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Norway: Landlines will no longer be supported

66 pointsby zabakiover 2 years ago

14 comments

Brajeshwarover 2 years ago
Around 2012-2013, my 5&#x2F;6-ish year old daughter found an old wired phone I kept around and she was astonished when I told her that wires used to connect phones. &quot;You need wires to phone call? But why!&quot;<p>A few years back, in India, competition amongst the ISP&#x2F;Telephone providers were heating up and everything became so cheap and readily available. I got Jio for fun, and then Airtel in hope to stop them from calling&#x2F;texting&#x2F;spamming me. Now, I have two additional Internet fibers coming in besides the primary, and they came with free (I think, Unlimited) phone calls. So, I added two wired phones and kept them.<p>Now, my 2nd daughter (5-ish year old) is intrigue and knows she can talk to her grandparents on the other end. She is brimming with triumph and fun that she knows the &quot;numbers to grandma and grandpa.&quot;<p>Growing up, phones were a luxury and I know the ins-out of the only telephone exchange in our tiny home-town, where I know quite a few top executives (friends&#x27; father&#x2F;uncles). I love the nostalgia of having a wired phone and I want that rotary ones.
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account-5over 2 years ago
In the UK, unless you&#x27;re on virgin (there might be a few others I&#x27;m unaware of), you&#x27;re pretty much forced to have a landline for which you&#x27;re charged line rental, even if you don&#x27;t or will never use it.
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timonokoover 2 years ago
You will never forget the numbers. Bloody waste of memory bits.<p>113 (1952) ; Human operator on small island<p>444303 (1958)<p>782502 (1966)<p>1484997 (1978) ; My first personal phone, It was also routed to my cell phone until 2018.
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throwawaaarrghover 2 years ago
getting misty-eyed thinking of all the kids who&#x27;ll never become phone phreaks. man, early technology was fun.<p>maybe we should bring back phreaking just as a game. is there such a thing as a hacker museum? we could set up a mini exchange, payphones, pbx, conf lines, etc and let kids hack it. and there would be no website; you&#x27;d have to connect to the BBS to get information, or join a party line.
aww_dangover 2 years ago
&gt; In connection with the remediation of the copper network, we have been clear that no one should lose their phone. Either we move them to <i>fiber</i> or mobile. For some very few people, we have been forced to find special solutions.
zabakiover 2 years ago
Tbh it came as a bit of shock for me. Purely because of the sentimental value. I haven&#x27;t had a landline in almost 20 years but I still remember the phone number we grew up with. Once I start a family I also thought &quot;the family&quot; needed a phone number, not just a phone number to each person. I guess that is still possible over mobile phone lines though. I was surprised nevertheless.
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tibbydudezaover 2 years ago
We all stil have a telephone pole in the yard - during the last refurbishment I asked the contractor to cut the wire from my office jack to just short of telephone box - cap it and loop it and use a cable tie to put it on the pole.<p>We now have an underground fibre to all the homes in our suburb.<p>US Robotics will always be special to me and nothing to do with robots.
phireover 2 years ago
In NZ, landlines are also on their way out.<p>It&#x27;s not quite unsupported, but you can&#x27;t sign up for a new copper landline plan unless there is no mobile coverage and no fibre coverage at your property. Otherwise, for anyone who really wants a &quot;landline&quot; you are getting VOIP over fibre or VOIP over mobile broadband.<p>87% of population have access to the new fibre network, and the old copper network is just redundant and unmantained in most built-up areas. Chorus recent started actively forcing remaining customers off it in some areas.<p>Personally, I&#x27;ve been without a landline for 10 years, and even my parents got rid of their landline a few years back. It&#x27;s just cheaper to use a mobile phones instead (and in NZ, mobile phones come with the additional benefit of never receiving spam calls)
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INTPenisover 2 years ago
Norway also shut down their old radio network. Which was sad to me as a history nerd because I remember reading about the heroic people who smuggled radios in briefcases and in attics just to bring news to people during german occupation.
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bennyp101over 2 years ago
The UK is getting rid of the copper network as well (I think originally it was supposed to be 2025? But I think it’s been pushed back)<p>There is already a push to not sell phone lines that support voice, so you just get a line that supports broadband only, getting more people used to voip - but there are so many independent ISPs popping up (now that the by ducting is available to use) that they are chucking full fibre left right and centre.<p>Will be interesting to see how it plays out regarding emergency calls when it’s fully switched off.
DoingIsLearningover 2 years ago
In the event of a disaster (earthquake, flood, blizzard) is voip infrastructure more or less &#x27;fragile&#x27; than a copper landline?<p>I assume this deprication will probably be cost related but I am curious about the implications on the emergency side of things.
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PostOnceover 2 years ago
New Zealand is also getting rid of its copper network -- I held on to my connection for as long as possible. I still have it, they haven&#x27;t actually shut it off yet, but they have warned me that it&#x27;s coming in some number of months.
zabakiover 2 years ago
I wonder how it will be for services that depend on landlines like fax.<p>fax is still used at all medical centres, pharmacies, hospitals, etc. would this influence those businesses?
noncomlover 2 years ago
Future generations will wonder why do we call the mobile phones “mobile”
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