On Thursday, 14 April, 2016 16:32, "Leo Bicknell" <bickn...@ufp.org> said:

> So maybe 10% of all cell phones are primarly used in the "wrong" area?

Out of curiosity, does anyone have a good pointer to the history of how / why 
US mobile ended up in the same numbering plan as fixed-line?

Over here in the UK we had a very different approach where mobile phones went 
into their own area codes from the start, hence no confusion as to what type of 
device you were calling, and it was trivial to put the increased cost of the 
call on the caller.  (It's *incredibly* rare, if not non-existent, here for the 
mobile user to pay for incoming calls or SMS).

Of course, we got our own set of problems once number portability kicked in - a 
lot of operators had set up "free / cheap on the same network" tarrifs, which 
was easy while you knew for sure that 07aaa nnnnnn was Orange but 07bbb nnnnnn 
was O2.  Once you could take your number with you to another network, it became 
a lot more guesss-work as to how much you were going to be billed for any given 
call...

Regards,
Tim.


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