phone number.
Re:I Wonder... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:I Wonder... (Score:2)
Not sure why this is such a big deal. The VoIP providers up here in Canada already let you choose the area code you want [primus.ca]. In fact, it's one of their big selling features for home-based businesses or for people who have family and friends in different area codes. The selection of area codes isn't unlimited, but it covers all the big urban areas.
Eric
Vioxx is Prozac for lawyers [ericgiguere.com]
Re:I Wonder... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I Wonder... (Score:2)
Yeah, I had Vonage for 8 months, waiting for them to get my landline number transferred, but they couldn't do it. I signed up for AT&T CallVantage, and they transferred it in two weeks.
I don't know what the deal was, but I got fed up with waiting, plus getting absolutely no useful information out of Vonage support.
I'm paying $5 per month more for AT&T, but I'm saving $20 on being able to finally drop my landlin
Re:I Wonder... (Score:2)
slight corrections (Score:2)
VoIP is great. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:VoIP is great. (Score:2, Funny)
I do the same thing, but the long cable is a real problem. People complain, especially when I board a plane with it.
Re:VoIP is great. (Score:2)
Re:VoIP is great. (Score:2)
Now if only I could route my cell phone's audio through my Powerbook. Then we'd be cookin' with gas.
Hmmm... (Score:5, Funny)
Now when you get that phone call shouting "FP!" you'll never really know where it came from.
Re:Hmmm... (Score:3, Funny)
Yay. (Score:4, Insightful)
Vonage reports only one number for outbound calls. (Score:2)
Re:Yay. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Yay. (Score:2)
VOIP is definetly an awesome technology, however I'm getting more and more concerned that it will usher in a whole new era of "voice spam". We all know how well the "Do not Spam" legislature in the US is working out.
Ma Bell is back (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ma Bell is back (Score:2)
Tell it to this guy. He'll wonder why you are moderated as "Funny" and not "Insightful".
Re:Ma Bell is back (Score:2)
Re:Ma Bell is back (Score:2)
Obligatory (Score:2)
docsigma2000: my son is sooooooo dead
c8info: Why?
docsigma2000: hes been looking at internet web sites in fucking EUROPE
docsigma2000: HE IS SURFING LONG DISTANCE
docsigma2000: our fucking phone bill is gonna be nuts
c8info: Ooh, this is bad. Surfing long distance adds an extra $69.99 to your bill per hour.
docsigma2000:
docsigma2000: is there some plan we can sign up for???
docsigma2000: cuz theres some cool stuff in europe, but i dun wanna pauy that much
c8in
Country codes... (Score:2, Funny)
Will US cell charges become more "European" now? (Score:5, Interesting)
Presumably if the US cell operators are savvy they'll be able to offer "no incoming call charge" service plans for people using these new numbering schemes.
I always thought it was a bit bizarre of the US telcos to give geographical numbers to mobile phones.
Re:Will US cell charges become more "European" now (Score:5, Interesting)
I believe one of the only wireless-only area codes is 917 in NYC.
Of course, I think my info is a few years old and I thought that I remembered reading that the FCC was gonna change its policy a few years ago. I don't ever remember if that happened though.
Re:Will US cell charges become more "European" now (Score:2, Interesting)
Yes, but the mobile service providers are still nationally based. If I want to call a mobile in another European country, I still have to add the international prefix.
On fixed line, you can move your NY number to LA but you can't move your London number to Berlin.
Re:Will US cell charges become more "European" now (Score:2)
It's part of the GSM spec that dialing the complete number should work. Quite a few phones will default to using the home country to store numbers if they are entered without a country code. Since it means that stored numbers will "just work" if the phone is roamed internationally.
In many cas
It is offered (Score:2)
Re:Will US cell charges become more "European" now (Score:3, Interesting)
I was in Chicago in 2000 and though the train system ws good and you had more fast food options, mobile phone uses was way behind. Back in Ireland, my little sister (aged 13 at the time) had a mobile phone, while our relatively affluent American cousins had 1 mobile for the family ( a fairly arcane looking mobile too). Nokia (finland), Siemens (Germany), and Ericson (Sweden) - all big European mobile makers
Re:Will US cell charges become more "European" now (Score:2)
Ironically, I believe that T-mobile coming on to the midwestern market has made a huge difference.
Not that we have the super-cool Japanese phones, but we have passible models now, and prices are more than reasonable for everyone to have their own phone.
Login to Amazon.com us section, and look at Cell Phones & Service.
