"Area Code" redirects here. For the song by Ludacris see Area Codes (song). The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. Please improve this article and discuss the issue on the talk page. (August 2010)

Area code 639 could be coming to Sask
That's the number being put forward as Saskatchewan's second area code, which is not expected to come into use until sometime in 2013.


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Area Code 615-Stone Fox Chase(1970)

Area Codes, Area Code Finder, Area Code Look Up, Telephone ...
AreaCode.org lists US and Canada telephone area codes for reverse area code lookup. Find area code list, area code maps, and cities within an area code.
A telephone numbering plan is a type of numbering scheme used in telecommunications to allocate telephone numbers to subscribers and to route telephone calls in a telephone network. A closed numbering plan such as found in North America imposes a fixed total length to numbers. An open numbering plan features variance in the length of telephone numbers.

Saskatchewan’s second area code likely to be 639
The 639 is joining the 306. The second area code for Saskatchewan is likely to be 639, not 474 as was suggested earlier this year, a SaskTel spokesman said Tuesday.


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Telephone numbering plan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This includes country codes, access codes, area codes and all combinations of digits dialed. ... Area codes were assigned based on the length of time a rotary dial phone took to ...
A dial plan establishes the expected number and pattern of digits for a telephone number. This includes country codes access codes area codes and all combinations of digits dialed. For instance the North American public switched telephone network (PSTN) uses a 10-digit dial plan that includes a 3-digit area code and a 7-digit telephone number. Most PBXs support variable-length dial plans that use 3 to 11 digits. Dial plans must comply with the telephone networks to which they connect. Contents 1 History 2 Structure 2.1 Country code 2.2 Area code 2.3 Local number 3 Standards 3.1 Area code and call pricing 4 Dialing plans 4.1 Example 4.2 Example 4.3 Open dialing plans 4.4 Closed dialing plans 5 Satellite phone numbering plans 6 Special services 7 Numbering plans by global regions 8 Dial plan syntax 9 Numbering Plan Indicator 10 See also 11 External links 12 References History

639 to be Sask.'s 2nd area code
It looks like the second area code Saskatchewan will be getting in two years will be 639 - but people who are already using 306 won't have to switch.

Added October 30 2008 Visits 951
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All Area Codes
Directory of U.S. area codes by state plus cities within each area code. Also lists Canadian area codes by province or territory.
In early telephone systems connections were made in the central office by telephone operators using patch cords to connect one party to another. If a person wanted to make a phone call in some phone systems he or she would pick up a phone and wind a crank on the side. In other systems the person would wind the crank first then pick up the phone. The crank was a small generator that would light a lamp at the central office. An operator would see the light and insert their patch cord into a socket and assist the customer with the call connection. The operator would use patch cords to connect the caller to the person being called. If the party being called was in another exchange the operator would use a patch cord to connect to another exchange where an operator elsewhere would finish the connection. As technology advanced electro-mechanical switches were introduced and calls were made using rotary dials.

Triangle's new 984 area code will start April 30
The region needs a second area code to accommodate a booming population and proliferation of cell phones.


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Area Code Lookup | WhitePages
Welcome to WhitePages! The world's largest and most trusted source for people's contact information, with more than 180 million U.S. adults and growing!
Initial use of area codes in the United States and Canada began in the late 1940s with large cities. By 1966 the system was nationwide.1

Back in the Day - June 9, 1991: New area code becomes official
New Jersey’s 908 area code officially took effect on June 8, 1991 for portions of Sussex and Morris counties.

XE Extreme Editor XE Consistency Adviser
http://awareness.ics.uci.edu/~rsilvafi/research.html

Area Code 615-Stone Fox Chase

List of North American Numbering Plan area codes - Wikipedia ...
This is a list of North American telephone area codes in effect for the North American Numbering Plan (NANP). The area that an area code is officially ...
Area codes were assigned based on the length of time a rotary dial phone took to dial the area code. Densely populated areas like New York City Chicago Los Angeles and Detroit had huge incoming call volume and were assigned numbers (212 312 213 313) that could be quickly dialed from a rotary dial phone. On a rotary dial phone low digits (1 2 3 4) could dial quickly as the time the rotary dial took to return to the home position was minimal. High digit numbers (7 8 9 0) on rotary dial phones took much longer to return to the home position and were usually used in less densely populated areas like rural Texas (915). This numbering strategy became unnecessary when touch-tone phones arrived as the tone allowed instant entry of digits. This section does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (August 2010)

Triangle to start using 984 area code April 30
Triangle residents will get a second area code, along with mandatory 10-digit dialing, in less than eight months.

