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- Subject: uk.telecom FAQ, Part 2/3 - Telephone services
- Newsgroups: uk.telecom,news.answers
- From: jrg@blodwen.demon.co.uk (James R Grinter)
- Date: Sun, 16 Oct 1994 16:23:10 +0000
-
- Archive-name: uk-telecom/part2
- Posting-Frequency: monthly
- Last-modified: Time-stamp: <1994/10/09 17:21:19 james>
- Version: 2.4
-
- Frequently Asked Questions for uk.telecom
-
- Part 2 - Telephone Services
-
- Compiled/ Posted by James Grinter <jrg@blodwen.demon.co.uk>
-
- ~See <uk-telecom-1_781719767@blodwen.demon.co.uk> for the question index,
- and further information about this FAQ.~
-
- These articles attempt to summarise answers to some of the more often
- asked questions in the newsgroup uk.telecom.
-
- This second part of the FAQ is about Telephone services, companies, and
- products in the UK, and what is available.
-
- ----
-
- Subject: What is uk.telecom ?
-
- It's the uk's own little newsgroup to discuss all sorts of topics related
- to telecommunications in Britain, including (but not limited to) technical
- matters, pricing, STD codes, equipment, BT vs Mercury, Network Services
- (nee Star Services), ISDN services, modems, etc. You get the idea..
-
- It was born in August 1991 to cater for the large amount of telecoms
- related traffic in uk.misc, as UK specific enquiries in the UseNet
- newsgroup comp.dcom.telecom tended to be swamped by the vast number of
- other articles.
-
- ----
-
- Subject: Phone numbers
-
- Q: Why do we need another digit in the phone numbers ?
-
- The existing numbering scheme is mixed 8, 9, and 10 digits (in all cases
- including the initial "0" - which isn't really part of the number.
- Theoretically, the maximum number of numbers is 900 million, excluding
- 00XX codes because by CCITT convention you can't have the same digit as
- the first digit of the NDC (National Destination Code, that's the STD
- code without the "0") as you have as national trunk prefix. 01XX has
- been cleared (solely to make the code change possible) and this reduces
- the total number of possible numbers to 800 million. Where the numbers
- are used for geographic areas, and users are offered the option to dial
- those numbers without a trunk code, then 201,000 numbers in each group
- of 1,000,000 become unusable. But other number ranges, such as cellnet,
- freefone, paging services and premium rate numbers are not limited in
- this way. So the real "supply" of numbers in the UK is about 650
- million. Experience shows that allowing for the continuing process of
- number changing, and the fact that there will always be some numbers
- that cannot be allocated, about 60% of the supply can be utilised at any
- one time. This means that the present scheme restricts us to using no
- more than 400 million numbers at any one time. In fact the UK (plus the
- Channel Islands and the Isle of Man) is currently using less than 30
- million numbers, which should allow plenty of room for growth.
-
- So why is there a problem? Because the numbering ranges are tied to
- fixed locations by a formula that has no place in modern
- telecommunications, and which was originally introduced solely to enable
- fairly primitive mechanical equipment to route and charge calls
- correctly. As a result there is a serious imbalance in the distribution
- of numbers: one code, such as 0393, has only 25 numbers in use - while
- another, such as 0532, has over 300,000.
-
- The proposed extra digit will NOT solve the problem. Agreed it will
- create a lot more codes: but even now there are 56 codes that have no
- numbers on them, and that figure (surprisingly enough) is increasing,
- not decreasing !
-
- But the extra digit won't provide any more numbers within each of those
- geographic areas served by individual codes, and that is where the brunt
- of the demand will be. Currently, growth is caused both by the need for
- more lines (particularly for fax) and by new operators taking blocks of
- numbers **within** the individual areas. Future demand will be driven by
- existing services such as DDI (Direct Dialling In to PABXs) which is a
- heavy consumer of numbers, and by new services such as Teenline, and
- Distinctive Ringing.
-
- The latent demand for DDI has been suppressed in the UK by both the lack
- of availability of connections, and by high tariffs imposed by BT. The
- arrival of DASS2 (the ISDN signalling system for digital PABXs) makes
- availability considerably easier, and Mercury and BT are now offering
- DDI at a much lower tariff.
-
- As demand grows, the larger cities will overflow their allocations of
- numbers and further complete changes will become necessary. It has
- recently been announced that five of those cities (Nottingham, Leeds,
- Sheffield, Leicester and Bristol) are to change to seven digit schemes
- in 1995: and looking at the list of codes vs numbering density in each
- (now, I believe, in the uk.telecom archives) it is clear that further
- places, including Brighton, Belfast and Bournemouth, are also likely to
- run out of numbers in the next few years.
-
- London's 071 was not expected to last beyond 2005 at the previous growth
- rates; however allowing for the greater demand caused by DDI and new
- services, the 071 number range is likely to be exhausted by the end of
- this decade. At that stage the two options will be either to split the
- 071 area into two codes, or to convert all of London to an eight digit
- scheme. This is not a new phenomenon ... even before London split into
- 071 and 081, two other capital cities (Paris and Copenhagen) had each
- tried an identical scheme. Those schemes failed, mainly because of
- confusion between "inner" and "outer" zone numbers, and each was
- superceded by an eight digit scheme which is reported to have been very
- successful.
-
- So we don't need an extra digit. And the extra digit (if we get it) won't
- solve any problems. We do need a complete overhaul of the numbering
- system, whether we have the extra digit or not. As that overhaul will
- have to come, it would be far better if we waited - and planned a single
- change that would solve all the problems, rather than have a hotchpotch of
- further changes.
-
- But - while the extra digit won't achieve anything for the customers, it
- will have an interesting effect on BT's sales figures. As soon as the
- extra digit is imposed, all Mercury Smart Boxes, SmartSockets, and
- compatible PABX and key systems will stop working unless they have been
- modified (at the user's expense) because they will be unable to
- recognise the longer codes. With the reduced differentials between
- Mercury's tariffs and BT's "options", some users may find it
- uneconomical to pay the charge for the modifications.
-
- Similarly, payphones supplied before 1992 by BT's competitors will be
- unable to charge correctly for calls. Some will have to be modified, at
- a cost, while others, that cannot be modified, will have to be scrapped.
- Some of those payphones are still on sale to unsuspecting members of the
- public without any warnings being given as to what is in store.
-
-
- Q: So who decided, and what were the choices?
-
- Ovum Ltd, 1 Mortimer St, London W1., a respected and independent
- telecommunications/management consultancy, carried out the investigation
- for OFTEL. They were asked to study the first five options below.
-
- 'Numbering for Telephony Services into the 21st Century -
- A Consultative Document' July 1989 Oftel. Sample quotes:
-
- There are *many* possible options for a future scheme.. This document
- identifies 5 practicable options which span the range of possibilities.
-
- The starting point for any new plan is the current scheme. This
- is essentially a nine digit plan. (The leading zero dialled for
- trunk calls is a prefix which is not strictly part of the full
- telephone number.) [<== here comes the selective blindness]
-
- -(A) Add a leading digit to all numbers which indicates the service
- being used. [Final choice; '1' indicates old numbers]
- -(B) As (A) but numbers are fully portable. [The number does not
- indicate geography or carrier].
- -(C) Compromise between (A) and (B). Add a leading digit.. numbers
- are portable.. but geographic portability is restricted to
- individual NNG areas [eg within Birmingham].
- -(D) Add an extra digit to the front of all local DNs.. local PSTN
- DNs increase in length from 6 or 7 digits to 7 or 8.
- -(E) The only nine digit plan of the five, allows full portability
- of DNs. Users dial the full national number at all times
- omitting the trunk prefix '0' which is redundant.
- -(F) [Not actually proposed] As for (A). Drop trunk prefix '0'.
- Add leading '0' for old numbers, so they look the same.
-
-
- Q: Who owns this numbering space ?
-
- The numbering space is owned by the nation, and (technically) Oftel is its
- custodian. But in practise Oftel delegates the majority of decisions to BT,
- and takes advice from BT (and sometimes other operators) on major issues.
- If Oftel owned the numbering space and managed it effectively, Mercury would
- have been allocated 0800 and 0345 numbers to issue to their customers, rather
- than having to use new codes (0500 and 0645) which are still not recognised
- by some BT (and private) payphones.
-
-
- Q: I've heard someone mention about Mercury's 0500 service, what is it ?
