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| Junior Member Newbie Posts: 6 Join Date: 12 Feb 2007 Location: Gdańsk
Country: | Polish mobile telecomunication has begun in 1992 with analog Centertel. Its prefix used to be 090 until "unification" of Polish telephone numbersto 9 digits. Today the prefix is 690. It is almost impossible to meet with the number beggining with 690. GSM net came to Poland in 1996 with operators Plus GSM and Era. The first one got prefix 601, the second one 602. In 1998 Centertel started its GSM brand called Idea with prefix 501. These prefixes are believed to be the most prestigeous and usually assosiated with buisness users. They're pretty rare, yet still avalible on market - I have got brand new 601 prefix number on September last year for in my job. And actually "mir doch scheiẞegal" what number I got I care of how much I pay ![]() btw... Quote:
![]() former SIMs: Simlus, POP, Tak-Tak, Heyah, GaduAIR CH: Orange DE: E-Plus, Ortel DK: Lebara, Sonofon SE: Telenor For work, I supply transport companies with trucks ![]() | |
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| Senior Member Prepaid Expert Posts: 418 Join Date: 21 Apr 2009
Country: | This idea of 'prestigious' prefixes or area codes is kind of laughable to me. Rare I can understand. There are people on eBay trying to sell people SIM cards with prestigious area codes in the US. His sales pitch is to make people especially desirous of these special area codes in order to get absurdly high prices. Anyone here who can activate a AT&T or T-Mobile SIM card; or H20 [and its ilk] for that matter could probably get one most of the time. Some area codes are not available or hard to get, but to pay a premium for one is beyond my comprehension. However, I have had some luck choosing Tru numbers that at least had a pattern or repetition of numbers to make easier remembering. Quote:
Area code 323 Area codes 310 and 424 These Wikipedia pages on area codes are actually well done and quite useful. | |
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| Senior Member Prepaid Pioneer Posts: 509 Join Date: 15 Jun 2006 Location: Berlin
Country: | Yes, it's a little different in North America, where there are no specific mobile prefixes, so the area codes with the most cachet are the same as they've ever been, particularly 212 - though the advent of mobile telephony has meant that anyone (like, say, me) can have a Manhattan phone number without having to live there. The fact that mobile phones cost the same to call as other numbers in North America also makes a "local" number desirable, and for Canada, a Toronto number is a local call to a large share of the country's population, making 416 - as PhotoJim said - the one to get. However, elsewhere, the original GSM mobile prefixes were often a) the most recognizable because they were the first; b) relatively quickly exhausted due to failure to anticipate demand; and c) sometimes "prestigious" for these reasons. (And these are the ones that are sold for a premium on eBay.) However, there were some other situations, such as the UK, where all the prefixes were changed after GSM was well established. Can anyone explain that one? Former DE: Vodafone, T-Mobile, O2, Blauworld, 01051mobile, Solomo, Lycamobile, Simyo, Congstar, Fonic; PL: Era, Sami Swoi, Orange, POP, iPlus, Heyah, Carrefour Mova, Telepin Mobi, Play; UK: Vodafone, T-Mobile, Virgin; US: T-Mobile, AT&T CZ: Vodafone, Oskar; ES: Lebara; GR: Vodafone, Wind; TR: Turkcell |
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