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Area Codes.org
Search by area code, state abbreviation, or city name.
The original set of North American area codes were unique. When the North American Numbering Plan was first developed logic circuits consisted of relays and vacuum tubes and simplicity was mandatory. The second digit of all area codes was 0 or 1 while the second digit of the exchange triplet was never 0 or 1 thus facilitating readily the recognition whether the dialing of a full 10-digit number was in progress or whether the user was dialing only a local number. In this coding scheme a leading 1 indicating long distance or out of the area code call was not necessary. In some regions local numbers were 7 digits (occasionally less) but a toll call within the area code required a preceding 1. This told the subscriber that the call being placed was a toll call. Area Code 617 in eastern Massachusetts used this system in the early 1970s while the Chicago area (Area Code 312) did not. In the Chicago Area one could call the Boston area by dialing only 10 digits while in Boston to call Chicago one would be required to use 11 digits (preceding the 10 digits with a 1)

Want A Website Brought Down? Just Dial 614-LULZSEC
Hacktivist collective LulzSec's 614 area-code phone line is answered by a recorded message from Pierre Dubois--possibly the name of the seemingly French cartoon character that's been popping up in LulzSec's online messages. You leave a message suggesting a target for a distributed denial of service attack, and if the mysterious figures behind LulzSec like your style, then they'll fire off their ...


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Area Code Look Up and Reference
Listing of the majority of Area Codes throughout the US and the world
By the 1990s the mechanical Central Office Switches were rapidly being replaced with ESS machines (Electronic Switching Systems) and the Area Code logic was no longer necessary. The need for more telephone numbers was increasing rapidly and the NANPA (North American Numbering Plan Administration) was running out of n0n and n1n combinations. This Area Code scheme was abandoned with the result that former Area Code only numbers could now be Exchanges and former Exchange only numbers could now be Area Codes. This caused a logic dilemma: The Switch had no way of knowing whether to expect 10 digits or 7 digits. The solution was simple. If a preceding 1 was entered (by dial and Touch-Tone key pad) then 10 more digits were expected. If the first digit entered was NOT a 1 only 7 digits were expected and the call would remain within area code. For a short while in some area codes one could enter the full 11 digits for a call within their own neighborhood or just enter the last 7 digits and the call would be routed and billed identically.

My 'Oakland' Athletics Bet With Fooch: Bay Area Sports Week In Review
Oakland or San Jose? SB Nation Bay Area Editor David Fucillo and Bay Area Sports Guy wager on the Athletics' future home. A couple weeks ago David Fucillo , the editor of SB Nation Bay Area and Niners Nation who's known to most of you as "Fooch," came over to Le Chateau de BASG to talk about the editorial direction of SB Nation Bay Area, audience demographics and sportswriting best practices. As ...

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Area Codes Lookup
Look up U.S. area codes and ZIP codes, or find postal and phone information for a town, city, or county.
Currently because of Area Code overlays nearly all metropolitan and many rural telephone calls require the full 11 digit entry to complete a telephone call. Structure

Whitecaps FC Launch Area Code 250 Match Pack
VANCOUVER, BC - A new match pack initiative has been created to make it easier for Vancouver Whitecaps FC fans from the British Columbia Interior and Vancouver Island to attend two exciting Whitecaps FC matches this July. The 250 Match Pack is available in limited quantities for $90 (including HST), plus an additional $5 processing fee per pack, and includes the Real Salt Lake match on Saturday ...

