| Joined: Mar 2002 Posts: 3 Junior Member | Junior Member Joined: Mar 2002 Posts: 3 | Hi, I don't know if it is the right place to post this. I know that phone technicians when they come to your house to work with the phone line, they call a phone number. The number or the system (computerized) says that the number you are calling from is: blah blah. So the phone technicians know what number is on the phone line they are working on. I live in Canada (Ontario), and BELL technicians call a 1-800 number. But I don't know the number, or any other way or number to know the number I am calling from. I don't want to call my cell to see the number. Can anybody help? Nick at [email protected] | | |
▼ Sponsored Links ▼
▲ Sponsored Links ▲
| | | Joined: Oct 2002 Posts: 955 UGN Super Poster | UGN Super Poster Joined: Oct 2002 Posts: 955 | Also there are things called ANACs (Automatic Number Announcement Something) that will read back your phone number. I did a quick search and included some links, if they old, search yourself http://artofhacking.com/files/sounds/index1.htm http://students.db.erau.edu/~weddj/phun.html I just did this and dunno if its what you looking for, but saw it in a tutorial @ neworder. Goto www.ureach.com and make an account. Write down the info. Call the number/extension with your cell phone. Now wait a few minutes atelasst, and check online and in your messages you will see the calling number. I know jackshit about phones and that is all I got. | | | | Joined: Mar 2002 Posts: 3 Junior Member | Junior Member Joined: Mar 2002 Posts: 3 | The keyword (ANAC) is useful. I am doing research. That's what I needed. Thank you. | | | | Joined: Feb 2002 Posts: 7,203 Likes: 11 Community Owner | Community Owner Joined: Feb 2002 Posts: 7,203 Likes: 11 | They call an ANAC to get your number. Their not that hard to get, not really that useful :x. | | | | Joined: Mar 2002 Posts: 533 Enforcement Admin | Enforcement Admin Joined: Mar 2002 Posts: 533 | In some places 311 is an ANAC... | | | | Joined: Jan 2003 Posts: 36 Junior Member | Junior Member Joined: Jan 2003 Posts: 36 | Actually i'm from Ontario as well, and i know theres a lot of local ANAC's, call backs, and various test numbers. Most phone technicians i've seen around here use the local numbers and not 800's.
-windead
| | | | Joined: May 2002 Posts: 18 UGN Newbie | UGN Newbie Joined: May 2002 Posts: 18 | The one I've always used belongs to MCI. You dial 1-800-444-4444 and it says, "Thanks for calling MCI! We see you're calling from xxx-xxx-xxxx..."
I actually pay for the ureach.com service for my job and works pretty good as an ANI. The only thing is, they have to leave a message for you to see their number. The cool thing about ureach.com is that if someone is calling your home phone using *67 all the time and you want to know who it is, just forward all your phone calls to your toll-free ureach.com number! *67 is useless against ANI, as long as they leave a message you'll get their number. | | | | Joined: Feb 2002 Posts: 7,203 Likes: 11 Community Owner | Community Owner Joined: Feb 2002 Posts: 7,203 Likes: 11 | Yeh RBCP, thats a good one, we've used it alot.
*67 doesn't work against toll free numbers. The reason for this is because the toll numbers are in essance private exchanges like the various government exchanges.
Windead, every state has numerous anac's, call backs, loops, test numbers, etc. Its because tech's are trained to use local numbers and not the toll free numbers. The toll free numbers are in essance a toll free foreign exchange to another number, which is local elsewhere.
If you read my PSAP text in the kbase you'll understand this a little better. | | |
Forums41 Topics33,840 Posts68,858 Members2,176 | Most Online3,253 Jan 13th, 2020 | | | |