T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
534.1 | | CURIE::DECARTERET | Jason DeCarteret | Thu Aug 20 1987 15:15 | 1 |
| where in the united states are you?
|
534.2 | | RSTS32::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Thu Aug 20 1987 18:09 | 8 |
| re: .1
New England - Area 603, exchange 673
Does that make a difference as far as the answers to my ?'s ?
[ :^) ]
-Jack
|
534.3 | 883-5555 | TOOK::MICHAUD | Jeff Michaud | Thu Aug 20 1987 19:03 | 13 |
| It used to be something other than 981 a long time ago,
then they changed it because too maney people used to
use it. My mother used to use it to tell us to be quiet
when see was upstairs sleeping.
My brother and I got the number from a telephone man who
did some work on our phones. It is a great trick to
go to somebodys house, pretend to dial someone, then
5 seconds later the phone rings, they answer and nobody
is there, so they hang up, and it rings again....
Another not so interesting one is 883-5555, which just
gives a continuous tone forever.
|
534.4 | | CURIE::DECARTERET | Jason DeCarteret | Fri Aug 21 1987 00:03 | 15 |
| I too live in New Hampshire. I think it only works in NH because
when I try it at my friends houses who live in Dunstable, Tyngsboro,
etc... It says the call cannot be compleated or something.
The numbers are different in different parts of the state, different
exchanges and such. They are as follows.
981-XXXX
982-XXXX
983-XXXX
984-XXXX
Where XXXX represents the last 4 digets of the phone number.
There is also another number that has been around for a while.
Can anybody tell me what it's for? I tried to connect my terminal
to it but no can do. The number is 883-2023.
|
534.5 | | CURIE::DECARTERET | Jason DeCarteret | Fri Aug 21 1987 00:06 | 5 |
| Oh yea, There was a number that my brothers friend told me a
long time back that when you called it, it would tell you the phone
number of the house your at. I keep remembering something about
XXX-7777.
-=*>Jason<*=-
|
534.6 | | NRADM2::MAXMGR | Al Cote | Fri Aug 21 1987 09:42 | 10 |
|
I live in R.I. ... we used to be able to use the 981 trick ... I
think it was, dial 981 .. wait for 2nd dial tone, dial 6 and hang up.
We also used to be able to dial 200- (or 220-) followed by any seven
numbers, and a recorded voice would tell you your phone number...
They don't seem to work anymore.
Al
|
534.7 | It's legal to ask... | MOSAIC::WASSER | John A. Wasser | Mon Aug 24 1987 13:09 | 17 |
| > What's the story on what would be considered, I guess, "maintenance codes"
> in the phone system? Are they fair game? Illegal to use? Or what?
> The first question is: Is it OK (legal) to "hack around" with the phone
> system like that?
I think that it is legal unless you disrupt telephone service
(vandalism), annoy people (harassment) or avoid normal telephone
use charges (theft of services). There may be some other charges
that could be brought but I think these are the three most
likely.
> Is it legal to ask any of these questions?
Of course! It's (still) a free country. You havn't slandered,
libeled or verbally assaulted anyone with your questions so
there is no problem. Answering questions is another matter.
|
534.8 | Once an abuser--I was warned. | DELNI::CANTOR | Dave C. | Tue Aug 25 1987 05:05 | 39 |
| A telephone installer once asked me not to use the ringback
number because there are limited ports available and when an
unauthorized person (someone who doesn't work for the TelCo)
uses them, it can interfere with authorized phone workers getting
their job done (installing or checking phones).
There used to be lots of test numbers around, and I'd guess
there still are. Probably the local phone companies keep
changing the codes as people discover them and use them
excessively.
Here are some interesting things I've known the numbers to
over the years:
ring back
continuous 1 Khz tone at a known level
dead silence (probably ring and tip crossed and grounded)
what number am I calling from
tone sweep
1 Khz tone interrupted every ten seconds
pair of numbers which connect to each other (two people dial
the two numbers and talk to each other)
recording for pay phone (something like "If you wish to make a
call, hang up, lift receiver, and deposit 10 cents when
you get a new dial tone.")
(I suspect this is a "default number" that you get
connected to from a pay phone if you hold a dial tone
without depositing money for too long.)
line verification operator
I do not encourage people looking for the phone company's
internal-use numbers any more than I encourage people looking
for system management's internal-use usernames.
If you have a use for some of these numbers, ask your phone
company. (Ring back used to be given out to people with
party lines, for example, so they could call their line-mates.)