Part of the problem is that Sprint, Verizon, and U.S. Cellular are STILL using fairly old fashion CDMA phones---I know that there are CDMA phones wh
Re:Will US cell charges become more "European" now (Score:2, Redundant)
In the U.S. about all operators now offer unlimited free weekend and night minutes, plus free mobile-to-mobile minutes (providing both are on same carrier). THe bucket of "peak" minutes is so large that effectively all airtime is pretty darn cheap now. Competition has d
Re:Will US cell charges become more "European" now (Score:5, Informative)
When dialing a cellphone that is abroad and using roaming, the caller still pays the usual (local) tariff since he cannot know that the callee is abroad. The callee has to pay the extra charges for the international traffic, since he (presumeably) knows what those extra charges are going to be if he picks up the phone.
Re:Will US cell charges become more "European" now (Score:4, Informative)
Wrong.
The person calling (and paying) typically has the choise between multiple different providers. He chooses one of them as the "default" and accesses any of the other ones by using a prefix.
So, for example I use 01013 as a default prefix, which means that if I pick up the phone and dial a mobile phone I'll pay what they charge pro minute. Mostly I'll manually dial 01071+number when dialing a mobile phone since they're cheaper on that though.
I don't have to do this manually, there's "least cost routers" available that you install between the phone and the landline that will automatically dial the prefix that is cheapest for the number you want to reach.
Re:Will US cell charges become more "European" now (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Will US cell charges become more "European" now (Score:2)
Yes, and that is why here in Denmark we pay twice as much to call a mobile from a PSTN phone as from a mobile on a different carrier.
> Competition has driven down the per minute costs.
Except the per minute cost to calls outside the country.
Competition... (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course they won't go quietly, but the competition will benefit the consumer with lower prices and more features. There was something to be said for the stability of old Ma Bell, but I think most people would agree they like having the choices and competition that have come with deregulation.
This is just the next step and let's hope it just keeps getting better!
Re:Competition... (Score:2, Insightful)
Competition ? (Score:3, Interesting)
Imagine a day when the phone company (any phone company) actually has decent service, actually helps you when you call instead of telling you to call another number, actually quits trying to bleed you for every possible cent.
Re:Competition ? (Score:2)
It's called profit seeking, and it's what most people think makes capitalism so freaking great.
Re:Competition... (Score:2)
And there still is... I know several folks who have converted over to Vonage and are unhappy with the level of quality. I don't know where this originates from- poor broadband or what, but the point is that a lot of folks are finding that the technology STILL isn't reliable enough. For some folks it works great but the horror stories are enough to keep everyone but the early adopters from signing up. For me, the features would be nice but
Welcome to the 21st century.. (Score:5, Interesting)
The phonecompanies have been building up to this for the past 15 years or more, making areacodes mandatory even then.
Re:Welcome to the 21st century.. (Score:2)
Re:Welcome to the 21st century.. (Score:2)
You are comparing two totally different numbering systems. Denmark has 8 digits for the subscriber. The NANP uses 7. Denmark has a population of 5,397,640. North America, plus the Carribean, roughly 334,700,000. New York City has a greater population than Denmark. Many states require two area codes just because of their population.
Also, Denmark has it's own country code, +45. North America has
Imagine ordering a pizza? (Score:5, Insightful)
Here's why: I have friends who already live in my area code, yet use cell phones with numbers from out of state. If I call them on my landline, I incur long distance charges. They know this, and they don't really like it. It's tough to order a pizza from an out-of-state cellphone. Pizza shops don't like it.
I use my cellphone more and more to avoid long distance, and I have really no interest in VoIP although I've been a courtesy customer, trialing VoIP for almost 18 months. I don't want to have a different area code than my neighborhood.
There are a lot of things that won't be very pretty. 911 service will be the one that the phone company will complain about.
People are used to area codes and exchanges being located in certain areas. Moving... well, it'll make the numbers less important. And wrong numbers could get to be VERY expensive.
The saddest part is that most legislators aren't bright enough to figure any of this out for themselves. They'll go with whoever sends them campaign money. They'll say that they're looking into it, but really, they'll just vote by whichever lobbyist gets them the most money.
Re:Imagine ordering a pizza? (Score:5, Interesting)
Here in France, all cell phones have a completely separate "area code" that tells you absolutely nothing about location (as it should be, since you could be anywhere). Pizza places don't care. All calls to cell phones cost the same. I'm sure bizarro VoIP numbers will be the same.
As far as expensive wrong numbers, HUH? At this point, an expensive long-distance call in the US is maybe ten cents a minute if you're really getting screwed; how long were you planning on staying on the line for that wrong number?
Having a number that is both supposed to enable people to reach you and is tied to your location is getting more and more silly these days. People move around, and take their phones with them, so location-based numbers are becoming meaningless. You can already get VoIP numbers that have no connection with your physical location, this will just change the choice.