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845 Area Code BC Rap

Area Code
Area Code on WN Network delivers the latest Videos and Editable pages for News & Events, including Entertainment, Music, Sports, Science and more, Sign ...
Most telephone numbers belong to the E.164 numbering plan though some PABXs (business telephone systems) have internal extensions. The E.164 numbering plan for telephone numbers includes: Country calling codes Regional numbering plans such as: the European Telephony Numbering Space the North American Numbering Plan Various national numbering plans such as: Telephone numbers in the United Kingdom Apart from the use of numbering plans for telephone numbers they are also used in routing of SS7 signalling messages as part of the Global Title. In public land mobile networks the E.212 numbering plan is used for subscriber identities (e.g. stored in the GSM SIM) while E.214 is used for routing database queries across PSTN networks. Country code Country code - necessary only when dialing to phones in other countries. In international usage telephone numbers are prepended with the country code preceded by a "+" and with spaces in place of hyphens (e.g. "+XX YYY ZZZ ZZZZ"). This allows the reader to choose which Access Code (also known as International Dialing Digit) they need to dial from their location. However it is often quoted together with the international access code which must precede it in the dial string for example "011" in NANP countries (including Canada Bermuda and the United States): "011-XX-YYY-ZZZ-ZZZZ" or "00" in most European countries: "00-XX-YYY-ZZZ-ZZZZ". This can cause confusion as a different Access Code may be used where the reader is located. On GSM networks "+" is an actual character that may be used internally as the international access code rather than simply being a convention. Area code Area codes are also known as Numbering Plan Areas (NPAs) and formerly known as STD codes in the UK. These are necessary (for the most part) only when dialed from outside the code area from mobile phones and (especially within North America) from within overlay plans. Area codes usually indicate geographical areas within one country that are covered by perhaps hundreds of telephone exchanges although the correlation to geographical area is becoming obsolete.2 The area code is usually preceded in the dial string by either the national access code ("0" for many countries "1" in USA and Canada) or the international access code and country code. However this is not always the case especially when 10-digit dialing is used. For example in Montreal Quebec where area codes 514 438 and 450 are currently in use users dial 10-digit number (ex 514 555 1234) dialing a 1 before this results in a recording advising not to dial a 1 as it is a local call. For non-geographic numbers as well as mobile telephones outside of the North American Numbering Plan area the "area code" does not correlate to a particular geographic area. Area codes are often quoted including the national access code for example a number in London: 020 8765 4321. Users must then correctly interpret the "020" as the code for London. If calling from another number in London they merely dial 8765 4321 or if dialing from another country drop the "0" and dial: +44 20 8765 4321. Area codes were introduced in the United States by the Bell System in 1947. The first direct dial long distance call occurred in 1951.3 Local number The local number (or subscriber number) must always be dialed in its entirety. The first few digits in the local number typically indicate smaller geographical areas or individual telephone exchanges. In mobile networks they may indicate a network provider in case the area code does not. Callers from a number with a given area/country code usually do not need to (but optionally may) include the particular area/country code in the number dialed which enables shorter "dial strings" to be used. Devices that dial phone numbers automatically can include the full number with area and access codes since there is no additional annoyance related to dialing extra digits. Standards Although the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) has attempted to promote common standards among nation states numbering plans take different formats in different parts of the world. For example the ITU recommends that member states adopt 00 as their international access code. However as these recommendations are not binding on member states some have not such as the United States Canada and other countries and territories participating in the North American Numbering Plan. The international numbering plan establishes country codes that is area codes that denote nations or groups of nations. The E.164 standard regulates country codes at the international level and sets a maximum length limit on a full international phone number (15 digits). However it is each country's responsibility to define the numbering within its own network. As a result regional area codes may be: A fixed length e.g. three digits in the United States and Canada; two digits in Brazil; one digit in Australia and New Zealand A variable length e.g. between 2 and 5 in Germany Argentina United Kingdom and in Austria; between 1 and 5 in Japan; 1 or 2 in Syria and Peru or Incorporated into the subscriber's number as is the case in many countries such as Spain or Norway. This is known as a "closed" telephone numbering plan. In some cases a trunk code (usually 0) must still be dialed as in Belgium Italy Switzerland South Africa and some locations within