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| Senior Member Prepaid Specialist Posts: 867 Join Date: 15 Oct 2004
Country: | Andy... I'm really not sure how one can distinguish between US landlines and US mobiles....they have exactly the same range of numbers and the FCC does not allow discrimination for one service over another. Let me give you an example....area code 917 was introduced in NY and originally it was to be just for mobiles and pagers to relieve some of the pressure on 212 and 718....the FCC ruled this practice was illegal and now there are many landlines in the NYC area with area code 917...all the distinctions seem to be blurring....you can have a 347 area code number for your landline or for your mobile or for your voip number (the only thing difficult to get for any of these in the NYC area are 212 numbers!)....or am I missing something? |
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| Moderator Prepaid President Posts: 1,951 Join Date: 10 Dec 2004
Country: | Actually ... Try a few searches on the www.numberingplans.com website, that Przemolog first recommended to us http://www.numberingplans.com/?page=...is&sub=phonenr - mess around with the next 3 digits after the area code, eg the 555 of common examples - you will find provider information comes up for valid results, and some of these are mobile phone companies I rather doubt that many companies would actually bother to keep and search such databases to determine tariffs or for any other reason, but it is hypothetically possible Here are some of the 917 allocations you mentioned http://www.numberingplans.com/?page=...ent_page=12288 |
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| Senior Member Prepaid Specialist Posts: 867 Join Date: 15 Oct 2004
Country: | ...which leads to the question do the US mobile carriers use termination fees the same way European and other places do...in other words does it cost a provider more to dial into a mobile number than to a landline or other number in the USA? I don't think so. |
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| Moderator Prepaid President Posts: 1,951 Join Date: 10 Dec 2004
Country: | I've seen one website that had slightly varying rates for different area codes in USA, but can't remember where it was, and I don't think there were exchanges listed within area codes. I expect those Iowa numbers were a bit higher. Some of the Betamax VoIP companies say they have differing retail rates, but their wholesale arm VoiceTrading has the same for both http://backsla.sh/betamax - but as I suggest, how likely is it they would bother to look up a table with over 130,000 elements? |
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| Senior Member Prepaid Pioneer Posts: 579 Join Date: 01 May 2006 Location: Greece
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| Senior Member Prepaid Expert Posts: 281 Join Date: 14 Dec 2004 Location: Connecticut, USA
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Suggestion...can you post the .xls file on Rapidshare or here(Rapidshare works OK, can't retrieve the Yahoo file for some reason) so we can add to it? Some people may want to figure out what the termination rate is to different countries or add other carriers. Also possible to post here by zipping the file (bigger uploads allowed for compressed files than raw spreadsheets or PDF's). Also think minor blooper on United Mobile direct dial outgoing from Canada to US (rate shown I think is incoming rate which you wouldn't get unless you used Callback World for a double call back). Sim Cards: AT&T (Jolt and Kindle), T-Mobile (Tuyo and Peek), Digicel Bermuda, ekit SimpleCalling Satphone: Iridium Broadband US Wireless Data: Verizon (Millenicom) VOIP: Skype | |
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| Senior Member Prepaid Expert Posts: 332 Join Date: 28 Mar 2005 Location: See flag
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The IOMCC does have to deal with the UK's Ofcom for number ranges, much like countries like Caymans +1 345 have to deal with Nanpa, because the country code is shared. But Ofcom doesn't control the rates or how the numbers are used. I don't think there's any reason other than lack of will (or number availability, or regulation) why any UK based mobile company couldn't do something similar to what is being done with Manx number ranges. It costs so much to call any UK mobile number that there is plenty of room for the forwarding/roaming cost. Indeed many of the UK 0844/0871 etc international callthrough numbers like pennyphone.co.uk (similar to the Iowa numbers) do already forward calls internationally at rates to the (domestic) caller that are lower than calling UK mobiles. There's no loophole or subsidy being exploited anywhere for the Manx numbers - they are simply using the high incoming charges to "UK" mobiles to pay for the forwarding/roaming. Same could be done with UK numbers, or Jersey/Guernsey. On your last sentence - I'd be amazed if any carrier charged the Caribbean at US rates, other than as an initial error. With all the premium rate numbers there they wouldn't last long... Thanks for doing the chart, I'd be interested to see it, but I currently can't reach the chart with either link. | |
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