See this sites: http://www.itu.int/ITU-T/inr/nnp/index.html: ITU-T numbering plan information http://www.numberingplans.com/: Commercial provider of numbering plans http://www.numberplan.org/: Commercial provider of numbering plans http://www.wtng.info/: World Telephone Numbering Guide se also: E164.org is a directory of telephone numbers that can be reached over the Internet. The system works by publishing a DNS zone, 'e164.org', that can be used by various Internet applications including SER, Gnome Meeting and Asterisk. The idea is to be able to map your phone number to an Email address, website, VoIP addresses, etc. Check out our http://www.e164.org/ Max Rivera Asterisk-Brasil ----- Original Message ----- From: <tmassey@obscorp.com> To: <asterisk-users@lists.digium.com> Sent: Thursday, February 03, 2005 5:44 PM Subject: [Asterisk-Users] OT: How to "own" a telephone number?> Hello! > > We are open to the possibility of changing our business telephone number > shortly. This will most likely be necessary due to a physical move, > changing providers and a few other reasons. However, we woud like this to > be the *last* time we need to do this. Ever. No matter what. Is that > possible? > > On the Internet, you get this power with domain names. We "own" our > domain name, so even if we move around the world, change connections, > change Internet providers, grow, shrink, etc. we keep the same domain > name. This is a wonderful thing. > > Is there such a way to do this with a telephone number? Is it possible to > "own" a telephone number, such that even if we change telephone providers > or move from POTS to ISDN to T1 to VoIP and back a dozen times we can keep > the same number? > > We would like to have this power with both a normal telephone number and a > toll-free number. According to our current provider (SBC in Michigan), > the only way we can keep our current number is to convert it into a > "virtual circuit" for almost $30/month (basically the same cost as a > "real" circuit), and then forward all calls from that line to another > number. If the number is not local, we'd have to pay for long-distance to > that new number. I know that with VoIP numbers we can move and change > Internet connections, but if we change VoIP providers, we lose the number. > With a combination of the two, we could buy a virtual circuit from SBC > and forward it to a local VoIP number that might change if we changed > providers, but that seems like a fairly expensive way of doing it. Is > there an alternative? And what if we didn't want to use VoIP, but wanted > to forward to a number that was long-distance? Obviously, that gets > expensive! > > Also, we're currently looking into toll-free service, but the alternatives > seem to be much the same. At least nobody is telling us if there is a way > to lock in a certain number even if we change providers. They've all told > us that the number we receive is theirs, and if we change providers we > lose the number. I'm sure 1-800-Flowers, et. al. are not being held > hostage like that... > > I would love to know what ideas you might have for getting a telephone > number with the ability to stay with us even as the underlying > infrastructure changes. Is this even possible? > > Thank you, > > Tim Massey > > _______________________________________________ > Asterisk-Users mailing list > Asterisk-Users@lists.digium.com > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users > To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users > >
On Thu, 03 Feb 2005 20:02:03 +0100, Stefan Gofferje <stefan@gofferje.homelinux.org> wrote:> Maybe you have something like that too, where your customers don't pay > too much and you don't pay too much. A nice side effect is that nobody > will ever know that your companies HQ is in a lonely little village in > the middle of nowhere because everybody thinks "they have a service no. > they must be huge"...Actually, when I see those I think "they must be a small company pretending to be a big company. Why should I pay more to call them just because they want to hide behind a non-geographic number?". Here in the UK (and I guess, elswhere), NGNs are a scam. The top-line cost is the same as either a local or national call (OK so far), but they don't qualify for discounts and don't count in inclusive or unlimited packages, so actually they're much more expensive than a standard geographic number. On the flipside, if you generate enough call minutes inbound you can get revenue share out of them. But that's for the big guys..... Peter
Andrew Thompson
2005-Feb-03 12:20 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] OT: How to "own" a telephone number?
