💾 Archived View for spam.works › mirrors › textfiles › phreak › nia033.hac captured on 2023-11-14 at 11:23:24.

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2023-06-16)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

 ???????????????????? ????????????????????????????????? ????????????????????

 ?   Founded By:    ? ?  Network Information Access   ? ? Mother Earth BBS ?

 ? Guardian Of Time ???            04JUN90            ???  NUP:> DECnet    ?

 ?   Judge Dredd    ? ?          Judge Dredd          ? ?Text File Archives?

 ???????????????????? ?            File 33            ? ????????????????????

          ?           ?????????????????????????????????           ?

          ?                ???????????????????????                ?

          ?????????????????? UK Telephone System ??????????????????

                           ???????????????????????





Telephone services in the UK are provided by the following

organizations:



    British Telecom

    Mercury Communications

    Hull Telephone Company

    Vodaphone

    Cellnet



For historical reasons, BT allocates area codes. This will change in a

couple year's time.



The bottom level of the BT system is the "Junction Exchange" (JX in

this document). A JX is a unit which handles 10,000 subscriber

numbers, numbered 0000 to 9999. A number may have several lines

attached to it (hundreds in some cases). These four digit numbers are

called LNs (Line Numbers) in this document.



In a few rural areas, some subscriber numbers are three digits. The

appropriate JX thus takes some LNs as being three digits, and some

(possibly none) as four. Such JXs are being phased out. [This should

be distinguished from the case where all LNs in a group of ten go to

the same subscriber, and are interconnected. For example, Basildon

hospital officially has the LN 2811. In fact, all of LNs 2800-2899 go

to the hospital switchboard, and the JX will route the call as soon as

it sees "28".]



JXs are grouped into "Area Codes" (AC). Each JX has a one or two digit

number within its AC - one digit numbers are being phased out. The

exception is in "all-figure areas", where each JX has a three digit

number. These numbers do not begin with 0 or 1.



Each area code has a number. For most area codes, this is three

digits, but for all-figure areas, it is two digits.



The "number-space" for area codes is used as follows.  All normal area

codes begin with a digit from 2-9. The area codes for the all-figure

areas are:



    Birmingham    21

    Edinburgh     31

    Glasgow       41

    Liverpool     51

    Manchester    61

    London inner  71 (new)

    London outer  81 (new)

    Tyne & Wear   91



Of the 720 three-digit codes, about 600-650 are in use (I do have a

complete table in numerical order, but it's not in machine-readable

form). Certain codes have special meanings:



    345  Calls charged at L rate irrespective of distance

    482  Hull Telephone Company

    800  Free calls

    831  Vodaphone

    836  Vodaphone

    839  Calls charged at m rate irrespective of distance

    860  Cellnet

    898  Calls charged at m rate irrespective of distance



Mercury has been allocated fifteen JXs in the 71 AC and the same

fifteen in the 81 AC. I believe that all Mercury subscribers have

numbers in this AC, irrespective of location.



Area code 1 was used for London (both inner and outer) until 0001 on 6th May

1990; I am unaware of any plans for it. Area code 10 is obscured by the

international access code. No area codes begin with 0 (but see below).



 From any BT subscriber, you can call any number by:



    0 + area code + JX number + line number



For example, anyone can call me by 0-954-78-0223. In addition, there are

certain special codes:



    010    international access

    0001   equivalent to 010 350 1  [Dublin]

    0055   from London only; calls charged at L rate

    0066   from London only; calls charged at a rate

    0077   from London only; calls charged at m rate



Service codes begin with a 1:



    100    operator

    144    BT credit-card calls

    151    fault reporting

    153    international directory

    155    international operator

    192    directory



Area codes are further grouped into "Charging Areas" (CA). For example:



    London CA:    71, 81

    Cambridge CA: 220, 223

    Madingley CA: 954



The exception is the Tyne and Wear AC, which is three CAs (JXs [24]??,

JXs 3??, and JXs 5??). This AC replaced three separate ACs (whose

numbers I have forgotten), each of which had its own CA.



BT has five charging rates for UK calls, and seven for international.

The UK rates, in increasing order of cost, are L, a, b1, b, and m (m

is more expensive than I, which is the cheapest international rate).

Rates also vary by time:



    peak     = M-F 0900-1300

    standard = M-F 0800-0900 and 1300-1800

    cheap    = all other times



(these do not apply to international calls).



All calls within a CA are at rate L, as are those to "neighbouring"

CAs. Each CA has a nominal centre. For all other calls, if the CA

centres are within 56km, the call is at rate a, and otherwise it is at

rate b. Rate b1 replaces rate b where BT feels under pressure from

Mercury (London CA to Cambridge CA is b1, but to Madingley CA is b).