-
- This is Mercury's 'freecall' service introduced at the end of 1992 and is
- their equivalent of BT's 0800 service. Similarly Mercury 0645 service,
- called 'localcall' is the equivalent of BT's 0345 (now tackily 'Lo-call')
- service. 0800 89 and 0500 89 prefixes normally indicate that the number is
- conected to a location outside the U.K.
-
-
- Q: How can I phone American 1-800 (toll free) numbers from the UK ?
-
- You can dial American 1-800 numbers using MCI's Call USA service. AT&T
- also provide this service, but will only connect you to numbers provided by
- AT&T. Or try Swiftcall (071 488 2001), who offer cheap phone access to the
- US (and some other places). With Swiftcall's service you will still pay
- UK->US charges, but at least they're cheaper than BT & Mercury. Minimum
- investment to access Swiftcall is UKP25 so it might not be for you if you
- never plan to call the US again.
-
- For a list of U.S. companies with U.K. 0800 numbers, call AT&T Direct (see
- another answer) and ask for 816-654-6688 collect. Then ask the person who
- answers for extension 7642 (if you're US military, then apparently you
- should ask for extension 9661 instead). You should call during US business
- hours.
-
-
- Q: How do I dial a number with a mnemonic in it ?
-
- Here's a letter to number mapping; this is potentially useful because many
- 1-800 numbers have mnemonics in them.
-
- Num UK USA
- 1
- 2 ABC ABC
- 3 DEF DEF
- 4 GHI GHI
- 5 JKL JKL
- 6 MN MNO
- 7 PRS PRS
- 8 TUV TUV
- 9 WXY WXY
- 0 OQ Operator
-
- There is no 'Z' in either system, and there's no 'Q' in the States.
-
- {*} These are now completely messed up, viz Motorola's mr1 handset and
- others.
-
- Q: What are BT Phonebase/ Electronic Yellow Pages/ TeleDirectory and
- how do you get access to them?
-
- BT Phonebase allows you to use your modem for directory enquiries. You
- get access to the whole country by name, street, town, even by phonetic
- partial match. You get access to up-to-date information, not a phone book
- that's maybe a year old. It gives you name, full address including
- postcode, and phone number. Phonebase is a seperate system, though it is
- supposed to be regularly updated from NIS - the DQ (Directory Enquiries)
- system.
-
- It costs nothing to join (phone 0800 919 199 or fax 0742 440157 and they
- send out the form).
-
- The modem call is charged at long distance rates (and costs more via
- Mercury), and is only 2400 baud. But even so, you can look up numbers for
- a fraction the cost of Directory Enquiry calls (37.8p +VAT).
-
- As for the retrieval system, well, it was written by a bunch of
- Americans and BT thought it was perfectly adequate. There was a
- front-end access program available, written by BT, though they have
- now discontinued support and are planning to change the interface. The
- program is available from ftp.demon.co.uk:/pub/ibmpc/baseline/.
- baseline.exe, and someone is trying to obtain the source and details
- of the proposed new interface definition.
-
- BT also recently launched an online directory enquiry system for personal
- computer users. Called TeleDirectory, the system is 'aimed at customers
- who require five or more telephone numbers a day' and costs 12p per
- enquiry. It's based upon an MS Windows front end, and comes with a
- software at a cost of UKP300 per annum, with discounts on 5 licenses or
- more. Ring 0800 200 700 for further information.
-
- Electronic Yellow Pages is quite obviously named. It offers access
- from 0345 444 444 or internationally on +44 734 591199. It's widely
- regarded as having one of the worst user-interfaces ever, although it
- is reasonably easy to get information from it after a bit of
- practice. You can also reach it on PSS with a reverse charge PSS call,
- and via JANET X25 calls to PSS/ niss, and its rumoured to be available
- via the Internet at niss.ac.uk. and some other ad-hoc gateways.
-
-
- Q: What defines a local call area?
-
- The boundaries are all quite complex. The only reference seems to be your
- local phone book, which will tell you where you can call for local costs. The
- complete list is available from BT on floppy, but costs a fortune!
-
- From BT's 1994 price update (Item Code 964780 (2/94)), it says
-
- >> "Telephone exchanges are grouped together into charge groups to determine
- >> call charges for local and national calls. Each charge group has a "charge
- >> point". A call made within a charge group is usually a local call. Charges
- >> for other calls are generally based on the distance (up to or over 35
- >> miles) between the charge points in the originating and called charge
- >> groups."
-
-
- {*} Q: When does the National Code Change take place?
-
- The National Code Change takes place at 1am on 'Phoneday' which is 16 April
- 1995. However the new codes and numbers have been available for use since 1
- August 1994. Phoneday is when the old codes and numbers will be withdrawn.
- Call 0800 010101 for more information.
-
-
- Q: I want a new line with a particular number, or want to renumber an
- existing line to a particular number.
-
- You can (generally) do this as long as the number is not allocated or
- reserved for somebody else. You will be told that the number you want is
- not on their list, but ask them to call the number allocation people for
- your area and get it for you.
-
- It CAN be done. NOTE: If you are requesting a new line tell them before
- they start tapping your details that you want to choose a number.
-
-
- Q: What sort of number is 0990?
-
- 0990 was used for Ascot, Chobham, and Wentworth, until a few years ago.
- Ascot moved to 0344 (2, 87) Wentworth to 0344 (84) and Chobham to 0276 (85).
-
- 0990 has in recent months become a BT code for **derived services**: of a
- similar nature to Flextel; i.e. the number is non-geographic and charged at
- a single rate from whereever the call is made. The charge rate used for
- 0990 is "b".
-
-
- ----
-
- Subject: Oftel
-
- Q: Who or what are OFTEL? How do I contact them?
-
- OFTEL is the Office of Telecommunications, created by the act that set the
- way for British Telecommunications to be privatised.
-
- Office of Telecommunications (Oftel)
- 50 Ludgate Hill
- LONDON EC4M 7JJ
-
- Tel: 071-634 8700 (Switchboard)
- 071-634 8888 (Advice unit) Fax: 071-634 8943
- 071-634 8754 (Publications)
-
- Oftel's library may be contacted on 071 634 8764/5 during office hours
- (9am-5pm). If you quote them the BABT approvals number from any piece of
- equipment, they can look up the relevant approval document and give you
- details of the company that applied for the license, and companies that
- can service the equipment without invalidating the approval.
-
-
- Q: Do OFTEL set any of BT's charges?
-
- No charges are set by Oftel. BT sets ALL its charges, and publishes them
- in their "Price List" (of which Oftel get a file copy). If Oftel believe
- any of BT's charging policies are in breach of the license conditions (or
- any other regulatory requirement) they will of course point this out.
-
- Oftel do put a price cap of RPI - 7.5% on a 'basket' of services and
- limits on some individual services.
-
-
- Q: How do I get a copy of 'Oftel News'?
-
- Just ring Oftel and ask. 071 634 8700
-
- ----
-
- Subject: Mercury Communications Ltd
-
- Q: Can you use your subscription to Mercury from any phone?
-
- It is believed to be strictly illegal to use your Mercury Code from other
- than your designated phone number. However, it may well be possible to to
- use it from any line on the same exchange as you. Look upon the inability
- to use it outside your local exchange as a security feature.
-
- You could consider their chargecard (Mercury Calling Card) service,
- instead.
-
-
- Q: What is the Mercury beep, and can I get rid of it ?
-
- The answer beep can annoy customers if it occurs once the person has
- started speaking. In some areas, it is immediate on answer and therefore
- no problem. It **can** be removed for specific accounts on request although
- Mercury are reluctant to do this unless essential.
-
- The beep triggers call logging/charging equipment, such as hotel
- switchboards and payphones, and although it is currently applied to all
- indirect calls via Mercury (except where the customer has requested its
- removal), Mercury are planning to withdraw it from all those customers
- that do not specifically require it.
-
-
- Q: What is known about PIN-less Mercury ?
-
- The code is 132. Users register their calling lines with Mercury. 132
- also works for data or voice calls over (BT installed) ISDN.
-
-
- Q: What do I get on Mercury's itemised bill using cost centres?
-
- - A statement giving total bill, together with giro credit slip,
- - A sheet listing all cost centres used, together with time and
- money totals,
- - A sheet for **each** cost centre used detailing **each** call made,
- listing exchange name (not code) and number dialed, time+duration,
- and cost.
-
-
- Q: Can I tell if Mercury 131/132 service is available in my area?
