annoying area codes in the windy city by the lake the call m
It is just as bad over here in Europe. I had the same number for 10 years. Got ISDN, had to get a new number. Ok, let my clients know, was a hassle, but thought that's it for the next 30 or so years. Hah!
Got a new digital exchange for our part of the city, new number (ja, I know - how can ISDN require a new digital number? Don't ask...)and informed all my clients. Three numbers in 18 months, ok - no fun but I survived.
Moved my office two blocks down...was told I had to have a new number, because this part of the street was not yet digital. A wiser man than before, I asked when it would GO digital...at the end of the year...this was October...
Oh, I said, no way. Give me the new number now. "Geht nicht" they said. Fifty phone calls later and I know not how many letters and faxes, I finally get a woman on the line who says: Well, we will just set up a call-forwarding from your current number to the "new/old" number for 6 weeks then transfer your "old/new" number to the new digital exchange in January.
She did, they did and my clients were able to keep the number until...well, actually today.
I think the reason the telephone companies do this is simple. Not having any friends - and having been hatched, not born of mortal woman - they never get private phone calls.
Oh - we had a beige wall phone from WE. It got zapped by lightning in the late 70's else my folks would still have it. Solid, well built, worked.
It is just as bad over here in Europe. I had the same number for 10 years. Got ISDN, had to get a new number. Ok, let my clients know, was a hassle, but thought that's it for the next 30 or so years. Hah!
Got a new digital exchange for our part of the city, new number (ja, I know - how can ISDN require a new digital number? Don't ask...)and informed all my clients. Three numbers in 18 months, ok - no fun but I survived.
Moved my office two blocks down...was told I had to have a new number, because this part of the street was not yet digital. A wiser man than before, I asked when it would GO digital...at the end of the year...this was October...
Oh, I said, no way. Give me the new number now. "Geht nicht" they said. Fifty phone calls later and I know not how many letters and faxes, I finally get a woman on the line who says: Well, we will just set up a call-forwarding from your current number to the "new/old" number for 6 weeks then transfer your "old/new" number to the new digital exchange in January.
She did, they did and my clients were able to keep the number until...well, actually today.
I think the reason the telephone companies do this is simple. Not having any friends - and having been hatched, not born of mortal woman - they never get private phone calls.
Oh - we had a beige wall phone from WE. It got zapped by lightning in the late 70's else my folks would still have it. Solid, well built, worked.