home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!news.miami.edu!ncar!ames!lll-winken!telecom-request
- From: Dave.Leibold@f730.n250.z1.FIDONET.ORG (Dave Leibold)
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.telecom
- Subject: Holiday Overseas Callbacks From Bell Canada Operators
- Message-ID: <telecom13.46.1@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Date: 27 Jan 93 05:00:29 GMT
- Sender: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- Organization: TELECOM Digest
- Lines: 78
- Approved: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Submissions-To: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Administrivia-To: telecom-request@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Telecom-Digest: Volume 13, Issue 46, Message 1 of 12
-
-
- From Bell News (Bell Canada - Ontario edition) 11th January 1993]
-
- Operators give special assistance for overseas calls.
-
- Bell operators in the 416 area offered special assistance to callers
- trying to make holiday connections with friends and relatives in
- non-dialable parts of the world.
-
- Starting four days before Christmas, between the peak-demand hours of
- 8 a.m. and 11 p.m., operators called back customers once they had made
- a connection with the overseas party.
-
- That special service saved callers hours of repeated tries to
- operators, hoping they could instantly obtain an a available circuit.
-
- Having placed their request, customers were assured by operators that
- their calls would be placed, and that they would be informed when the
- connection was made.
-
- "Initial response has been great. We'll be testing the special service
- for six months in the 416 area code," explained Nazir Lalani, section
- manager, Operator Services. "If it continues to be successful, it will
- be expanded to other area codes in Bell Ontario territory."
-
-
- Dave Leibold - via FidoNet node 1:250/98
- INTERNET: Dave.Leibold@f730.n250.z1.FIDONET.ORG
-
-
- [Moderator's Note: This used to be the custom here in the USA many
- years ago, when all overseas calls to Europe/Africa/the Middle East
- were routed through operators at the old international center at White
- Plains, NY. You'd ask the long distance operator for an international
- operator and be connected to White Plains. After giving the operator
- the details, she'd have you disconnect and wait for a call-back which
- could be in less than a minute, or sometimes several hours, depending
- on where you were calling and the time of day, etc. I seem to recall
- a call to Cairo, Egypt in the late 1950's, and the AT&T operator
- saying it would be several hours before the call could go through
- because 'we have to book the call with the international operator in
- Paris; the telecom administration in France only lets AT&T use the
- circuit (*the* circuit?) to Cairo for an hour in the morning and two
- hours in the afternoon ... and I think we have one or two calls ahead
- of yours waiting ..." And to this day, 35 years later, where are many
- of the still non-direct-dialable international points from the USA?
- Quite a few are in northern and central Africa; countries which used
- to be French colonies.
-
- For British colonies it was the same difference only London controlled
- who got to call where and when. The overseas operator in Montreal,
- Quebec controlled the circuits to the far northern wilderness in
- Ontario and Quebec, with calls frequently going by AM radio from a
- site in Val-D'or, Quebec. White Plains told Montreal, Montreal told
- Val-D'or and the lady at Val-D'or would go on the radio calling
- alternatly in French and English, "Miquelon, Miquelon, this is
- Val-D'or with a call on Channel 2 ..." and after a couple minutes of
- this she would report, "they are not answering, White Plains; you know
- I told you before they only promise to listen to the radio in the
- morning at ten o'clock." Sometimes Montreal would not even bother to
- ring Val-D'or, admonishing White Plains that "we are not supposed to
- call her after 10 PM unless it is an emergency. The radio station and
- telephone exchange is in her home and she goes to bed at ten. We give
- her a wake up call at six each morning ..."
-
- ... eventually the call to Cairo would go through; after a period of
- time the phone would ring and as soon as it was answered an operator
- would ask us to hold on a second ... then from across the ocean a
- man's voice speaking English with a French accent would be heard:
- "Hello White Plains, I've got Cairo for you now ... Cairo, this is
- Paris with a call from the States, they want, umm, oh, uh, White
- Plains, wait a minute, he rang off on me, I'll try to raise him again
- but you know dear, you've only got seven minutes, the cable closes
- down to American Telly at 2100 Greenwich; won't open again until 1100
- Greenwich tomorrow ... um, oh, Cairo, wait a minute! Don't cut me
- off! Put the States onto <number> ... " *That* was an international
- call years ago. PAT]
-