-
- 131/PIN service: try tone dialling 131 ~wait-for-tone~ 123456. If the
- service is available you'll get a recorded announcement starting 'A test
- PIN code has been used to dial this number'.
-
- For the pin-less service, dial 132. If you get a message "We are sorry,
- but we are unable to connect you to the Mercury network..." phone 0500
- 500 194 and ask about it.
-
-
- Q: Is it possible to access Mercury 131 from a BT Payphone?
-
- If the phone is rented by a customer from BT, the answer is yes, **provided**
- that (a) it is in a Mercury Access Area, and (b) the customer has not asked
- BT to bar access to Mercury from that phone. If however the phone has been
- provided by BT for "public" use (i.e. nobody is paying rental on the phone,
- and all the takings go to BT) then, in nearly all cases BT will have barred
- Mercury access. If there are any cases where Mercury access has not been
- barred, it will be simply because someone has forgotten to do it!
-
-
- Q: How can I dial 9 digit numbers quickly- the system waits a while for
- the 10th digit?
-
- For Mercury 131, try using a #. This apparently doesn't work for 132,
- because for that service the BT exchange stores all the digits and
- dispatches them to Mercury in one go.
-
-
- ----
-
- Subject: British Telecommuncations plc (BT)
-
- Q: Why is there no 0345 access to PSS Dialplus ?
-
- [Two answers to this one:]
-
- There are probably two main reasons why this is not done.
-
- 1) 0345 services (and 0800, 0898, 0891) were designed to give country-wide
- access at the appropriate charge rate to a specific number in a specific
- area of the country. There **is** also a method of directing calls
- originating in a specific area to a regional number - eg - 0345 123456
- dialled in Brighton would route to a number somewhere in South East
- England, and the same number dialled in Scotland would route to a number
- in, say, Glasgow (cf. BT's experts service - ~Advanced LinkLine~). In both
- cases the renter of the 0345 number pays for the trunk call part of the
- charge. The PSS service has PADs all over the UK, ie dozens of them, so
- that PSS traffic is not tying up trunk circuits. That would negate the
- whole point of the service!. The complexity of determining the 0345
- routing to all these local PADs is probably not worth it.
-
- 2) The services are currently carried on an overlay network with its own
- exchanges. By their nature, most of these services are short holding
- time calls (despite the incidence of children spending long hours on
- chat-lines & pop music feeds), and the network is dimensioned for this.
- It is certainly not designed to carry relatively long holding time
- traffic to PADs!
-
- Perhaps, in the future Intelligent Network Databases will allow this
- sort of universal number access to lots of local nodes using the
- existing local network, but that's not imminent as far as I know.
-
-
- [However, another explanation has been proffered - Ed.]
-
- This question was asked, some years ago, at a `Character Terminal
- Implementors Group' meeting (a UK group which inputs to CCITT on the
- X.3, X.28 and X.29 recommendations, now defunct).
-
- The representatives from BT Network Services said that since BT was
- split up into different commercial divisions, BT Network Services would
- have to pay the full going rate for an 0345 (or 0800) number. That
- charge would obviously have to get passed on to the PAD user, and on
- average it would be higher than that of the phone calls made by the PAD
- user since the majority of them could make a local call.
-
- That's not a full answer, as there are bound to be savings in reducing
- the number of locations where PAD lines are located (be they real, or
- out-of-area lines to a PAD somewhere else), but it seemed as though BT
- Network Services were well aware of the possibility, and would take
- decisions on cost grounds. A factor which is obviously difficult to
- quantify is the value of having a single number which PAD users can
- call. One slight technical hitch is that an NUI is not necessarily
- known at all PAD centres.
-
-
- Q: What **are** these Network Services that people keep mentioning? Are they
- a BT version of teletext or something? Do you have to pay for them?
-
- [Culled from information provided by P.K.Chawdhry@newcastle.ac.uk (Pravir K
- Chawdhry), clive@x.co.uk (Clive Feather) and pkh@cs.nott.ac.uk (Kevin
- Hopkins).]
-
- Network Services are available on BT's digital exchanges (System X and
- System Y) and are usually available on the payment of a quarterly rental,
- though some are available solely on the payment of a per usage charge.
-
- [PLEASE NOTE: This is just a summary, for a full list and charges please
- see the seperate posting "BT Network Services information"
- <uk-telecom-network-services_781719767@blodwen.demon.co.uk>]
-
- Set up features:
-
- 5 == Retry When Not Busy (when busy tone heard) (System Y)
- *21*number# Call Diversion (all calls)
- *261# Call Barring (incoming)
- *34bar# Call Barring (outgoing)
- *40*number# Call Charge Advice (System X)
- *40*number Call Charge Advice (System Y)
- *411# Call Charge Advice on all calls
- *43# Call Waiting
- *51*code*number# Code Calling
- *55*time# Reminder Call
- *56*time*programme# Reminder Programme (System X)
- *61*number# Call Diversion (no reply)
- *61*number*wait# == Call Diversion (no reply) (Extra System Y facility)
- *67*number# Call Diversion (on busy)
-
- Code Calling calls:
-
- ** 0 Repeat Last Call (excluding Code Calling calls)
- ** code Code Calling call
-
- Status checks on settings:
-
- *#001# Check which services are active (System X)
- *#21# Call Diversion (all calls)
- *#261# Call Barring (incoming)
- *#34# Call Barring (outgoing)
- *#411# Call Charge Advice on all calls
- *#43# Call Waiting
- *#51*code# Code Calling
- *#55# Reminder Call
- *#56# Regular Programme (System X)
- *#61# Call Diversion (no reply)
- *#67# Call Diversion (on busy)
-
- Cancel features:
-
- #21# Call Diversion (all calls)
- #261# Call Barring (incoming) (System X)
- #261*keyword# Call Barring (incoming) [System Y]
- #34bar*keyword# Call Barring (outgoing)
- #37# == Retry When Not Busy [System Y]
- #411# Call Charge Advice on all calls
- #43# Call Waiting
- #51*code# Code Calling
- #55# Reminder Call
- #56*time*programme# Reminder Programme (System X)
- #56# Reminder Programme (System X)
- #61# Call Diversion (no reply)
- #67# Call Diversion (on busy)
-
-
- Q: When I use call waiting, and press R to get the dialling tone so that I
- can get to the new caller, nothing happens i.e. no dialling tone.
-
- You may have switched your phones to tone dialling but there should be a
- separate switch to change the type of recall from Earth Loop to Timed
- Break (which is essential to use Call Waiting fully). Sometimes there is
- only one switch, three position (LD/MFE/MFT) in which case you want MFT.
- Some MF phones do NOT have the Timed Break (MFT) option - in which case
- you would need a new phone to make full use of the service.
-
-
- Q: How do I order BT's full price list ?
-
- >> The BT price list I ordered finally turned up... it wasn't what I
- >> expected - it's a thin leaflet with basically little more information
- >> than the residential price guide you get with your bill.
-
- Then it simply isn't the **price list**. It may be what BT try to fob you
- off with when you ask for a copy of the price list. Now ring them back
- and insist on the REAL THING ! (BT reference is TRF/BTP/A100 et seq.)
-
- The person responsible for co-ordinating the price list is Damien
- O'Reilly. You can write to him at: PP 4029, 2-12 Gresham Street, London
- EC2V 7AG, or else fax your request through on 071-356-7340
-
-
- Q: How do I get a BT 'Midnight line'?
-
- Be sure to phone 152, not 150, and be persistent that such things exist!
- BT product number A12342. Connection is UKP499.50 +VAT; Rental is
- UKP358.80 +VAT per quarter (at 10/12/1993), on top of the 'normal' BT
- charges.
-
- {*} Between Midnight and 6am all UK Mainland calls are free,
- international calls are charged as normal, mobile phone calls are free,
- and all inland diverted calls are free. All other calls are metered as
- usual. Premium Calls are still barred. All other times normal
- metering.
-
- Break even point is approx. someone making a 110 units of calls a night, 5
- days a week 52 weeks of the year. Above this you start making a payback on
- the extra spent on connection.
-
-
- Q: Are calls made on Midnight lines **outside** the Midnight-6am free period
- charged at normal dialled rates?
-
- Certainly they are. If they are directly dialled, that is !
-
-
- Q: Can I get a fully itemised bill from BT ?
-
- Yes, with the proviso that you are on a System X or Y exchange.
