[2455] in North American Network Operators' Group

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Re: Address "portability"

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Per Gregers Bilse)
Sat Apr 6 11:06:30 1996

From: Per Gregers Bilse <bilse@EU.net>
Date: Sat, 6 Apr 1996 18:03:53 +0200
In-Reply-To: <5327.828730847@surfnet.nl>
To: Erik-Jan Bos <erik-jan.bos@surfnet.nl>
Cc: Peter Lothberg <roll@stupi.se>, Eric Kozowski <kozowski@structured.net>,
        nanog@merit.edu

On Apr 5, 21:00, Erik-Jan Bos <erik-jan.bos@surfnet.nl> wrote:
> When I take my GSM-phone to Hong Kong (or to Stockholm) my grandmother
> is still able to give me a call while I am there on the same number as
> when I am at home... Address portability at work...

Not really, your phone doesn't have a routable number as such.  It
has a name which happens to be a number; and it can be reached
outside its natural habitat after 30-90 seconds of searching,
probing, and call setup.  The Internet already handles name
portability, even much better than the phone system.  And there's no
end to what could be done if dial-up users were charged two dollars
per minute for out-of-habitat traffic, whether voice or 9.6kbit data.

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