I am not good with numbers and wouldn’t have a clue as to how to solve this problem. It has to do with phone numbers.
Given any prefix aka 719 you have 7 numbers after that to use for phone numbers.
I don’t know all the rules behind phone numbers but if you start with 200-0000, and can use one and zero except in the first number, how many phone numbers can assigned under each that could be conceivable used under one area code?
I was watching NBC Nightly News and they didn’t state how many phone numbers could be listed under each area code…
So in Colorado, that’s 32 million phone number possibilities. If you divide that by 4 million, the reported amount of population (of course this doesn’t include businesses) each person then has 8 phone number possibilites?
Please correct me if this is wrong…like I said, I am not good with numbers.
Me? I have 3, main phone, data phone and cell phone.
Now to throw in another bend, please forgive for my lack of math skills, but I would like to know how many 10 digit phone numbers is available (minus 911 and 411)
Don’t call me stupid as I am stumped on this and can’t figure out what the total possibilities are.
shoot, you have to factor in that you can’t really use 1 as the first number again, right? If there are other rules I have forgotten please factor that in and include the rule.
That’s a correct response to the OP but there are other limitations, right? Like 555 is directory assistance (?), and I think 9 is reserved for special numbers like 911. What other limitations are there?
I assume you’re talking about phone numbers in the USA.
Area codes cannot start with 0 or 1, and have three digits. (It used to be that the second digit of area codes had to be a 0 or a 1, but that is no longer true.)
Phone numbers cannot start with a 0 or a 1, and always have seven digits (so that excludes those three-digit “special information” numbers.)
Solution: (eight possibilities for the first digit of the area code * 10 possibilities for the second digit of the area code * 10 possibilities for the third digit of the area code) * (eight possibilities for the first digit of the phone number * 10 possibilities of the second digit of the phone number …)
So, based on the population of the US, which excludes other areas that use the same number scheme (aka Canada, US Virgin Islands, etc.) there are around 274 million people, which makes it about 23.35 phone numbers per person in the US.
Another problem, that’s hotly debated in California, especially by people opposed to telephone overlays, is that utility commissions allocate phone numbers in blocks of 10,000 IIRC, and if a small phone service provider (e.g. cell phone company) only uses part of that block, the other ones are still unavailable. Which is why in the LA area they’re adding new area codes at the rate of one a year or so.
Arnold, I believe that the FCC has just modified that 10,000 value down significantly - just this week, if I’m remembering what I read in the paper right.
I have to admit, though, that searching for proof of this claim on the web came up empty.