-
- It has been said that if you dispute the number of metered units you've
- used, BT will send you a fully itemised bill, which includes all calls
- not just those of 10 units and over.
-
- Fully-itemised billing from BT is being trialled. There is no planned
- charge for the service. You can choose between all calls, 2-, 5- and
- 10-unit itemisation, or no itemisation.
-
- Delivery of itemisation records on floppy disk is being trialled, and has
- been so for some time. The size of the trial is to be increased. A
- single-sheet paper bill is also sent, for legal reasons (including VAT). A
- charge is made for the analysis software, which runs under MS Windows.
-
- Another suggestion to accomplish itemisation of any call on a bill, which
- already includes 10 units and over itemisation, has been proffered: Dial
- 0800 500 005, press 'recall' (**not** redial) and dial the number. Any
- number will apparently work, though recorded information lines (you could
- also try 0800 556677) obviously won't annoy a real person. This will
- only work if you have 3-way calling.
-
-
- Q: How can I get ISDN? {*} [moved]
-
- Some BT exchanges offer ISDN (to find out whether **your** exchange can
- offer it, you need to talk to their sales droids again), and it works
- out rather more expensive by way of line rental than does an ordinary
- line, but call rates (apart from special offers) are the same. At
- least some other carriers also offer ISDN - try asking those that are
- to be found in your area (for example, I believe Cambridge Cable do
- round here). Note that an ISDN connection to Mercury via 131 (even if
- Mercury have ISDN capability) is probably a no-hoper. Mercury now do
- ISDN access via 132. It needs to be signed for seperately from the
- normal Mercury service.
-
-
- Q: What are the costs of ISDN connection and calls? {*} [moved]
-
- For ISDN2 (Basic Rate Access), the connection charge is UKP400 and the
- quarterly rental is UKP84. Call charges are the same as the normal PSTN
- for national calls, but there are differences upon international routes.
-
-
- ----
-
- Subject: Caller ID/ Caller Identification (CLI/CLID)
-
- Q: Is Caller ID available in the UK ?
-
- The UK telecomms authorities are considering introducing caller-id, and a
- detailed discussion paper covering most of the issues, including an
- appendix by the Data Protection Registrar and the results of a survey of
- public attitudes, was published as follows
-
- Consultative document : calling line identification / issued by the
- Director General of Telecommunications. September 1993. 20 pages.
-
- (contact Oftel for this)
-
- from the April 1994 BABT Newsletter
-
- >> CALLER DISPLAY SERVICES ON ANALOGUE PSTN LINES
- >>
- >> The draft SITS [Special Investigation & Test Schedule - ie. Specification]
- >> BABT/TC/128, which has been available for comment, will not be ratified by
- >> the BABT Technical Committee until OFTEL have resolved the position
- >> regarding competition between public network operators (PTOs).
- >>
- >> Two incompatible standards have been proposed by different PTOs.
- >> Terminal equipment may be affected if it has to interwork
- >> with both services. As a temporary measure, field trial approvals are
- >> being granted for terminal equipment intended for use with trial services
- >> established in limited areas. The approvals are valid for equipment
- >> supplied before the end of September 1994 and the quantity of equipment
- >> will be specified in the approval.
-
- {*} BT's Caller Display and Call Return services will be launched nationally
- on 5 November 1994 at which time most customers on modern exchanges will
- be able to make use of the services. Full implementation is due before
- the end of 1994. In the meantime they are available on a limited trial
- basis in the Bristol area.
-
- Other operator's networks are likely to offer similar services in the future
- at which time Caller ID will almost certainly be passed between networks.
-
- Prices for the services will be set nearer the launch day, but are likely to
- be similar to those adopted for the consumer trial in Edinburgh where Caller
- Display cost 1.50 UKP per month (including VAT) and Call Return was free of
- charge (aside from the normal price of the returned call)
-
- To use Caller Display you will need a special telephone or display unit which
- show, and then store, the numbers of incoming callers. Call Return simply
- stores the number of your last incoming caller, and will work with any phone.
-
- Customers will have a range of free options for preventing their identity going
- forward on outgoing calls and blocking incoming anonymous calls. The simplest
- of these will be the '141' service which blocks caller id going forward on a
- per-call basis.
-
- For more information on Caller Display and Call Return call 0800 801471.
-
- [See the archive for some technical information upon BT's CLI or try and
- find British Telecommunications Engineering, Volume 12, part 3- October
- 1993]
-
- Q: What PSTN phones support Caller ID?
-
- BT has some PSTN phones and add-ons ready for its launch of Caller
- Display.
-
- Q: What ISDN phones support Caller ID, decoding and displaying it?
-
- DP2000 From BT - is an ISDN phone with analogue jack and RS-232 38K port
- It does CLI, MSN, stores last 10 CLI so you can return your calls and it
- looks OK. (Caller ID to ISDN costs UKP3.40 per quarter).
-
-
- Q: I've seen a couple of ads in Exchange & Mart for Caller ID devices...
- anyone know if these really work ?
-
- In a word, no (they don't work)
-
- They are EITHER boxes made to the USA standard (which we know we are not
- going to adopt in the UK) or boxes that ask callers to input their number
- in MF tones, and then display what is input.
-
- Don't buy any "Caller-ID" box for use in the UK until OFTEL announces the
- standard that we are all going to use. It may not necessarily be the same
- as the standard currently being promoted by BT in their Scottish trials.
-
- ----
-
- Subject: Call barring
-
- Q: Will BT provide a line with all outgoing calls disabled except to
- Mercury?
-
- As it happens they will, if you subscribe to network services (Call
- Barring). They used to try blocking Mercury 131 as well, when a
- caller used Call Barring, but that nice Mr Oftel had a word with them
- about it...
-
-
- Q: Is it possible to bar reverse charge calls on a line that allows
- incoming calls?
-
- For payphone lines, BT add a (very annoying) tone for the first minute of
- incoming calls, to indicate to the operator that this line is not to
- accept reverse harge calls.
-
- I am not sure of the details, but am fairly certain this is an option you
- can ask for, just tell them you have a private payphone on the line. You
- may have to pay for it, possibly combined with meter pulsing.
-
-
- Q: What are the newly announced plans for barring 0898 Adult Entertainment
- premium-rate numbers?
-
- Phoning one of these numbers will require use of a PIN (personal
- identification number) from your telephone, and they will only provide you
- with such a number if you **ask** for one. This number will only be
- required on the 0898 Premium rate numbers.
-
-
- ----
-
- Subject: Engaged lines
-
- Q: If someone's number is permanently engaged, what can you do?
-
- Phone the operator. They can forward you to the operator local to that
- phone who is able to tell you if the receiver hasn't been replaced
- properly.
-
- There is some debate upon how they do this. Some say that they can
- determine by listening to it (a 'line test'), others that the exchange
- just registers it as being off the hook.
-
-
- Q: What can BT do about a phone off the hook?
-
- They can put a loud tone down the line.
-
- [people say this is sometimes very effective..]
-
- BT can request that you do not leave your telephone off the hook. If you
- continue to leave the phone in this manner then apparently you are
- blocking a line at the exchange.
-
- BT have withdrawn their service from several people who, after being
- warned, have continued to leave their telephones off the hook.
-
- ----
-
- Subject: Automatic announcements
-
- Q: What are the meanings of the various automatic announcements?
-
- [anyone want to offer some to add to this list?]
-
- 'The Number you have dialled is not accepting calls at present.'
-
- - The called party had Incoming Call Barring (*261#) set, costs
- UKP7 per quarter.
-
- 'Please hold the line while we try to connect you. The number you are
- calling, knows you are waiting.'
-
- - Called party has call waiting.
-
- 'Sorry, your call is not being answered, please try later.'
-
- - Call waiting set, but they rejected the waiting call or ignored the
- five-second bleep. Recall (wait for dial tone) 0 turns off the bleep to
- reject the incoming call. Tour caller is told that the call cannot be
- connected. If you reject a waiting call, no more calls will be offered
- until your number is free.
-
- 'Please hold the line, calls to this number are being diverted'
-
- - Called party has call diversion set (you may only get this
- announcement for call diversion on no reply).
-
- 'Sorry, the number you have called is not available'
-
- - Number is temporarily out of service.
-
- 'Sorry, the service requested is not available from this line'
-
- - You haven't rented the Network Service you're trying to use.
-
- 'The number you have dialled has not been recognised, please check and
- try again'
-
- - Number does not exist.
