catj wrote on Nov 30
th, 2010 at 9:18pm:
The country isn't really "running out" of numbers. What's happened is that Ofcom's crazy system of allocating numbers "by provider" has wasted vast amounts of number stock and it is now catching up with them.
That's what I thought. It's not really rocket science and all of this was therefore predictable.
The whole sordid affair has come about as a result of the obsession that telecommunications must be privatised with competing providers at all costs. Had telecommunications not been opened up to multiple providers, this would not have happened.
What should have happened is that a suitable solution to the problem be drawn up prior to opening up of the industry.
These days, remediation is only carried out as a consequence of negative outcomes as a result of the bad design. With the railways, it took loss of life for systems to be changed.
catj wrote on Nov 30
th, 2010 at 9:34pm:
Quote:0208, 02476
Slapped wrists for that!
It's (020) 8 and (024) 76.
Either you have taken my comment out of context, or you have forgotten that 0845 has no longer been a STD code for over 15 years. Any slapped wrists are for the many people who write numbers incorrectly, and that includes putting 0845 in brackets.
At the end of the day, there is no need to have national dialling only in any area because (to the best of my knowledge) there are plenty of numbers that are not allocated to subscribers within all STD codes.
If this ridiculous way of handing out numbers is to be the way, then why don't we increase number length to say 20 digits and have done with it? That way there will be loads and loads of numbers for communications providers to sit on.
National dialling only within particular STD code(s) is just a total bodge. How are we supposed to know which areas where the code must always be dialled? There is no logic!