the NANP. Hong Kong used to have 1-digit area codes. They were incorporated into the subscriber's numbers back into the 1990s. No trunk code is required. Area code and call pricing In countries other than the United States and Canada the area codes generally determine the cost of a call. Calls within an area code and often a small group of adjacent or overlapping area codes are normally charged at a lower rate than outside the area code. This is not necessarily the case in the United States or Canada where rates are determined by the distance between rate centers. In most United States and Canadian locations area codes cover a sufficiently large territory that different rates will apply within the same area code determined by the distance between rate centers. Each rate center also has a local calling plan which determines which other rate centers regardless of distance are a local call. The area code plus the first three digits following the area code (the NPA-NXX) defines the rate center for any given telephone number. Multiple NPA-NXX combinations often in different area codes comprise each rate center and each rate center is assigned a geographic point known as the rate center's V&H coordinates. The tariff distance in miles between any two rate centers may be calculated using the formula squareroot( ( (V1-V2)**2 + (H1-H2)**2 ) /10 ). Calls between nearby rate centers in different area codes may be cheaper (or even free local calls) as compared to calls to more distant rate centers in the same area code. Rates are set in zones of zero to six miles six to twelve miles and so on with these bands determined on a state-by-state basis for intrastate calls (calls within the same state) and determined by federal regulation for interstate calls (calls which cross a state line). As a specific example callers in the Falls Church Virginia rate center (officially named "Washington Zone 17 VA" -- example numbers beginning with 703-534 V5636 H1600) may make untimed local calls to 31 other nearby rate centers in Virginia Maryland and the District of Columbia in area codes 703 571 202 301 and 240 while calls to distant locations in 703 such as Manassas and Haymarket VA are charged as long distance. Calls within a state regulated by that state's public utilities commission are often higher than rates to call more distant locations in some other state regulated by the Federal Communications Commission. The partial deregulation and introduction of competition for long distance phone services has established other methods of determining call pricing that do not necessarily follow the traditional model. Each year more customers switch to a fixed rate "all-you-can-dial" plan covering the state the United States or all North America generally (as of May 2008 and exclusive of taxes) for approximately $30 per month. Competition with cable telephony and Voice over Internet Protocol services have helped drive the cost of service down for residential and business customers. Special area codes are generally used for free premium rate mobile phone systems (in countries where the mobile phone system is caller pays) and other special rate numbers. There are however some exceptions in some countries (e.g. Egypt) calls are charged at the same rate regardless of area and in others (e.g. the UK) an area code is occasionally treated as two parts with different rates. Dialing plans Example In the U.S. some typical dial plans include: Internal extension numbers of a varying number of digits Local numbers of seven or ten digits Long distance numbers of eleven digits consisting of a 1 then a three-digit area code then a seven-digit number International numbers of any length starting with 011 Many corporate telephone systems use a dialing prefix typically the digit 9 to obtain a line to the public switched telephone network. Example In Australia the following dialing plans can be found: Internal extension numbers of a varying number of digits usually 3 or 4 digits Local numbers of eight digits Long distance numbers of ten digits consisting of a 0 then an area code then eight-digit number International numbers of any length starting with 0011 In Australia the digit 0 is used to obtain a line to the public switched telephone network. Open dialing plans An open dialing plan is one in which there are different dialing arrangements for local and long distance telephone calls. This means that to call another number within the same city or area callers need dial only the number but for calls outside the area an area code is required. In this situation it is customary to show the area code in parentheses signifying that in some cases the area code is optional or is not required as suggested by ITU-T Recommendation E.123. The area code is prefixed by a trunk code (usually "0") which (apart from rare cases such as Italian land lines) is omitted when calling from outside the country. To call a number in Sydney Australia for example: xxxx xxxx (within Sydney and other locations within New South Wales - no area code required) (02) xxxx xxxx (outside New South Wales - the area code is required) +61 2 xxxx xxxx (outside Australia; notice the dropped 0) Note that the "+" is not dialed it signifies that first the international access code must be dialed followed by the country code in this case 61 followed by the number. When using a mobile telephone to place a call all GSM phones and many models using other technologies do allow the + to be entered and this is internally converted to the correct access code based on caller location as the call is made. New Zealand has