On Wed, 13 Apr 2016, John R. Levine wrote:
NANP geographical numbers can be located to a switch (give or take number portability within a LATA), but non-geographic numbers can really go anywhere. On the third hand, it's still true that the large majority of them are in the U.S.
Would you agree that 408-921 is a geographic number?
No. It's a prefix, assigned to the at&t switch in west San Jose.
And further to that, throw in Local Number Portability (LNP) and you really need to know the full number in order to know which switch the specific number is assigned to. Not all 408-921 prefixed numbers will go to that switch in West San Jose.
I guarantee you that there are phones within that prefix within US/Calif/LATA-1 and also some well outside of that, probably not even in the same country.
Who said anything about phones? Could you describe what "geographic numbers can be located to a switch" means to you?
In the same way that an IP address and it's "location" is amorphous, the physical location in which a phone call to a given phone number is answered could be anywhere. There could be a forward on it that sends a call made to US number +1 408-192-4135[1] to a phone in Latvia. Or it rings to a computer in London, which forwards it to Brussels. A phone number, like an IP address, can only imply a physical location. It is not a guarantee, and that hint can range from moderately accurate to wildly wrong. Beckman [1] Intentionally invalid NANPA, for example purposes only --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Peter Beckman Internet Guy beckman@angryox.com http://www.angryox.com/ ---------------------------------------------------------------------------