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New Houston did both
When our 2nd area code was added, the city was split with 713 for addresses inside the beltway and 281 for those outside. There was a lot of expense for those businesses with new numbers - having to print up new letterhead, notify customers, etc.

When the 3rd area code was added they went with the overlay plan due to all of the complaints about the costs from before.

My thoughts on the matter was they should just have added 1 extra digit to the end of the phone number and increase the amount of numbers 10 fold. Any existing number would have a 0 as the new last digit, so if you saw an old-style number anywere you could still dial it by adding a 0 to the end.
Darrell Spice, Jr.                      [link|http://spiceware.org/gallery/ArtisticOverpass|Artistic Overpass]\n[link|http://www.spiceware.org/|SpiceWare] - We don't do Windows, it's too much of a chore
New Sounds like they didn't give enough notice.
The Australian public had *years* of notice. And the details about *each* step of the migration was public. We had some media flurry when the first 8-digit numbers appeared due to PABX software not understanding 8-digit numbers, but the regulatory authority's response was pretty much "you've known for years that it was happening - it's not out fault you won't upgrade your PABX software".

Wade.

Is it enough to love
Is it enough to breathe
Somebody rip my heart out
And leave me here to bleed
 
Is it enough to die
Somebody save my life
I'd rather be Anything but Ordinary
Please

-- "Anything but Ordinary" by Avril Lavigne.

New wasn't much
if [link|http://frodo.bruderhof.com/areacode/|this] list is correct then it was 8 months.
11/02/1996 - 06/07/1997 Area Code 281 : splits off area code 713 in Texas

Looks like most lead time was less than a year in the states.
Darrell Spice, Jr.                      [link|http://spiceware.org/gallery/ArtisticOverpass|Artistic Overpass]\n[link|http://www.spiceware.org/|SpiceWare] - We don't do Windows, it's too much of a chore
New Re: Houston did both
When our 2nd area code was added, the city was split with 713 for addresses inside the beltway and 281 for those outside. There was a lot of expense for those businesses with new numbers - having to print up new letterhead, notify customers, etc.

When the 3rd area code was added they went with the overlay plan due to all of the complaints about the costs from before.

Pennsylvania gave up on splitting areas because numbers where being added so fast they couldn't keep up. That seems to have peaked though, the real problem was back in the 80's when home users started using multiple numbers. Between cell phones, modems and faxes, even home users might have 3 or 4 numbers.

Jay
New The reason our "Bell system" will NEVER increase...
...the number of digits in a phone number has to do with the classic "rule of 7" which their own researchers discovered. Since it's their discovery, they will stick with it come hell or high water. (Oh, and that plus the fact that it would be "confusing"...)
jb4
shrub\ufffdbish (Am., from shrub + rubbish, after the derisive name for America's 43 president; 2003) n. 1. a form of nonsensical political doubletalk wherein the speaker attempts to defend the indefensible by lying, obfuscation, or otherwise misstating the facts; GIBBERISH. 2. any of a collection of utterances from America's putative 43rd president. cf. BULLSHIT

New rule of 7 is long gone
we're on 10 digit dialing afterall...
Darrell Spice, Jr.                      [link|http://spiceware.org/gallery/ArtisticOverpass|Artistic Overpass]\n[link|http://www.spiceware.org/|SpiceWare] - We don't do Windows, it's too much of a chore
New Yes, of course
But still, the rule of seven has already been invoked to shut down the 8-digit solution.

For me, I don't really see the diffeence between "duh-duh-DUH...duh-duh-DUH...duh-duh-duh-DUH" and "duh-duh-DUH...duh-duh-duh-DUH...duh-duh-duh-DUH". But then, I don't find the Germanic system particularly "confusing' either. Like I said, I'm a contrarian. (And I like to think I have an IQ somewhere above 75, which seems to be the average for Murikans these days.)
jb4
shrub\ufffdbish (Am., from shrub + rubbish, after the derisive name for America's 43 president; 2003) n. 1. a form of nonsensical political doubletalk wherein the speaker attempts to defend the indefensible by lying, obfuscation, or otherwise misstating the facts; GIBBERISH. 2. any of a collection of utterances from America's putative 43rd president. cf. BULLSHIT

New I think that rule is slightly faulty anyway.
And that is because the grouping of digits in a phone number influences the memorability. Two groups of 4 digits are no harder to remember than one of 3 and one of 4. And those researchers might be astonished to discover that the Aussie mobile phone numbers are also memorable: and they're of the form 04xx yyy zzz! So much for the "7-digit" rule, as Darrell pointed out.

Wade.

Is it enough to love
Is it enough to breathe
Somebody rip my heart out
And leave me here to bleed
 
Is it enough to die
Somebody save my life
I'd rather be Anything but Ordinary
Please

-- "Anything but Ordinary" by Avril Lavigne.

     Phone numbers and i18n - (Yendor) - (39)
         Only thing I would question - (jake123)
         If you want to make your display useful - (Arkadiy) - (3)
             What else could you store it as? -NT - (drewk)
             Re: If you want to make your display useful - (Yendor) - (1)
                 Country code, area code, main number, extension -NT - (Arkadiy)
         Re: Phone numbers and i18n - (JayMehaffey) - (1)
             Re: Phone numbers and i18n - (Yendor)
         Basically, you're totally wrong, and your colleague right. - (CRConrad) - (22)
             American users are helped by it - (drewk) - (17)
                 In Charlotte, and surrounding area,... - (a6l6e6x)
                 No - (tuberculosis) - (15)
                     True, if everything's 10-digit no need for the '1' -NT - (drewk)
                     the leading one is to route to a stp for long distance - (boxley) - (2)
                         I know why its there - (tuberculosis) - (1)
                             duh, forgot about that :-) - (boxley)
                     Here too - (SpiceWare)
                     Well, (probably because I'm a contrarian) - (jb4) - (9)
                         Note on "overlaid" area codes. - (static) - (8)
                             Houston did both - (SpiceWare) - (7)
                                 Sounds like they didn't give enough notice. - (static) - (1)
                                     wasn't much - (SpiceWare)
                                 Re: Houston did both - (JayMehaffey)
                                 The reason our "Bell system" will NEVER increase... - (jb4) - (3)
                                     rule of 7 is long gone - (SpiceWare) - (2)
                                         Yes, of course - (jb4) - (1)
                                             I think that rule is slightly faulty anyway. - (static)
             In A5a, it works like this. - (Another Scott) - (1)
                 wrt Canada - (jake123)
             Also, a11y. - (pwhysall)
             That's why you're an international linguist... - (jb4)
         I've had a little experience storing I18n phone numbers. - (static) - (3)
             Maybe you have to assume some level of user knowledge - (drewk) - (2)
                 Not to mention, having an International internal phone sys. - (folkert)
                 Definitely. - (static)
         The only thing you can assume - (tuberculosis) - (4)
             Have to disagree with that one - (drewk) - (2)
                 It would be a LOT of work - (tuberculosis)
                 No, Todd is right - (tonytib)
             Re: The only thing you can assume - (JayMehaffey)

It's a Berkeley DB file - neat! I love retro.
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