a special case of an open dialing plan. While most nations require the area code to be dialed only if it is different in New Zealand one needs to dial the area code if the phone is outside the local calling area. For example the town of Waikouaiti is in the Dunedin City Council jurisdiction and has phone numbers (03) 465 7xxx. To call the city council in central Dunedin (03) 477 4000 residents must dial the number in full including the area code even though the area code is the same as Waikouaiti and Dunedin lie in different local calling areas (Palmerston and Dunedin respectively)4 In the United States Canada and other countries or territories using the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) the trunk code is '1' which is also (by coincidence) the country calling code. The same rule also applies in many parts of the NANP including all areas of Canada that still have an open dialing plan. This is not universal as there are locations within the United States that allow long distance calls within the same area code to be dialed as seven digits. In Canada the trunk code (also known as the long distance access code) must also be dialed along with the area code for long distance calls even within the same area code. For example to call a number in Regina: xxx xxxx (within Regina Lumsden and other local areas) 1 (306) xxx xxxx (within the 306 area code but not within the Regina local calling area (e.g. Saskatoon)) 1 (306) xxx xxxx (anywhere within the NANP outside the 306 area code) +1 (306) xxx xxxx (outside NANP) To call a number in San Francisco California the dialing procedure will vary: xxx xxxx (local calls no area code required) 1 (415) xxx xxxx (outside San Francisco and within the U.S. Canada and other countries in the NANP)5 +1 (415) xxx xxxx (outside the NANP - 1 is the country code for the U.S.) However in parts of North America especially where a new area code overlays an older area code dialing the area code or 1 + the area code is now required even for local calls which means that the NANP is now closed in certain areas and open in others. Dialing from mobile phones is different in the U.S. as the trunk code is not necessary although it is still necessary for calling all long distance numbers from a mobile phone in Canada. (Most mobile phones today can be programmed to automatically add a frequently-called area code as a prefix allowing calls within the desired area to be dialed by the user as seven-digit numbers though sent by the phone as 10-digit numbers.) In some parts of the United States especially northeastern states such as Pennsylvania served by Verizon Communications the full 10-digit number must be dialed. If the call is not local the call will not complete unless the dialed number is preceded by a 1. In this situation where the area code is not optional the area code is not enclosed in parentheses. Thus: 610 xxx xxxx (local calls area code required; one of two completion options for mobile phones within the U.S.) 1 610 xxx xxxx (intra-area code charged calls; second of two completion options for mobile phones within the U.S.) +1 610 xxx xxxx (outside the NANP) In areas served by AT&T in California pre-recorded messages instruct customers that use of the local area code within the area code is not permissible and that only the xxx xxxx format is permitted. Many organizations have private branch exchange systems which permit dialing the access digit(s) for an outside line (usually 9 or 8) a "1" and finally the local area code and xxx xxxx in areas without overlays. This "feature" is unintentionally helpful for employees who reside in one area code and work in an area code with one two or three adjacent area codes. "1+" dialing to any area code by an employee can be done quickly with all exceptions processed by the private branch exchange and passed onto the public switched telephone network. Open and closed dialing plans should not be confused with open and closed numbering plans. A closed numbering plan such as found in North America features fixed length area codes and local numbers. An open numbering plan as found in assorted countries that have not yet standardized features variance in length of area code or local number or both. Closed dialing plans are rare where numbering plans are open. Closed dialing plans A closed dialing plan is one in which the subscriber's full number is used for all calls even in the same area. This has traditionally been the case in small countries and territories where area codes have not been required. However there has been a trend in many countries towards making all numbers a standard length and incorporating the area code into the subscriber's number. This usually makes the use of a trunk code obsolete. For example to call Oslo in Norway before 1992 one would dial: xxx xxx (within Oslo - no area code required) (02) xxx xxx (within Norway - outside Oslo) +47 2 xxx xxx (outside Norway) After 1992 this changed to a closed eight-digit numbering plan e.g.: 22xx xxxx (within Norway - including Oslo) +47 22xx xxxx (outside Norway) In other countries such as France Belgium Switzerland South Africa and some parts of North America where the dialing plan is closed the trunk code is retained for domestic calls whether local or national e.g. Paris 01 xx xx xx xx (outside France +33 1 xxxx xxxx) Brussels 02 xxx xxxx (outside Belgium +32 2 xxx xxxx) Geneva 022 xxx xxxx (outside Switzerland +41 22 xxx xxxx) Cape Town 021 xxx xxxx (outside South Africa +27 21 xxx xxxx) New York 1 212 xxx xxxx (outside the North American Numbering Plan +1 212 xxx xxxx) while