Call Centres
Dreadful pits of hellish torture for both customer and the people who work there. Press 1 to leave an amusing story, press 2 for us to send you a lunchbox full of turds.
( , Thu 3 Sep 2009, 12:20)
Dreadful pits of hellish torture for both customer and the people who work there. Press 1 to leave an amusing story, press 2 for us to send you a lunchbox full of turds.
( , Thu 3 Sep 2009, 12:20)
« Go Back
Directory Enquiries
When I was in Australia I used to use the payphone to call back home, usually late evening when pissed (phonebox was outside the pub) Being pissed I was also a bit forgetful and had trouble remembering the international dialling code and what digits not to dial. The directory service was one of those speech recognition things. The conversation went thus:
Machine: please state the name and suburb (something like that)
Me: Hippopotamus, England
Machine: Y'what cobber?
Me: Hippopotamus, England
Machine: Sorry mate, I can't understand your silly English accent. I'll put you through to Bruce.
I got put through to a real person and the conversation went something like this:
Operator: Hi, you're through to Bruce. I understand you're after a number for a Hippopotamus in England? (he sniggered a bit)
Me: Nope, not really.
Operator: I thought not. You don't get hippos in England. You get badgers though don't you?
*****brief chat about badgers follows here********
Operator: So to get back on track, what is the number you are after?
Me: Just the dialling code please
Operator: It's 0044 (is that right? I forget now).
Me: Thanks mate
Operator: No, thank you - that brightened up my evening.
I hangup, insert $2.00 (which lasts a suprising amount of time), call home and mumble hello to the folks.
Fast foward 1 week and repeat. I got the same operator. He remembered the call, was quite amused, and was most helpful once again.
( , Wed 9 Sep 2009, 16:51, 7 replies)
When I was in Australia I used to use the payphone to call back home, usually late evening when pissed (phonebox was outside the pub) Being pissed I was also a bit forgetful and had trouble remembering the international dialling code and what digits not to dial. The directory service was one of those speech recognition things. The conversation went thus:
Machine: please state the name and suburb (something like that)
Me: Hippopotamus, England
Machine: Y'what cobber?
Me: Hippopotamus, England
Machine: Sorry mate, I can't understand your silly English accent. I'll put you through to Bruce.
I got put through to a real person and the conversation went something like this:
Operator: Hi, you're through to Bruce. I understand you're after a number for a Hippopotamus in England? (he sniggered a bit)
Me: Nope, not really.
Operator: I thought not. You don't get hippos in England. You get badgers though don't you?
*****brief chat about badgers follows here********
Operator: So to get back on track, what is the number you are after?
Me: Just the dialling code please
Operator: It's 0044 (is that right? I forget now).
Me: Thanks mate
Operator: No, thank you - that brightened up my evening.
I hangup, insert $2.00 (which lasts a suprising amount of time), call home and mumble hello to the folks.
Fast foward 1 week and repeat. I got the same operator. He remembered the call, was quite amused, and was most helpful once again.
( , Wed 9 Sep 2009, 16:51, 7 replies)
Er, not quite...
Technically, the UK country code is +44.
The 0011 part is the code to dial out of Australia, irregardless of the country you are calling.
So, to call the UK from Australia you would dial "001144 [UK phone number less leading zero]".
But, to call the UK from another country it would be something else of the form "[other country's exit code] 44 [UK phone number less leading zero]" and, indeed, in certain countries the exit code also varies depending on the network that you're using.
( , Thu 10 Sep 2009, 0:57, closed)
Technically, the UK country code is +44.
The 0011 part is the code to dial out of Australia, irregardless of the country you are calling.
So, to call the UK from Australia you would dial "001144 [UK phone number less leading zero]".
But, to call the UK from another country it would be something else of the form "[other country's exit code] 44 [UK phone number less leading zero]" and, indeed, in certain countries the exit code also varies depending on the network that you're using.
( , Thu 10 Sep 2009, 0:57, closed)
Furthermore...
Sorry to be pedantic, just that this is a subject that seems to cause a lot of people a lot of confusion, so I figured I'd chip in in case anyone reading this inadvertently memorised something that caused them problems later on.
( , Thu 10 Sep 2009, 0:59, closed)
Sorry to be pedantic, just that this is a subject that seems to cause a lot of people a lot of confusion, so I figured I'd chip in in case anyone reading this inadvertently memorised something that caused them problems later on.
( , Thu 10 Sep 2009, 0:59, closed)
Yep...
...001144 is correct.
People who mistakenly dial 0001144 are a little surprised when they get asked which emergency service they require. The extra zero takes them straight through to triple-zero - the Oz equivalent of 999 / 911...
( , Wed 9 Sep 2009, 16:58, closed)
...001144 is correct.
People who mistakenly dial 0001144 are a little surprised when they get asked which emergency service they require. The extra zero takes them straight through to triple-zero - the Oz equivalent of 999 / 911...
( , Wed 9 Sep 2009, 16:58, closed)
I have lived in Australia ...
for more years than I care to confess to.
But I have only once met a man called Bruce and a woman called Sheila. They were an elderly married couple visiting from Aberdeen.
( , Thu 10 Sep 2009, 4:36, closed)
for more years than I care to confess to.
But I have only once met a man called Bruce and a woman called Sheila. They were an elderly married couple visiting from Aberdeen.
( , Thu 10 Sep 2009, 4:36, closed)
« Go Back