Buckle up, kids! Daddy's puttin' the hammer down.

Spike ,'Touched'


Natter 33 1/3  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Jesse - Feb 23, 2005 4:23:31 am PST #356 of 10002
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

Happy belated, Laura!! Happy birthday, Lysana!!

Burgers and beer is definitely a good thing.

The area code thing is weird now, since I only have a cell phone, so "technically" I live in 718, but my home phone is 646. Otherwise, I'm all about 617, 215, 202, 212. I haven't really lived that many places.


Topic!Cindy - Feb 23, 2005 4:25:05 am PST #357 of 10002
What is even happening?

I was 617, and then 781, without moving, because they added more area codes to MA, a few years back. A while after that, they set it up such that we have to dial area codes, even when making the most local of calls. I remember thinking when I was calling my neighbor that I could have walked to her house more quickly.


Jesse - Feb 23, 2005 4:26:40 am PST #358 of 10002
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

A while after that, they set it up such that we have to dial area codes, even when making the most local of calls.

My mother was just bitching about that! MA started that sooner than most places, I think.


Topic!Cindy - Feb 23, 2005 4:38:36 am PST #359 of 10002
What is even happening?

Yeah, they started it before they had to, but with an eye toward needing more exchanges--I think because of cell phones and modems, but I can't remember. I think we used to just have 617 and 413 (western part of the state). Then we had 617, 413, and 508. 508 was weirdly split between the more northernly parts of the north shore, and the south shore. Then they added 781, and 978 to the mix, and that seemed to take over the northernly part of the 508 and formerly 617 areas.

I'm never sure when I need to dial "1" now, before regional (but not local) calls. When I'm calling Boston, it seems to work whether or not I do it. Well, I think I dial "1" there as a default, but still? Silly.


Megan E. - Feb 23, 2005 4:46:21 am PST #360 of 10002

Burgers and beer is definitely a good thing.

and the beer went down oh so well. it's the first alcoholic drink I've had since christmas! It might be time for a martini night in the near future.

Happy Birthday Lysana and Laura!


DXMachina - Feb 23, 2005 4:46:22 am PST #361 of 10002
You always do this. We get tipsy, and you take advantage of my love of the scientific method.

Yeah, they started it before they had to, but with an eye toward needing more exchanges--I think because of cell phones and modems, but I can't remember.

Partly. The biggest problem was that due to the old fashioned way that telephone switching worked, the regional phone companies (like Verizon) could only allocate phone numbers in blocks of 10,000 at a time (i.e., one complete telephone exchange) when they started selling off those numbers to resellers and cell phone companies. That used up all the exchanges in the area code pretty quickly, so they wound up having to create new area codes.

Except in RI, because we're so teeny.

I've had two area codes, 201 and 401.


Jesse - Feb 23, 2005 4:52:13 am PST #362 of 10002
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

That used up all the exchanges in the area code pretty quickly, so they wound up having to create new area codes.

Yeah, but it used to be that if you were calling within an area code, you only had to dial seven digits. MA went to ten-digit dialing way early. Even when NYC started doing overlaid area codes, you didn't have to dial the area code every time.


Anne W. - Feb 23, 2005 4:53:54 am PST #363 of 10002
The lost sheep grow teeth, forsake their lambs, and lie with the lions.

We've had to dial area codes for local calls in Maryland for years. It feels weird not to have to do it when I go back to St. Louis.


Topic!Cindy - Feb 23, 2005 4:59:28 am PST #364 of 10002
What is even happening?

Yeah, but it used to be that if you were calling within an area code, you only had to dial seven digits. MA went to ten-digit dialing way early. Even when NYC started doing overlaid area codes, you didn't have to dial the area code every time.

That was the most frustrating part. Although to be honest, I still have to think about my area code, because for my whole life, it was 617 for all the towns I've lived in which are now 781, and there's got to be a better way to say that, but I can't make my words work.


DXMachina - Feb 23, 2005 4:59:33 am PST #365 of 10002
You always do this. We get tipsy, and you take advantage of my love of the scientific method.

MA went to ten-digit dialing way early. Even when NYC started doing overlaid area codes, you didn't have to dial the area code every time.

RI did for awhile too, claiming, among other things, that it helped people recognize when they were dialing a non-local call, so they wouldn't be surprised by the charges. Fortunately, enough people complained that they stopped doing it.

Actually, up until about 15 years ago, I could make local calls just by dialing the last 5 digits of the number.