-
- 'Sorry, you have dialled an invalid service code, please replace the
- handset and consult your instructions'
-
- - You misdialled a network service code.
-
-
- Q: What are those 'Doh dah dee' tones?
-
- The "Doh dah dee" is usually known as "Special Information Tone" or SIT.
- Frequency Cadence
- 950+-50Hz 330+-70ms 0 to 30ms between tones
- 1400+-50Hz 330+-70ms
- 1800+-50Hz 330+-70ms
- 1000+-250ms pause
-
-
- ----
-
- Subject: Chargecards
-
- Q: I want to get a BT Chargecard, the problem seemed to be that you need
- to be a current customer (have a phone) to be able to get one. Is this
- so? If it is why is it so?
-
- Sorry, but charges incurred on your Chargecard are put on to your phone
- bill. No phone -> no bill -> no chargecard. This should be catered for,
- in my opinion, but isn't.
-
-
- Q: Why can't I direct dial with my BT chargecard on Cellnet ?
-
- Apparently BT have not yet put the infrastructure in for direct-dial from
- any Cellnet phone, though operator calls are possible. Funny thing is,
- you can't make even operator calls from Vodaphone phones, even though you
- can supposedly make them from any country in the world with a BT
- Chargecard.
-
-
- Q: What itemisation do I get with a BT Chargecard?
-
- On your bill, you are told what number you called and how much it cost,
- but not where it was made from.
-
-
- Q: What service do you get with the Mercury Calling Card?
-
- 3 levels of service.
- - Premier = world wide
- - UK = uk only
- - 3 call = 3 nominated numbers only.
-
- Access is via any phone line on a 0500 number (phone on 0500 100 505 for
- more info). There is a surcharge for operator connected calls, but if you
- had to do this because the BT phone wasn't capable of DTMF, there is no
- surcharge.
-
- If you have a Mercury account you can have the Calling Card bill
- integrated with that. If you don't, or you choose not to, you can still
- have a card and be sent a seperate bill. The bill includes full itemisation
- of both called and calling number. The Mercury card is cheaper than BT's
- for UK calls.
-
-
- Q: What service do you get with BT's Chargecard
-
- - Quickcall - only one number can be dialled using the card.
- - All numbers in the UK.
- - All numbers worldwide.
-
-
-
- ----
-
- Subject: Other Telephone services
-
- Q: What is AT&T Direct ?
-
- AT&T Direct is a way to contact the AT&T operator in the USA without having
- to ring any operator in the UK (or whichever country you happen to be in).
-
- You can contact AT&T in the UK, on 071 355 6000 or via AT&T direct itself on
- 0800 890011. You would need an account with AT&T to use it to call the USA.
- It **may** be cheaper than dialling via BT but don't bank on this. Other phone
- companies in the US, such as Sprint on 0800 890 222, offer similar services.
-
- They have also announced an arrangement with Mercury for 0500 89 0011.
- calls to the US placed through this number should cost ~slightly less~.
-
- [Someone else proffered this information - Ed.]
-
- When I last compared rates between AT&T, SPRINT, MCI, BT & Mercury (I have
- accounts with all five...don't ask why). Mercury seemed to be about the
- cheapest, but had the poorest quality connections. The real killer with
- all US carriers is the 1st minute charges. I think it costs over $3 for
- the first minute. It's not too bad averaged out over a long call, but if
- you get an answering machine on the other end you are stuffed. With
- Mercury if I get an answering machine it costs 10-20p for the call.
-
- I know MCI has a scheme that will allow UK residents to have MCI cards, I
- don't know about SPRINT and AT&T.
-
- Here are the UK numbers for
-
- MCI: 0800 89 0222
- SPRINT: 0800 89 0877
-
-
- Q: What is Flextel?
-
- Flextel - which uses part of the 0956 (Mercury One2One) number range - is
- a personal numbering service. It is NOT a Mercury product. Flextel like
- to call it a **flexible** numbering service.
-
- Basically you buy a Flextel number and just tell Flextel where you want
- calls that number to be connected. They then connect them. If you want
- the destination changed, you simply tell Flextel what you want it changed
- to. In a little while you also will be able to update the destination by
- DTMF input.
-
- Standard service subscribers have nothing to pay apart from the annual
- charge. There is no monthly bill, no hiddden cost. The caller pays for
- the whole of the call. For calls from BT a small translation fee is
- charged to the caller. This fee is significantly less than 1 penny per
- minute over normal trunk cheap rate. Peak rate rises to just over 2p/min.
- For call from some other operators. there is now an additional fee. The
- small fee is sufficient to onward route calls to all normal UK numbers.
- (Connection charge UKP141, Annual service charge UKP28.20 both incl. of
- VAT)
-
-
- Q: What ways are there of calling the US cheaper than BT or Mercury?
-
- Swiftcall (071 488 2001) have service to North America, a few Asian
- countries, Australia, and Israel. You subscribe by calling them and
- quoting your VISA or Access details. They debit your credit card by
- UKP23.50 (UKP20 + VAT) and set up an account with that value. Call
- charges, at the moment [16 Mar 94], are as follows
-
- UK-USA/Canada Normal Rate (Mon 09.00 - Fri 21.00) 24p/min
- UK-USA/Canada Cheap Rate (Fri 21.00 - Mon 09.00) 20p/min
-
- (remember to add on the cost of the 071 call to their UK switch & VAT)
-
- Once your account is set up you dial an access number, enter your 9-digit
- PIN and then you're given American Dial Tone (provided by Sprint - 'phone
- 1 700 555 4141 on the US dialtone to hear). There are no minimum usage
- surcharges. When you have used your paid for units you can 'phone them up
- and purchase more. You can write them a letter giving specific
- authorisation if you are concerned.
-
- [Comparison at October, 1993: Sources - Swiftcall/ jharuni@micrognosis.co.uk.
- BT column includes Option 15; BT Prices at 15 May 1994]
-
- Destination Swiftcall BT BT PremierLine Mercury
- band
- Australia 67p 58.2p 6 49.4p 61.9p
- Canada/USA 34p 46.6p 4 39.6p 38.4p
- Hong Kong 65p 81.1p 8 69.0p 77.4p
- India 100p 141.0p 12 119.8p 101.7p
- Israel 100p 108.1p 9 91.9p 96.5p
- Japan 100p 126.5p 11 107.6p 98.6p
-
- To call Use
- Australia BT or Mercury
- Canada/USA Swiftcall
- Hong Kong Swiftcall
- India Swiftcall or Mercury
- Israel Mercury or BT
- Japan Mercury or Swiftcall
-
- [BT reduced prices to Australia from Feburary 94]
-
- Telepassport by Mastercall (0933 401552) offer up to 70% discounts on US
- calls. For a fixed one-off fee of UKP25, the user gets a New York
- phone number which, after dialling and hanging up, calls back the UK
- number with a US dialling tone. The UK user can then make calls or faxes
- anywhere in the US at 50 cents perminute any time of the day.
-
- Telepassport is run by the editor of the Telecom Digest, Pat Townson
- (<ptownson@eecs.nwu.edu>). For further information, send the following email
- message
-
- To: tel-archives@lcs.mit.edu
- Subject: (will be ignored)
-
- reply ~user@email.address~
- info telepassport
- help
- end
-
- Business Communications Management (BCM) offer a service which gives you a
- US dialtone. Rates from the UK to the US or US to UK are $0.29/minute, 24
- hours a day, seven days a week, based on a 30-second minumum, six-second
- increment billing, $25/month minimum usage and a $50 sign-up fee.
-
- This is charged to your credit card (Master card/ Visa/ AmEx/
- Diners). Email <vthiry@netcom.com> for an ascii version of their brochure
- and price list.
-
- Dial International Telecom Limited (081 490 5000) offer a service similar
- to Swiftcall, you use your credit card to charge an account, and then can
- talk until the credit runs out.
-
- Uk -> US rates:
- Daytime rate: 20p/min
- cheap rate: 17p/min
- (where cheap/daytime are as BT define them)
-
- No connection/sign up fee, minimum pre-payment UKP25 at set up, paybale by
- cheque, credit card or travellers cheques. London PoP.
-
- They also run a callback system, when you dial an 081 number from abroad,
- and the company call you back and give you a UK dial tone.... (charged at
- the same rates as if you direct dialled from the UK to the country). Number
- they callback is preprogrammed, but user changeable.