some like Italy require the initial zero to be dialled even for calls from outside the country e.g. Rome 06 xxxx xxxx (outside Italy +39 06 xxxx xxxx) Further there are locations with closed dialing plans in the NANP that require the full phone number including area code to be dialed for all calls but the trunk code is required for only long distance calls even in the same area code. While the use of full national dialing is less user-friendly than using only a local number without the area code the increased use of mobile phones which can store numbers means that this is of decreasing importance. It also makes easier to display numbers in the international format as no trunk code is requiredhence a number in Prague Czech Republic can now be displayed as: 2xx xxx xxx (inside Czech Republic) +420 2xx xxx xxx (outside Czech Republic) as opposed to before September 21 2002:6 02 / xx xx xx xx (inside Czech Republic) +420 2 / xx xx xx xx (outside Czech Republic) Satellite phone numbering plans Satellite phones are usually issued with numbers in a special country calling code. For example Inmarsat satellite phones are issued with code +870 while Global Mobile Satellite System providers such as Iridium issue numbers in country code +881 ("Global Mobile Satellite System") or +882 ("International Networks"). Some satellite phones are issued with ordinary phone numbers such as Globalstar satellite phones issued with NANP telephone numbers. Inmarsat:+870: SNAC (Single Network Access Code) ICO Global: +881 0 +881 1. Ellipso: +881 2 +881 3. Iridium: +881 6 +881 7. Globalstar: +881 8 +881 9. Emsat: +882 13. Thuraya: +882 16. ACeS: +882 20. Special services Some country calling codes are issued for special services or for international/inter regional zones. +388 5 shared code for groups of nations +388 3 European Telephony Numbering Space Europe-wide services (discontinued) +800 International Freephone (UIFN) +808 reserved for Shared Cost Services +878 Universal Personal Telecommunications services +881 Global Mobile Satellite System +882 International Networks +888 - international disaster relief operations +979 International Premium Rate Service +991 International Telecommunications Public Correspondence Service trial (ITPCS) +996 9 - Kyrgyzstan PG.R.S. Server +999 reserved for future global service Numbering plans by global regions Telephone numbers in the Americas Telephone numbers in Oceania Telephone numbers in Europe Telephone numbers in Asia Telephone numbers in Africa Dial plan syntax The following syntax used to identify a dial plan in a digit map is adapted from RFC 2705page needed. Dial Plan Syntax To specify a Enter the following Result Digit 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 * Identifies a specific digit (do not use #) Range digit-digit Identifies any digit dialed that is included in the range Range digit-digit digit Specifies a range as a comma separated list Wild card x x matches any single digit that is dialed Wild card . . matches an arbitrary number of digits Timer T Indicates that an additional time out period of 4 seconds should take place before automatic dialing starts Some dial plan examples using the above syntax look as follows: Dial Plan Syntax Examples For calls to Users dial Dial plan Internal Extension a two digit number xx Local Number 9 (if required for an outside line) and then a seven digit number 9xxxxxxxT Emergency 911 911 Local Operators 9 (if required for an outside line) then 0 90T Long Distance 9 (if required) 1 area code and local number 91xxxxxxxxxx International 9 (if required) 011 any number of additional digits 9011x.T Numbering Plan Indicator The Numbering Plan Indicator (NPI) is a number which is defined in the ITU standard Q.713 paragraph 3.4.2.3.3 indicating the numbering plan of the attached telephone number. NPIs can be found in SCCP and SMS messages. As of 2004update the following numbering plans and their respective Numbering Plan Indicator values have been defined: NPI Description Standard 0 unknown 1 ISDN Telephony E.164 2 generic 3 data X.121 4 telex F69 5 maritime mobile E.210 and E.211 6 land mobile E.212 7 ISDN/mobile E.214 See also List of North American Numbering Plan area codes for the U.S. Canada Caribbean and Pacific Ocean islands List of United Kingdom dialling codes Carrier access code External links List of ITU-T Recommendation E.164 assigned country codes as of 15 April 2009 List of ITU-T Recommendation E.164 Dialling Procedures as of 1 March 2010 World Telephone Numbering Guide References Lincmad.com Saunders Amy (2009-05-16). "Cell-phone age turns the 614 into just numbers". The Columbus Dispatch. http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/localnews/stories/2009/05/16/0AREACODES.ARTART05-16-09A15JDSM84.html. Retrieved 2009-08-21.  1951: First Direct-Dial Transcontinental Telephone Call Technology Timeline AT&T Labs. 2010 Otago White Pages. Yellow Pages Group. pp. 8 80 177.  Note: From mobile phones the initial 1 is not required but is recommended. "slovac pln veejnch telefonnch st" (in Czech) (PDF). Telekomunikan vstnk (Czech Telecommunication Office) 9/2000. 2000-09-25. ISSN 0862-724X. http://www.ctu.cz/1/download/cislovaci-plan-verejnych-telefonnich-siti1114435245.pdf. Retrieved 2006-10-13.  (in Czech language) Numbering Plan for Public Telephone Networks - annotation of the article in Englishdead link

Code Orange advisory prompted by 'spike' in ozone pollution
Code Orange issued to Memphis area by Shelby County Health Department thanks to a "late spike" in dangerous ozone pollution.


http://www.eminento.co.jp/areacode