home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!sdd.hp.com!spool.mu.edu!wupost!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!lll-winken!telecom-request
- From: lmadison@ie.oracle.com (Linc Madison)
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.telecom
- Subject: Re: Proposed Australian Number Changes 1994-1998
- Message-ID: <telecom12.904.10@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Date: 13 Dec 92 17:44:52 GMT
- Sender: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- Organization: Oracle Europe
- Lines: 39
- Approved: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Submissions-To: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Administrivia-To: telecom-request@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Telecom-Digest: Volume 12, Issue 904, Message 10 of 14
-
- I'm sorry, folks, but this is the most incredibly BRAIN-DEAD scheme
- I've ever heard of. The idea is to split Australia into four area
- codes: Queensland (07), New South Wales/ACT (02), Victoria/Tasmania
- (03), and W.A./S.A./N.T. (08), and then give everyone an eight-digit
- number.
-
- Are they going to institute local calling within each area code? Not
- likely! Also, you'll have to dial eight digits to make a local call
- in the tiniest, most remote town in the nation. There are only a
- handful of cities in the world that have eight-digit numbers: Paris,
- Rome, Tokyo, Mataranka ...
-
- Further, the alternatives are so OBVIOUS it's painful. If Sydney or
- Melbourne needs to split, you can divide them into 020/021 or 030/031.
- Then, some years down the road, you can open up 02N and 03N codes if
- they're needed. Adelaide you can put into 081, allowing local numbers
- to begin with a wider range of digits. For Perth and Brisbane, it's a
- little dicier, because you'd have to pick one of the initial digits of
- current numbers and change to that as the last digit of the area code:
- for example, 092 and 072. You'd have to do something in two stages,
- as the current plan proposes, to avoid confusion between the old (09)
- 23a-bcde and the new (092) 3ab-cdef, for example. You could, for
- example, pick the (09X) code with the fewest exchanges, and make all
- the 09X into 09YX. (Say, for illustration, that 096 has the fewest
- numbers. Move all 096 numbers into prefixes beginning with 2, 3, 4,
- and 5. Then change the area codes 091 -> 0961, 096 -> 0966, etc.)
- Tasmania is easy -- it just comes in as a second phase of the
- Melbourne split. This plan doesn't account for overcrowding in 04X
- 05X 06X areas, but it's just a first hack.
-
- It just seems to me that there could hardly be a more user-unfriendly
- plan than the one currently proposed. Having an extra digit into the
- area codes seems vastly preferable to having universal eight-digit
- local numbers. Who designed the new plan -- AUSTEL or GTE??
-
-
- Linc Madison == LMadison@IE.Oracle.COM
- (Note: this account will probably expire December 11, 1992.)
-