Moving Landline Phone to VOIP

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Fastpedaller

Über Member
Location
Norfolk
We've given up on the landline and made a monthly saving. We realised how little we used the landline (maybe 2 calls a month), and it will go eventually anyway. I can appreciate the concern if an emergency call needs to be made, and although we live in a rural area with fluctuating mobile signal, if there is a need to make a 999 call, the phone connects to any of the 4 suppliers' networks.
 

geocycle

Legendary Member
But since landlines are being dumped by Openreach anyway it makes no odds. Soon everyone will on mobile or phone over broadband but no copper landlines. Think broadband will go down with the powercut just as much as mobile.

Yes this is true. I was reluctant to move from the old copper wire network but had no choice. Our area was without power for a week in 2015, no broadband or mobile as the masts were all down. Fortunately the ancient phone we kept for such situations worked and all the neighbours shared it to let folk know what was happening. It does reduce resilience in emergencies.
 

Pat "5mph"

A kilogrammicaly challenged woman
Moderator
Location
Glasgow
@Alien8 I did a short stint during lockdown working for a BT call centre.
I never learned how to do number porting lol, but I remember clearly that there are numbers allocated to providers according to exchange locations.
If you move in an area within a different exchange box (which is not a box, but a building) your number cannot be ported.
About VOP, I know that you must get a new number.
I know this because when I switched to Sky for ISP, they automatically assign you a socket for a phone, even if you have no phone!
Sky said if I wanted to plug in a phone the number is already allocated.
I forget now how to find out your new number, because I only use my mobile, but I guess it would be in your contract.
 

briantrumpet

Legendary Member
Location
Devon & Die
We did the same a few years ago with BT. There was further confusion because open reach forgot to switch off the old copper wire so for a while we had two lines. We now have moved to EE on a broadband only contract and just use the mobile with Wi-Fi calling. Wi-Fi calling works great and is essential because we have no mobile reception in the house.

A good friend of mine is only holding onto his landline because his wife's mother likes calling the landline number, despite having a mobile herself. Old habits, and all that.
 

briantrumpet

Legendary Member
Location
Devon & Die
But since landlines are being dumped by Openreach anyway it makes no odds. Soon everyone will on mobile or phone over broadband but no copper landlines. Think broadband will go down with the powercut just as much as mobile.

It's a recognised problem with getting rid of the copper network, but landlines will soon only go via fibre, with no choice. It's exactly the same in France, despite the worries about emergency calls during power cuts, if mobile masts also go down when the power goes.

tl;dr Having a landline will be exactly the same as mobile via wifi very soon - pretty much exactly the same system except for the landline the VoIP box relies on power too.
 

tyred

Squire
Location
Ireland
Hypothetically let’s say you currently live in Glasgow and have a phone number starting 0141, and are moving to Edinburgh who’s telephone numbers start 0131 it would be misleading to callers as your number indicates you are in a different geographical area than you actually are.

It's been a while since I worked in telecoms, and I programmed the office systems mostly rather than deal with the lines too much. However, I do remember towards the end of my time as VoIP was becoming more of a thing, most phone numbers could be ported on to the cloud and then programmed to go to wherever.

It even happens in my current job for a US based company where the number assigned to my phone is a US number even though I'm 4,000 miles away.
 

kynikos

Veteran
Location
Elmet
I think having a 'wrong' STD code is probably disallowed because it's a bit like using a false address, misleading callers about your location. Also, don't exchanges rely on the STD code to determine the call charge?

There's never a "right" STD...
 
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