-
- Special offer at the moment. For calling the states, if you set up with a
- pre-payment of UKP100 you get the first 1/2 Hr free...
-
-
-
- ----
-
- Subject: Facsimile/ FAX machines
-
- Q: Where can I get a FAX switch from?
-
- HCS Global.... They have London and Scottish outlets. They make an
- excellent product that can do voice, Modem & Fax... cost is about
- UKP120-150. Cheap models can be obtained for a good deal less. RJB
- Communications (0932 253 131) has been reported as a cheaper source for
- these Faxlink devices.
-
-
- The Lineshare 5000 switch from Lineplex (0483 211 632), its UKP195 +VAT
- but very versatile. There are four outputs Phone, TAM, FAX & modem. All
- the timings can be set, and also can be set to be different depending on
- whether the switch is set to "IN" or "OUT". It can also recognise that you
- are "OUT" and changeover to that mode - ditto it can recognise that you
- are "IN". You can set time windows for IN and OUT, and any of the four
- outputs can be selected by the caller (old models support just pulse
- dialling, newer ones two DTMF digits).
-
-
- Q: What is the legal status of messages transmitted via Facsimile?
-
- In the last few years, a law was passed making documents sent by Fax as
- legally valid as the original (but I'd still check with your lawyer).
-
- ----
-
- Subject: Radio Pagers
-
- Q: What are recommended pager companies in the UK?
-
- For many people choice is limited by coverage.
-
- Richard Cox (<richard@mandarin.com>) writes
-
- >>From my experience (including an independent user trial of the five main
- >>paging companies, in which I participated), I would **definitely** say that
- >>Hutchison provide the best service.
-
- >>Bottom of the list, by a wide margin, was Mercury ... and second to bottom
- >>was Vodapage. I used to use Vodapage - but not now I have tried
- >>Hutchison!
-
- ----
-
- Subject: Cellular Mobile phones
-
- Q: I was recently offered a "free" Cellphone with a product I
- bought. While I accept that it may be a condition of accepting the "free"
- phone that you also subscribe to their airtime, is it actually ~illegal~
- not to purchase an agreement with the phone?
-
- When you buy a phone from Dixons, say, rather than from a dealer (who gets
- a golden hello of 100 quid + from the air time provider) you don't have to
- sign up with anyone. All you get is a info pack for Call Connections
- (with Cellnet). The phone in this case is pre-registered with Cellnet,
- but that shouldn't prevent you from signing up with Vodafone.
-
- However, in your case, the supplier of your "free" phone is expecting a
- nice big kick-back when you sign up, and is unlikely to give you the phone
- without an airtime agreement. Usually this type of disreputable dealer
- will rip you off for rental and call charges, to recover the subsidy of
- the "free" phone. When the dealer says its illegal, what he really means
- is that its unprofitable for him!
-
- Also, beware of gotchas such as the following
- - peak time 0700-2300 including Saturdays (ie. all calls are at peak rate)
- - 90 days minimum notice after 12 months min contract = 15 months min contract
- - itemised billing 3-4 quid/month
- - call charges > Cellnet/vodafone reccommended prices
- - compulsory (and very expensive) insurance & maintenance contracts
-
-
- Q: Will calls from PSTN lines to mobile phones, in other countries, work?
- What premium will I pay above the normal charges?
-
- Yes it will work. It costs the same as phoning a normal number in that
- country. One daft thing about the current charges is that it can cost less
- to phone a Eircell mobile phone in the Irish Republic from the UK than it
- costs to phone the car parked outside your window (if you would want to!).
-
-
- Q: Will inbound access to UK mobiles work?
-
- You can call any UK mobile phone from overseas.
-
-
- Q: Where can I get details of Cellnet, Vodaphone, and One2One coverage?
-
- One of the two mobile phone magazines available ("What Cellular Phone"?)
- has coverage maps for Vodafone TACS, Vodafone GSM, Cellnet TACS and
- One2One in the back pages. You can also get Carphone Warehouse's (0800 424
- 800) colour catalogue, which includes the maps.
-
-
- Q: Why do analogue cellphones have a 'soft' serial number, enabling alteration?
-
- It is a problem with the cellphone manufacturers, NOT the TACS/ETACS
- specification which states that the ESN should be hard coded within the
- phone. However this causes huge problems when the phone goes for
- servicing or gets broken etc. so many put the ESN in EPROM, EEROM, PROM
- etc. therefore cloning becomes very easy.
-
- With GSM or PCN (which is based upon the GSM spec, but at a higher
- frequency) the ESN's are stored in a different way. You also have two
- 'ESN' per phone, one for the phone itself and one for the SmartCard with
- the user details. Both have to be validated.
-
- Interestingly, authentication of a mobile subscriber for use in a TACS
- network is available. The method that is defined in Issue 4 of the
- TACS specification has been implemented my all the major vendors of
- mobile equipment.
-
- The network side of the implementation is already in place in the UK,
- Italy, China and the UAE. The system is cheap to introduce into the
- mobile phone and is also very secure. But operators like Vodaphone
- and Cellnet have not promoted the use of TACS authentication.
-
-
- Q: What do Cellnet Callback and Vodaphone Messenger offer?
- Who do I ring for help?
-
- Both offer storage of messages whilst your phone is switched off or
- unavailable (eg the network is busy or you don't have a signal), in fact
- the voicemail software is written by the same company.
-
- For Messenger help, ring the Messenger help line on 0836 823823. They will
- set up an account with a PIN so that only you can access your
- messages. They'll also tell you how to set up the divert etc.
-
- To activate the Messenger's recall box, dial 121 and ask the operator to
- activate the facility. However, if you do not use the recall service for
- more than 30 days, then you will have to re-call 121 and ask them to
- switch it back on again.
-
-
- Q: What prompts the Cellnet callback or Vodaphone Messenger systems to
- call back?
-
- 1. The network was busy when there was an incoming call, but it now has
- spare capacity, or the switch/ cell site you were using had no capacity to
- pass the call.
-
- 2. You were in a no service area, but now you are available again.
-
- Each cellphone is required to register itself when it is turned on, or has
- moved into an area of coverage from no coverage. They also reregister
- every now and again just to ensure the network hasn't forgotten about
- them.
-
- When an outgoing call is made - this performs a registration.
-
- The network can also 'page' the phone, both for incoming calls and to send
- you callback messages. The paging can also occur to get the phone to
- reregister.
-
- Both networks have the facilities to try and help you with regards to
- coverage in your area, etc. Ring the operators from the cellphone.
-
-
- Q: Who are the 'People's phone'?
-
- People's Phone is a service of Cellular Communications Corp., a Vodafone
- and Cellnet service provider.
-
- People's Phone claim to offer a "better" deal for cellular phone users.
- They have a generally reasonable air-time contract, with various
- guarantees as to no increases etc., and attempt to be down-to-earth and
- trustworthy. Their marketing is targetted at (1) people who don't
- understand the wide variety of services and contracts in the cellular
- industry and (2) people who've had their fingers burned with other
- companies.
-
- Of particular note is their "Quota" system. You agree (in advance) a limit
- to your call charges each month. When you reach that limit, the network
- inhibits further outgoing calls until the beginning of the next billing
- period. Incoming calls still work. You can change this Quota at any time.
-
- Some other features of their system
- - No charge for unconnected calls
- - No charge for a call answered by a Vodafone recorded message; however, if
- your call is to a number on a different network (e.g. Cellnet or BT) then
- it will be chargeable.
- - No charge for any call lasting less than four seconds
- - In the event of a dropped call, if you dial 100 immediately afterwards the
- operator will reconnect the call with the first minute of the reconnected
- call free of charge.
-
-
- Q: How can I check the status of a Mercury One2One phone's divert and
- call waiting?
-
- F1 -> menu -> determine divert status (M200)
-
- (all M300/301/400. Should also work on M200)
- *#21# to check number for "All Calls Divert"
- *#67# to check number for "On Busy Divert"
- *#61# to check number for "On No Reply Divert"
- *#62# to check number for "Divert if unreachable (off or out of range)
-
- *#43# to check call waiting status. (M400)
-
- To set divert:
- ** 21*number#
- ** 67 On Busy Divert
- ** 61 On No Reply Divert
- (etc)
-
-
- Q: What facilities are present in GSM and PCN handsets (like Orange and
- One2One) to counter 'phone thieves?