Dave C.
|
534.9 | confessions of a professional phone hacker | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | All Hail Marx and Lennon (Bros. & Sisters) | Tue Aug 25 1987 10:30 | 20 |
| These things have come up periodically on ARPAnet Telecom Digest.
The numbers vary from place to place. As Dave said, they have traffic
limitations, so you can't go using them a lot or there could be
trouble. But some are generally useful.
The 98x-defg trick works in New England Telephone territory, usually,
but it was 550-(pulse 6) in NJ, and your-own-number+pulse in NY when I
lived there. It's not nationally uniform for ringbacks. New England
Tel uses "area code 200" for "speak back your own number" from the
auto number identifier. It is often turned off nowadays.
One of my favorites way back when (in NJ) was the looparound test.
You dialed xxx-9929 and got 1004 Hz tone (test milliwatt). Someone
else dialed the same prefix -9930 and got you. When I was doing
pirate radio, it was occasionally fun to sit on 9929 and give out
our number as "9930" on one of the few exchanges where it worked.
(Usually I gave out my real number tho. Didn't wanna make it too
hard for the FCC :-) ) These numbers, btw, vary from telco to telco;
9935 is the plain milliwatt (not loop) in NE, but it was 9971 in NJ.
fred
|
534.10 | (603)883-5555 gives interrupted tone, special code? | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Tue Aug 25 1987 11:51 | 14 |
| Indeed this phone number gives a tone. However, the tone interrupts
about once a minute.
Questions worth investigating:
o If you touchtone appropriate codes, will you get somewhere ?
o Exactly how often does the tone interrupt ?
o What is the purpose ? Merely a tone to test line quality ?
o Is there a charge for the call ?
/Eric
|
534.11 | boop tone for good touch tone | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | All Hail Marx and Lennon (Bros. & Sisters) | Tue Aug 25 1987 15:11 | 10 |
| re:.10
Oh, did I forget to mention that the looparound milliwatt was 9
seconds on 1 second off? Sounds familiar...
On the ringback numbers (which usually return a dial tone, then
a single tone (440?) when you go into ringback-ready mode), you
can dial 1234567890[*#] and it will give you two boops if your tones
are right. I think a single boop means it doesn't like your tone
pad but you're close enough that it knows you're trying.
fred
|
534.12 | is (603)883-5555 half of a loop ? | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Wed Aug 26 1987 17:23 | 16 |
| Ah yes, loops.
I remember now, as reminded in previous reply. Two numbers, each
of which dialed gives 1000 hz. tone. But if TWO people dial them,
they can talk to each other.
So, is (603)883-5555 one half of one of these ? Can anyone find
the other half ? 5556 seems to ring indefinitely, 5554 gets AAA (don't
bother them again!).
Also, some loops were regular charge, some were free. Free were
real nice, because any two people in the country could call them
and talk forever for free. (CAUTION: I'm sure this constitutes
theft of services, even though telco set up the numbers!)
/Eric
|
534.13 | | JON::MORONEY | Welcome to the Machine | Wed Aug 26 1987 22:52 | 7 |
| The TELCO is now selling loops as teen gab lines.
re .-1: Maybe loops are chained, like business numbers. Try dialing the number
twice and see if you get yourself. If it is busy, it still may be a chain, you
just didn't get the first one. Chains don't have to be sequential numbers.
-Mike
|
534.14 | Moderator alert! | UFP::MURPHY | Rick Murphy | Wed Aug 26 1987 23:11 | 4 |
| It's time to mention that this is not the FONE FREEKS notes file.
If anyone would like to start one, fine. I don't think this discussion
is approriate here.
-Rick
|
534.15 | Any suggestions where to take it? | PFLOYD::ROTHBERG | That's not a bug, it's a feature. | Fri Sep 25 1987 04:02 | 6 |
|
Too bad. I found it somewhat interesting. Is
there an appropriate notes conference for this
somewhere? I don't think it warrents it's own
conference.
|
534.16 | Yes | COOKIE::CHAVEZ | Dale C. - CXO3 Colo Spgs | Fri Sep 25 1987 12:46 | 7 |
| RE:< Note 534.15 by PFLOYD::ROTHBERG "That's not a bug, it's a feature." >
> -< Any suggestions where to take it? >-
Yes, try OVDVAX::ELECTRO_HOBBY. Phone discussions are rampant!
Dale
|
534.17 | It's been moved | RSTS32::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Thu Oct 08 1987 10:28 | 7 |
| At the suggestion of others, and the hospitality of the Moderator of
OVDVAX::ELECTRO_HOBBY, the base note and the first 13 replies have
been moved to that conference. Please feel free to follow the discussion
there.
-Jack
|