Re:Imagine ordering a pizza? (Score:2)
Do French pizza shops feel the same way if a person orders a pizza from a Finnish mobile? I'm just curious. I know in the states it's difficult to use an international phone to order a pizza. Usually for two reasons. Firstly the cost... no one knows what the cost is but it sounds expensive even to those not familar with mobiles having a different rate. Secondly few people know how to dial internationaly.
Issues i've seen with US mobiles ordering
Re:Imagine ordering a pizza? (Score:2)
Re:Imagine ordering a pizza? (Score:2)
I honestly have no idea, I've never tried anything like it. I don't order pizza very often anyway.
Re:Imagine ordering a pizza? (Score:2)
Re:Imagine ordering a pizza? (Score:2)
2nd, it's relatively cheap to add a virtual number.
Re:Imagine ordering a pizza? (Score:2)
It should be noted with a drive of less than 30 minutes, you can be in my cell phone's area code, while the restaurant's area code stretches as much as 4 hours away from their location. Had I given t
Portability (Score:4, Informative)
"I moved to Kansas from Texas, but I still want to keep my Dallas area code! I want SBC to have to transfer my POTS phone number to my new address!"
For VoIP providers, this is a relatively easy task - they just assign the inbound number to an account/IP address. For POTS providers, this is a bit more complex, as the routing tables on the Class 5 switches (using SS7) aren't set up like DNS is for the internet...
Re:Portability (Score:2)
The end result is that you can get royally screwed if you call a number that looks like a local fixed phone but really is a mobile i Timbuktu and cost you a buck/sec.
When you throwing VoIP into the mix then you regulary end up using an operator from out-of-state and an out-of-state number. Par
Re:Portability (Score:2)
You just log on and set it to eg. 10 cents/minute and you will not get any surprices.
Re:Portability (Score:4, Interesting)
(I know in the UK numbers must, legally speaking, be portable between any provider operating in the same area, and that some providers can take a number that's mapped onto their exchange and terminate it anywhere they want, but I'm not sure of the details of how it works or whether a similar system is available in the US)
Re:Portability (Score:2)
First thought: Consider TCP/IP with a DNS reverse lookup; (phone # becomes URL that points to a background routing number...such as IP4/6.)
Re:Portability (Score:2)
Actually, there's a plan for something just like this - an ITU standard, in fact. Check out , a link to the wikipedia article on E.164. [wikipedia.org]
Much like reverse-DNS, this creates a standard for backwards-masking phone numbers + .e164.arpa and hosting them in DNS like anything else. The root structure, etc. would have to be stabilized worldwide like DNS, but it would make adding country codes, area codes, etc. very easy and provide for some pretty swift and nifty ties between IP, IPv6, domain
Southern Bell Corp (SBC) Cingular and ATT (Score:3, Informative)
Spain's also moving that way (Score:2, Informative)
why though? (Score:2)
what is all this sutff about 'area codes'??? (Score:4, Interesting)
If you have a glance at any old days movies, you'll see why we have 'area codes':
-riing -"I want to make a call to chicago" -"yes sir, which is the number?" -blabla
the area code simply allows a machine to do that.
The point is. What do you really want when you call someone?? You just want to talk to that 'someone', you don't want to talk to the 'someone's house', so the phone number is just a synonym (a sort of an id number) of that someone's name. The area codes are just 'routing prefixes', useful for the machine that handles the connection.
Now, if you have a cell phone, that is really not necessary. In fact, in Europe it is handled that way. I'm very surprised of reading here about cell phones with 'area codes'...
Anyway, the voIp just wipes out this last frontier between the machinery you need to talk to someone, and what you need to localize him
Area codes are just dinosaurs waiting to die. have fun.
Re:what is all this sutff about 'area codes'??? (Score:2)
-riing -"I want to make a call to chicago" -"yes sir, which is the number?" -blabla
Imagine dialing dialing that chick on a rotery phone! Given the choice i'd dial the operator and have her hook me up. No wonder we switched to (xxx)yy#-#### where x = area and y did = city/neighborhood at some point.
I'm rather pro-area codes
Re:what is all this sutff about 'area codes'??? (Score:2)
(1) I need to be able to call cell phones and voip phones from my POTS phone.
(2) I need to be able to call POTS phones from my cell phone and voip phone.
Therefore there must be a bridge between POTS and cell/voip, and that bridge is located in an AREA, and to get a call over that bridge you must dial an AREA CODE.
Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night (Score:2, Informative)
Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night
Do not go gentle into that good night,
Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
Though wise men at their end know dark is right,
Because their words had forked no lightning they
Do not go gentle into that good night.