-
- The new breed of GSM/PCN mobile phones use a Smartcard or SIM This makes it
- possible to use any valid car in your phone. It also means that the phone
- number will change depending on the card. Both the mobile and SIM are
- validated before a call is set up. Therefore if the mobile is reported
- stolen it won't work even with a valid card.
-
-
- Q: What are the functions possible with Hutchison's Voice messaging
- service?
-
- After you've keyed in your PIN etc.
-
- Message retrieval:
-
- 2 delete last msg
- 3 play messages most recent first
- 4 play messages oldest first
- 5 replay last msg heard
- 6 play all msgs
- 7 play time and date information
- 9 forward msg (enter mailbox number followed by #)
-
- Extended forwarding:
-
- 13 to enter extended forwarding
- 2 confirm msg to be forwarded
- 7 to prepend a comment
- 9 to append a comment
- 5 to listen to complete message with comments
- 6 followed by # to actually send the message
- 10 to return to normal message retrieval mode.
-
-
-
- ----
-
- Subject: Phone Call charges
-
- Q: Why are some numbers charged for when they don't exist?
-
- Seeing as how charging starts upon b-answer it's unlikely, unless they
- consider the through-connection of the voice message telling you that the
- number is non-existant as the b-answer. If so, I agree that this is wrong.
-
- CCITT E.231 recommends that no charge should be made for calls which
- terminate on services for suspended, cancelled or transferred subscribers.
- However, there is also E.124, which is entitled "Discouragement of
- frivolous international calling to unassigned or vacant numbers answered
- by recorded announcements without charge". This recommends that the
- provisions of E.231 may be suspended if it is determined that calls to
- specific out of service numbers are "predominantly frivolous."
-
- This situation often occurs with the Cellular networks. As things stand
- right now, only calls that are answered get charged. Calls that get engaged
- or ring tones ~ONLY~ are not charged.
-
- Exception: calls that route to a mobile network (or to a direct-dialling-in
- PABX) and THEN divert to an external number, are charged from the moment the
- diversion takes place, even if the diverted leg of the call fails to connect
- (for whatever reason).
-
- But, in the context, answered can mean "answered by the mobile network on
- behalf of the called party". Of course we all know that phrase is a con,
- but BT insisted on the Cellular networks agreeing to do this, before they
- would allow them to interconnect with the BT network. Mercury followed suit!
-
- A cellular network answers calls on behalf of the called party (and plays
- that annoying announcement) when either: (a) it can't get a response from
- the called telephone (even if this is solely due to congestion in its own
- network) or (b) the telephone is rung for 45 seconds without a reply.
-
-
- Q: What are the costs of running 0345 and 0800 number services?
-
- (pence per minute approx. These are the costs to the holder of the line.)
- Peak Standard Off-Peak
- 0345 13 10 7
- (+cost to caller 4.4 3.2 1)
- 0800 16 12 9
-
- Try also contacting British Airways Speedwing who are reselling their bulk
- purchased time for these services on to other potential users. They are
- offering between 17-20% discounts depending on usage. The sevice is
- called SpeedLine and sounds curious only in so much as the only thing you
- seem to get from SpeedLine is an order/service. BT do everything else
- including billing you.
-
- Call Speedwing on 081 564 1000; Peter Jones is on 081-564 1489.
-
- [info given by Alan Jay - alanj@ibmpcug.co.uk, 14 feb 94]
-
-
- Q: What are the current phone-call costs?
-
- [The following are a guide only.. if you know that something has changed,
- please let me know. --james]
-
- PSTN- {*}
-
- BT annouced their new Weekend Rate for calls to band a, b1 and b
- destinations in December 1993, 90 seconds per unit (4.935p incl VAT) or
- 76 seconds per 10 pence on a payphone. In April 1994 BT abolished the
- morning peak rate, although not for Payphone or Chargecard calls.
-
- For a summary of BT's call charges, see <dom@hype.demon.co.uk>'s regular
- posts.
-
- Mercury have maintained their price differential against BT's Basic
- Rates. For example the Mercury Weekend Rate is 2.94 pence per minute
- (including VAT).
-
- BT's 'Option 15' offers 10% from all direct dialled called and BT
- chargecard calls.
-
- BT 'Friends & Family' offers a discount of 5% on up to 5 numbers (one
- may be overseas) for a UKP4.99 (including VAT) one off fee. This applies
- on top of Option 15 (UKP3.40/quarter + VAT for 10% off all calls) but
- removes the qualification for 5% volume discounts. Families and Friends
- is not available on all exchanges- ring 150. Mercury offer 'YourCall'
- which is basically the same.
-
- BT 'PremierLine' gives 10% off **all** direct dial calls (15% for **all
- but** d, m and p1 calls). This for a UKP19.99 (ex VAT) enrollment fee
- for three years. It will also give you and 500 ~TalkingPoints~ on
- enrollment, plus 1 point for every UKP1 billed before VAT. Points will
- be convertible into gifts from a catalogue, or may be exchanged for air
- miles. Friends and Family discounts are cumulative.
-
- Mercury have maintained their price differential on BT's offers. with
- a weekend rate of 2.5p/min (ex VAT). This undercuts the new BT
- rate. They also have a frequent caller scheme ('Your Call') which
- gives discounts on 5 customer nominated numbers.
-
- Payphones-
-
- Charge for 3 minute call inc. VAT:
- [posted 17 may 94, by ww@wiseword.demon.co.uk]
-
- Cheap Standard
- BT Mercury BT Mercury
- Local 0.20 0.24 0.30 0.63
- a 0.30 0.24 0.60 0.63
- b1 0.40 0.24 0.70 0.63
- b 0.50 0.24 0.80 0.63
- Mobile 1.50 ? 2.30 ?
- Eire 1.70 1.55 2.30 2.12
- W. Europe 2.10 1.94 2.70 2.43
-
-
- Cellular-
-
- Call Connections 0800 238238 (Cellnet) have been offering free weekend
- calls for the first year (not limited to local ones) of a 30 month
- contract, and the following deals. They offer a choice of five phone models
- (which they insist upon selling you). The prices include VAT.
-
- Carphone Warehouse 0800 424800 currently [May 1994] have some special free
- connection offers on Cellnet tariffs.
-
- [updated prices taken from Dixons catalogue May 1994. All very approximate
- as different air time companies have different deals.]
-
- Lifetime for Leisure (for the rest of us, Certain phones only)
- Connection UKP29.50. UKP13.99 per month - 50p peak / 20p off peak
- Off peak hours Mon-Fri 7pm-8am & all day weekends.
-
- Lifetime for Peace of Mind - geared at VERY low user (i.e. someone who
- want a phone in case they break down).
- Connection UKP29.50. UKP 9.99 per month - ALL calls at 80p per minute
-
- Primetime for Business (business/ heavy user of mobile)
- Connection - ~Special Offer - FREE~
- UKP29.50 per month - 29p peak / 12p off peak
- Off peak hours Mon-Sat 10pm-8am & all day Sunday.
-
- Lifetime for Small Business (makes a few calls a day)
- Connection UKP29.50. UKP17.99 per month - ALL calls 34p per minute.
- Off peak hours Mon-Fri 7pm-8am and all day weekends.
-
- People's phone: [at 18 Mar 94]
-
- - The Emergency Tariff: monthly rental UKP9.99 inc. VAT + first 3 phone calls
- free every month.
- - Low-User Tariff: UKP12.77 monthly rental (works out to UKP15 inc. VAT)
-
-
- One2One prices-
- (all ex-vat) [from a post, 17 jan 94, umeca86@Imperial.ac.uk (Graham M Stuart)
- with changes for new business tariff]
-
- business personal
- connection 20 20
- monthly charge 17.50 12.50
- call charges (per min, min 1 min, 30 sec intervals thereafter)
- peak 14p 25p
- off-peak national 8p 10p
- (saturday is now off-peak for business)
- off-peak local 8p FREE
- one2one->one2one 8p 25/10p i.e.normal charge
- one2one voice mail
- retrieve 16/8p 25/10p
-
- Extra Business options
- Local option For an additional 10.00 per month, Free Off-peak local calls
- are available (9pm-7am Mon-Fri and all other times)
-
- International For an additional UKP2.99 per month, international calls are
- option charged 10% lower than BT's prices (per minute)
-
- Special numbers
- off-peak peak
- Speaking clock norm norm
- Dir. Enq.(UK) 45p 45p
- Dir. Enq. (INT) 55p 55p
- Blind/disabled dir enq free free
- premium rate no.s 30p 50p
- Cellnet/vodafone 25p 30p
- 0645/0345 2p 5p
- Freephone (0800/0500) Free Free
- UK pagers norm norm
- International 42-125p 46-126p
-
- Special Services
- Call waiting/hold Free
- Call divert Free
- Voice Mail Free (you still pay normal charge when playing
- back your voice mail)
- voice mail/Plus 5/month
- Itemised billing Free
- Call limit 2/month (don't know if this actually works!)