Rate m ("mobile") is only used for calls to Vodaphone, Cellnet, and

the special area codes. Hull is treated as a normal CA. Calls from BT

to Mercury are charged as normal calls to the London CA.



The real complications (you thought this wasn't enough ?) come when

dialling calls other than by the full 0+ sequence. For this you need

to know the subscriber number (SN).



The one simple case is the all-figure areas. For each area, lines

within the area are identified by seven digits (JX+LN), and calls are

made by just dialling this number [in Tyne and Wear, calls *between*

ACs must be prefixed with 90; this is being phased out].



Everywhere else, we run into the "Named Exchange" (NE). An NE

comprises a set of JXs, usually, but not always, in the same AC. A

subscriber is identified by an exchange name followed by the SN, which

is the LN with a prefix. The prefix can be empty, the last digit of a

two digit JX, or the JX number. A catch to beware of is that sometimes

two NEs have the same name but are distinguished by number length. For

example, there is "Welwyn (six figure numbers)" and "Welwyn (four

figure numbers)". These cover the same geographical area, but may have

different ACs (these two don't). They are always in the same CA.



As an example, the Madingley CA consists of:



    AC  JX  NE                 Prefix

    954 78  Crafts Hill        78

    954 21  Madingley          21

    954 3   Swavesey           3

    954 6   Willingham         6

    954 5   Cottenham          5

    954 4   Caxton (4 digits)  none

    954 71  Caxton (6 digits)  71

    954 7   Elsworth           none



Calls to CAs other than at rate L are always dialled by the full 0+

method. To call a subscriber on the same NE, it is just necessary to

dial the SN. Other calls within the CA, and to CAs which are at the L

rate, may have an alternate dialling method (not necessarily:

Madingley to Huntingdon is rate L, but 0+ must be used; all calls from

AC 71 or 81 to any other (or each other) must be dialled as 0+).



Two alternate methods seem to be in common use: the "fan" method and

the "slave" method (my names).



The "fan" method is used at the main NE of a CA. Several prefixes in

its AC are not used, but instead become dialling codes from the NE.

For example, from Cambridge:



    8  -> AC 220 (same CA)

    91 -> AC 440 (different CA)

    92 -> AC 767 (different CA)

    93 -> AC 954 (different CA)

    94 -> AC 638 (different CA)

    95 -> AC 763 (different CA)

    96 -> AC 799 (different CA)

    98 -> AC 353 (different CA)



These are then followed by the JX and LN. All other NEs in the same AC

(not the same CA) can be called by dialling the JX and LN with no

prefix (there are no cases of this in AC 223).



[Amusing side-note. Someone blew it in specifying 8 -> AC 220. The JXs

that were in AC 220 (21, 23, 24, 26, 27, 29, 5) did not occur in

AC223. So there was actually no need for the dialling code. All of

these except the last two have now been moved to Cambridge NE (and AC

223) by simply changing the SN, without changing the JX+LN

combination. The others will come soon (I have already seen people

using "Cambridge 29xxxx" phone numbers).]



The "slave" method is used at all other NEs in the same CA, and

possibly in other CAs (All of Madingley CA is a slave of Cambridge NE

in this sense).  Calls to the master NE are made by dialling a single

9 followed by the SN. All calls which are rate L, and which could be

made from the master NE with a dialling code, are made by dialling 9

followed by the sequence from the master NE.



For example, from ACs 220 and 954, the following dialling codes exist:



    9    -> AC 223

    9+8  -> AC 220 (also used from Teversham (220 5) to West Wratting (220 29))

    9+91 -> AC 440 (not available from AC 954)

    9+92 -> AC 767

    9+93 -> AC 954 (also see below)

    9+94 -> AC 638 (not available from AC 954)

    9+95 -> AC 763 (not available from AC 954)

    9+96 -> AC 799 (not available from AC 954)

    9+98 -> AC 353



In addition, a slave NE may also have other dialling codes not

beginning with a 9. For example, in AC 954, to dial from Caxton (six

digits), Cottenham, Crafts Hill, Madingley, Swavesey, and Willingham

to any number in the AC is done by JX+LN, without any code. On the

other hand, to dial from Elsworth to Caxton (four digits), or vice

versa, the route via Cambridge must be used (i.e.  9+93+JX+LN).



One final note. Slave exchanges have operator service provided by the

master exchange. This means that emergency service is "9+99". On

master exchanges, it is thus simply "99" (! for UK readers).

-JUDGE DREDD/NIA



[OTHER WORLD BBS]