Good men, the last wave by, crying how bright
Their frail deeds might have danced in a green bay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
Wild men who caught and sang the sun in flight,
And learn, too
VOIP is a lifesaver (Score:4, Interesting)
And thanks to the 1-888 toll free bit, it doesn't really matter where your number is.
I'm from the Netherlands and I use this to stay in touch with people I know in the US.
Works like a charm
old news. (Score:3, Interesting)
Work and friends call the New York number to save on long distance fees. Florida work and friends call my local area code number. They are both on the same line. I can pick up the Cisco device that is the VOIP and walk out of the house, plug it into any IP network and get either of those phone call there.
London, Ebiza, Florida, New York, Hawaii, Indo, Costa Rica....so far it has worked any time I have pluged it up and have a working IP.
IP knows nothing about area codes......
VOIP + Power out =? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:VOIP + Power out =? (Score:2)
Yes, this is one major disadvantage of VoIP - it's not as robust yet. I think, down the line, it's possible that this *might* be overcome. I know there is a standard for power-over-ethernet, which allows low-voltage current to be run on the ethernet line along with your data, in order to power small devices attached to the ether. Think small cameras and, um, phones.
If you extend that kind of technology to the broadband networks that provide you data in the first place, and then the broadband car
Portable numbers cost money... (Score:4, Interesting)
There is also a block of numbers with the 07 prefix allocated for "personal" numbers - numbers that follow you to wherever you happen to be. These are charged at mobile rates, which accounts for their relative lack of uptake: you might as well have a mobile phone in your pocket than keep redirecting the "personal" number to your nearest landline as you move about.
A new block of numbers has provisionally been allocated for VoIP, but apart from BT, no-one really seems yet to be using it.
However, the point about all of these numbers is that they cost more to call than a regular landline. Some cost more than others, but they all cost more.
Part of this is due to the fact that the telephone network is built to map numbers to physical equipment. There can be several local telephone service providers in the same geographic area and they're required to allow customers to move their numbers between competitors. The only way this can happen is for the calls to go to the network which orginally allocated the number and for it then to be bounced on to the new terminating network: this is a cost to the network with whom the customer is no longer doing business.
The same technological constraint applies to non-geographic numbers: someone has to own and operate the terminating equipment for the dialled number and then relay the call on to a "genuine" landline. However, in this case, the telco gets to charge for its services. Which is why the calls cost more.
The same thing is true for landline calls to VoIP numbers: they have to go to terminating equipment somewhere and hop off onto the IP network. If you want to change your provider and keep your number, someone has to pay to keep that terminating equipment in place. That someone is probably you.
Of course, it would be possible to re-engineer the phone networks so that the whole of the number you dial is looked up to make the routing decision rather than the first few digits, but look back a few years at the problem of growing Internet routing tables and remember why CIDR was invented.
The real solution is an alpha keypad you can type your domain name on...
Regional Bells? (Score:2, Funny)
I thought they had all been acquired slowly by SBC?
VOIP is only as good as your ISP (Score:2)
Baby Steps (Score:4, Interesting)
Number portability across telco service providers is a great thing, extending that portability to the area code is better.
But it shows just how dated the whole "telephone number" mapping between integers to phones is getting.
What I'd like to see is the whole number thing get completely submerged in the same way that IP addresses were submerged by hostnames and DNS. This is already happening at the personal level, as I speed dial "3" or select a name in my phone's memory. If I could key in "Fred's Restaurant, Sydney" and get a directory lookup returned to my phone that would be nice. Unfortunately, my cell phone company likes the status quo of charging me for voice based directory lookups.
The other thing: something like TLS based authentication for CallerID, with inverse directory lookups in my favorite RBL on "Citizens for Responsible Exploitation", etc.
Ooh! (Score:4, Funny)
Oddly enough I live in the 666 exchange in Lafayette. I get a fair number of odd looks when I give a phone number that starts (after the area code) with 666. I'd heard that phone companies were avoiding that number in their exchanges due to that silly superstition, but I guess with how tight the phone numbers are getting they had to use 'em all. Phone number of the beast heh heh heh...
Dylan Thomas? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Emergency Numbers (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Emergency Numbers (Score:2, Interesting)
With PSTN, you dial the emergenc
Re:Emergency Numbers (Score:5, Informative)
Enhanced 911 Services [fcc.gov], or 911 trunks to each PSAP in markets served by $VoIP_Company both solve this problem. Neither is manditory, but many providers offer it to achieve parity with POTS features.
E911 is not just for wireless anymore. Here's another good link:
http://www.911dispatch.com/information/voip.html [911dispatch.com]
Re:Emergency Numbers (Score:2)
BTW, I love Vonage.