- change pricing option Free (first 2, then UKP4 per change)
- change phone no. Free
- Replace lost smartcard 1st one free, then UKP15 per card
- Extra smartcard 20
- Reconnection 15
- Bill reprint 1st one free, then UKP3 per copy
- Golden no. 100 reservation fee
- Defect to Hutchison 150 (within 6 months of signing up)
- 50 (after 6 months)
-
- Hutchison Orange-
- (all ex-vat) [From Orange Personal Communications brochure, April 1994]
-
- One off connection charge - UKP 30.00
-
- plan name monthly airtime call charges to orange
- change (mins) peak off-peak (per minute)
- talk 15 15.00 15 25p 12.5p 12.5p
- talk 60 25.00 60 20p 10p 10p
- talk 200 50.00 200 18p 9p 9p
- talk 360 75.00 360 16p 8p 8p
- talk 540 100.00 540 14p 7p 7p
-
- includes:
- Orange answer phone (7.5p/minute to set message and retrieve them)
- Call Divert
- Call Waiting/ Hold *
- International Call Barring
- Premium Rate Call Barring
- Itemised Billing *
- 3 year warranty and 2 hour replacement service
- First 12 months insurance (against loss, theft and accidental damage)
- Phone Book service - up to 50 numbers loaded onto your SIM card over the
- air *
- Caller id - Orange to Orange calls only *
-
- * - optional services (at no charge)
-
- All calls charged to the nearest second, Calls of 3 seconds or less will
- not be charged. Peak times are from 7am to 7pm Monday to Friday.
- Off-peak at all other times, including bank holidays.
-
- Bronze numbers- UKP50; Silver- UKP200; Gold- UKP300.
-
- BT to Personal Communication Network phones (PCN) charges (band d)
- (Mercury are marginally cheaper) [per minute, inc VAT, at May 94]
- Peak 17.9p
- Standard 13.1p
- Offpeak 8.4p
-
-
- Chargecards-
-
- For a five minute call including VAT here are the comparative rates
- (prices in UKP)
- Cheap Standard Peak W/end
- BT Merc BT Merc BT BT Merc
-
- Local Call 0.30 0.23 0.40 0.53 0.60 0.30 0.22
- National Call (up to
- 35 miles) 0.40 0.23 1.00 0.53 1.30 0.40 0.22
- National Call (over
- low cost route) 0.70 0.33 1.10 0.60 1.40 0.40 0.22
- National Call (others) 0.90 0.33 1.30 0.74 1.80 0.40 0.22
-
- Mercury have abolished peak rate on their calling card, it is now part of
- standard rate. They have also informed us officially that there is no
- operator surcharge for calling card calls from BT payphones.
-
- International rates for Mercury Calling Card
- Standard Cheap
-
- Rep. of Ireland 41.0 30.0
- Group 1 47.0 38.0
- Group 2 62.0 51.0
- Group 3 77.0 66.0
- Group 4 56.0 45.0
- Group 5 85.0 73.0
- Group 6 110.0 90.0
- Group 7 110.0 90.0
- Group 8 116.0 95.0
- Group 9 146.0 126.0
- Group 10 149.0 127.0
- Group 11 154.0 149.0
- Group 12 154.0 150.0
- Group 13 154.0 151.0
-
- [These rates only apply to calls made from the UK. Correct to 31 July 1994]
-
-
- ISDN-
-
- BT Connection: UKP400 for two 64k bearer channels and the 16k delta channel
- Quarterly rental: UKP84
- Connection charges: Inland -> same as voice
- International -> premium price dependant on destination
- (because ISDN requires a full 56/64k channel and not a compressed
- satellite channel)
-
- (This makes the installation price per ~channel~ down to the same as
- Analogue, though rental is still high).
-
-
- Q: What is an 'average' 'phone bill for the US, as a comparison?
-
- [from julian@bongo.tele.com]
-
- The average bill with "Unlimited local calling" in Pacific Bell territory
- is $13-14 per month. Of course Long Distance increases that. I have some
- lines that are used for local calls only - two modem lines - They are busy
- about 16 hours per day each. I pay $13 and change per month for each line
-
- The average U.S. residential line is used 20 minutes per day.
-
-
- Q: So how do the Americans price their 'phone calls then?
- (and other myths)
-
- [from julian@bongo.tele.com]
-
- >> Also note that 'local' in the US often means 'own exchange', whereas for
- >> BT is is charging-group related, which usually means all the exchanges in
- >> your local area.
-
- In the U.S., most phone companies have several "tarrifs" or rates. For
- example in Pacific Bell Southern California. You can get "measured
- service" which means local calls are charged at $0.10 per min. Or
- variations of the above, say so many free local calls, and any above that
- number are measured.
-
- You can also get "unlimited local calling". For a fixed fee, you get all
- the local calls you want. The "local calling area" is usually a 8 -16 mile
- radius. Unlimited local calls for residential use costs me about $14.00
- per month. Long distance calls are extra.
-
- So unless "own exchange" is a rural one with dispersed subscribers local
- calling areas encompass up to hundreds of exchanges as is the case in the
- Los Angeles area.
-
- [For comparison,
- $14.00 is about UKP9, or about UKP27 per quarter, against BT's quarterly
- rental of UKP20 (or very close, at 22/12/1993, + VAT).]
-
-
- Q: What happens with the cost of calls which last over two or more charge
- bands?
-
- In a GPO Strowger exchange this situation was handled by splitting a unit
- into 10 part-units. At changeover, therefore, you'd be over/undercharged
- by no more than 10%.
-
- It is believed that this is emulated by digital exchanges. Some old
- crossbar exchanges would charge the call at the original rate.
-
- ----
-
- Subject: Other Telecoms info
-
- Q: Where can I get an old style BT phone box from ?
-
- A couple of people suggested looking in small ad's in Sunday newspapers,
- Private Eye or Exchange and Mart. One or two people suggested contacting
- BT directly, but nobody claimed to have tries this or gave any suggestions
- as to which bit of BT to try. Mark Whidby (M.Whidby@mcc.ac.uk) remembers
- seeing a company with a yard full of 'phone boxes near Staleybridge.
-
- I looked for the adverts and found a couple in Exchange and Mart.
-
- One company in Essex (0277 899 495, Michael Smith) does them in off-street
- condition for UKP350+delivery+VAT or reconditioned at around
- UKP975+delivery+VAT.
-
- Another company (061 767 9259) does them for UKP375+delivery (off-street)
- or UKP1250+delivery reconditioned. They said that there was no VAT
- (presumably they're a smaller company who aren't VAT registered?).
-
- They told me that customers usually found it cheaper to buy them
- reconditioned than to resort to DIY. Reconditioning includes stripping,
- filling and repainting the cast iron frame, replacing glass (including the
- `Telephone' signs), guilding the crowns and refurbishing the doors
- Customers who did their own refurbishment usually did it for pleasure or
- sentimental value rather than to save money.
-
- Delivery would cost UKP125 (from their Birmingham depot to me in Essex),
- or I could collect if I happened to have a lorry and a fork-lift.
-
- Suggestions for uses were showers, drinks cabinets, fish tanks, to grow
- plants in, to house a telephone, ...
-
-
- Q: So tell me some more about these old phone boxes
-
- The original K2 boxes (the ones with 6x3 almost-square panes in three of
- the foor walls) had teak doors. There aren't many of these left. What
- most people think of as a "red telephone box" is the K6 (with 8x3 very
- unsquare panes in three of the foor walls); they have metal doors, as do
- the later K8s.
-
- Some K2s and K6s are old enough to qualify for Listed Building status.
- There are 216 listed K2s (213 of these in London!), and 996 listed K6s.
-
- [Source: the excellent book "Telphone boxes" by Gavin Stamp,
- Chatto & Windus, 1989.]
-
-
-
- [end of uk.telecom FAQ part 2/3]
-
-