tmassey@obscorp.com wrote:> Also, we're currently looking into toll-free service, but the alternatives > seem to be much the same. At least nobody is telling us if there is a way > to lock in a certain number even if we change providers. They've all told > us that the number we receive is theirs, and if we change providers we > lose the number. I'm sure 1-800-Flowers, et. al. are not being held > hostage like that...They're not. Their number belongs to them, and is serviced by some LD carrier. If you call up a "traditional" carrier, and ask for a toll-free number, they will assign you one, and it _will_ be yours, and be portable(search for "resporg"). What you are seeing with these bargain providers is they have a clause in their contract that says they own the number, not you. It is a lock, and it ought to be illegal, but sadly, it's probably not. If you choose one of these companies that doesn't allow you to "port" or "resporg" your number out, that's your decision. Just ask when you get the toll-free if they do allow resporg's out, and have them show you the wording in their contract that confirms it.> I would love to know what ideas you might have for getting a telephone > number with the ability to stay with us even as the underlying > infrastructure changes. Is this even possible?A normal (not tollfree) number, if assigned to you by a RBOC, or most CLECs belongs to you, and you can port it to any other carrier who services your area(assuming they allow port-in's). I doubt you'll find a LEC that will want to do you any better than what you've already seen with the call-forwarding, unless you have a significant amount of traffic and want to set up a point-to-point, frame, or other method of trunking the traffic. A company I used to work for advertised in newspapers and yellowpages in hundreds of cities across the country. In most areas, they had a Remote Call Forwarding(RCF) that they advertised locally with, pointed to their toll-free number. I remember looking over some of their phone bills, but I can't recall if I saw usage charges on the RCFs. Hope this helps. -- Andrew Thompson http://aktzero.com/ http://dev.asteriskdocs.org/
tmassey@obscorp.com
2005-Feb-03 12:44 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] OT: How to "own" a telephone number?
Hello! We are open to the possibility of changing our business telephone number shortly. This will most likely be necessary due to a physical move, changing providers and a few other reasons. However, we woud like this to be the *last* time we need to do this. Ever. No matter what. Is that possible? On the Internet, you get this power with domain names. We "own" our domain name, so even if we move around the world, change connections, change Internet providers, grow, shrink, etc. we keep the same domain name. This is a wonderful thing. Is there such a way to do this with a telephone number? Is it possible to "own" a telephone number, such that even if we change telephone providers or move from POTS to ISDN to T1 to VoIP and back a dozen times we can keep the same number? We would like to have this power with both a normal telephone number and a toll-free number. According to our current provider (SBC in Michigan), the only way we can keep our current number is to convert it into a "virtual circuit" for almost $30/month (basically the same cost as a "real" circuit), and then forward all calls from that line to another number. If the number is not local, we'd have to pay for long-distance to that new number. I know that with VoIP numbers we can move and change Internet connections, but if we change VoIP providers, we lose the number. With a combination of the two, we could buy a virtual circuit from SBC and forward it to a local VoIP number that might change if we changed providers, but that seems like a fairly expensive way of doing it. Is there an alternative? And what if we didn't want to use VoIP, but wanted to forward to a number that was long-distance? Obviously, that gets expensive! Also, we're currently looking into toll-free service, but the alternatives seem to be much the same. At least nobody is telling us if there is a way to lock in a certain number even if we change providers. They've all told us that the number we receive is theirs, and if we change providers we lose the number. I'm sure 1-800-Flowers, et. al. are not being held hostage like that... I would love to know what ideas you might have for getting a telephone number with the ability to stay with us even as the underlying infrastructure changes. Is this even possible? Thank you, Tim Massey
Martin List-Petersen
2005-Feb-03 13:31 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] OT: How to "own" a telephone number?
On tor, 2005-02-03 at 20:02 +0100, Stefan Gofferje wrote: [snip]> Maybe you have something like that too, where your customers don't pay > too much and you don't pay too much. A nice side effect is that nobody > will ever know that your companies HQ is in a lonely little village in > the middle of nowhere because everybody thinks "they have a service no. > they must be huge"...Actually, that is wrong. Any company that uses a 0180x is just single minded and purely focused on the german marked. Funny as hell, these numbers are simply blocked by nearly any international destination, because it's too complicated to get them rated correctly. Often companies using these numbers forget, that nobody outside the country can call them anymore, unless they provide an alternative number. I used to have a free fax-number in Germany, that I had to cancel, when they switched everybody over on 01805 numbers. The number became useless to me, because it only can be called inside Germany. Sl?n leat, Martin List-Petersen Dublin, Eire (contact info on --> http://www.marlow.dk/)
David Brodbeck
2005-Feb-04 07:00 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] OT: How to "own" a telephone number?
> -----Original Message----- > From: tmassey@obscorp.com [mailto:tmassey@obscorp.com]> Is providing the ability to assign numbers to people instead of to > locations really that hard? Is it really so much easier for Internet > domains to do it? Or is this just an oligarchy at work? :)A phone number is more analogous to an IP address than a domain name. If you move, you'll have a different ISP, and you won't get to keep your old IP address. Your domain name, however, can be pointed to any IP address you like. It's that extra layer of indirection -- the domain being resolved to an IP -- that lets Internet domains be moved so easily. It's also partly a historical issue. The phone system is layed out geographically, because in the days of mechanical switches that was the only reasonable way to do it. Each area code represents a certain area of the country, and each exchange (the first three digits of the local number) represents a particular central office. If you're outside the area covered by that central office, there's no way to get a direct line run to you (unless you use forwarding, or something like VOIP.) Billing is based on this, too. If people could move numbers around willy-nilly, you'd never know if you were making a long-distance call or not.