h a l f b a k e r yNot so much a thought experiment as a single neuron misfire.
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The 1- prefix is for long distance numbers. (It is also the country code for the US, possibly for related reasons.) Adding a 2- prefix would be difficult for cell phones, which mostly omit the 1- (or maybe dial it automatically without telling you). |
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What bugs me is that NY still requires the 1- even though *all* calls now require an area code. |
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Since I get free long distance on my cell, who needs an 800 number anymore? Except international forwarding or Canada or something... |
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The hotel I work at has the toll-free number that starts with 877. The 800 version of the number is a sex line. Hilarity ensues. |
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They won't let me use the phone here. |
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I don't no, the phone numbers would be confusing and harder to memorize. |
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Bone for the "sneaky" bit. |
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A crafty entrepeneur put two and two together one day when he learned that the party who owns a toll free line credits a leased pay phone account 25 cents for each toll free call placed. |
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He leased a bank of phones and set them up with autodialers who phoned every toll free number available in sequence. |
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When AT&T realized they were sending out credit cheques in the oder of tens of thousands of dollars, they pulled the plug on this loophole. |
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