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Default The Most Expensive Pay Phone Call in History

You'll need a VERY LARGE Wallet to make this call....
(Or a fleet of Semi-Trucks filled with Dimes).

http://www.thisisarecording.com/z/248-771-0023.mp3


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On 02/12/2016 03:43 AM, wrote:
You'll need a VERY LARGE Wallet to make this call....
(Or a fleet of Semi-Trucks filled with Dimes).

http://www.thisisarecording.com/z/248-771-0023.mp3





Sometime back around 1968 I called a friend... on the East coast... from
a pay phone. The operator would have me put in a quarter every three
minutes or something like that until I eventually ran out of change.


When I ran out, she told me that I could complete my conversation at
which time I was informed that I owed a dollar and when I got the proper
change all I had to do was dial "operator" and ask for #23, tell her who
I was and then deposit what I owed.


What interesting times those were. My guess is that if I never "paid up"
they would have reversed the charge, I don't know.
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On Friday, February 12, 2016 at 6:58:34 AM UTC-5, philo wrote:
On 02/12/2016 03:43 AM, wrote:
You'll need a VERY LARGE Wallet to make this call....
(Or a fleet of Semi-Trucks filled with Dimes).

http://www.thisisarecording.com/z/248-771-0023.mp3





Sometime back around 1968 I called a friend... on the East coast... from
a pay phone. The operator would have me put in a quarter every three
minutes or something like that until I eventually ran out of change.


When I ran out, she told me that I could complete my conversation at
which time I was informed that I owed a dollar and when I got the proper
change all I had to do was dial "operator" and ask for #23, tell her who
I was and then deposit what I owed.


What interesting times those were. My guess is that if I never "paid up"
they would have reversed the charge, I don't know.


Back around that time we used to make "free" collect calls.

If you wanted to let someone back home know that you had arrived at your destination
or pass along some other pre-arranged piece of information, you could initiate a
collect call through the operator. When the party on the receiving end would be asked
if they would accept the charges, they would just say "No."

Since it was all prearranged, the collect call itself passed along the information.
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On 02/12/2016 06:19 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:


What interesting times those were. My guess is that if I never "paid up"
they would have reversed the charge, I don't know.


Back around that time we used to make "free" collect calls.

If you wanted to let someone back home know that you had arrived at your destination
or pass along some other pre-arranged piece of information, you could initiate a
collect call through the operator. When the party on the receiving end would be asked
if they would accept the charges, they would just say "No."

Since it was all prearranged, the collect call itself passed along the information.




Yep, we did stuff like that all the time. Once when we went to Chicago,
a friend of mine called home just to let his mother know all was OK.

He also tried to get a message through by talking. but the phone company
knew enough to have audio off until paid for
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On Friday, February 12, 2016 at 8:01:09 AM UTC-5, philo wrote:
On 02/12/2016 06:19 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:


What interesting times those were. My guess is that if I never "paid up"
they would have reversed the charge, I don't know.


Back around that time we used to make "free" collect calls.

If you wanted to let someone back home know that you had arrived at your destination
or pass along some other pre-arranged piece of information, you could initiate a
collect call through the operator. When the party on the receiving end would be asked
if they would accept the charges, they would just say "No."

Since it was all prearranged, the collect call itself passed along the information.




Yep, we did stuff like that all the time. Once when we went to Chicago,
a friend of mine called home just to let his mother know all was OK.


The city was different, but yep...that was the most common use of the
technique. Lot's of teen-age road trips back then. ;-)


He also tried to get a message through by talking. but the phone company
knew enough to have audio off until paid for


Tru dat!



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On 2/12/2016 6:19 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Friday, February 12, 2016 at 6:58:34 AM UTC-5, philo wrote:
On 02/12/2016 03:43 AM, wrote:
You'll need a VERY LARGE Wallet to make this call....
(Or a fleet of Semi-Trucks filled with Dimes).

http://www.thisisarecording.com/z/248-771-0023.mp3





Sometime back around 1968 I called a friend... on the East coast... from
a pay phone. The operator would have me put in a quarter every three
minutes or something like that until I eventually ran out of change.


When I ran out, she told me that I could complete my conversation at
which time I was informed that I owed a dollar and when I got the proper
change all I had to do was dial "operator" and ask for #23, tell her who
I was and then deposit what I owed.


What interesting times those were. My guess is that if I never "paid up"
they would have reversed the charge, I don't know.


Back around that time we used to make "free" collect calls.

If you wanted to let someone back home know that you had arrived at your destination
or pass along some other pre-arranged piece of information, you could initiate a
collect call through the operator. When the party on the receiving end would be asked
if they would accept the charges, they would just say "No."

Since it was all prearranged, the collect call itself passed along the information.


I remember being told to do that when I was going out of town. Mom said
she'd know I was safe and wouldn't accept the charges.

--
Maggie
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On 2/12/2016 4:58 AM, philo wrote:
Sometime back around 1968 I called a friend... on the East coast... from a pay
phone. The operator would have me put in a quarter every three minutes or
something like that until I eventually ran out of change.

When I ran out, she told me that I could complete my conversation at which time
I was informed that I owed a dollar and when I got the proper change all I had
to do was dial "operator" and ask for #23, tell her who I was and then deposit
what I owed.


In the early 80's, I was in a little town in Southern CO (Florence).
I called home (east coast) from a pay phone (as calling from the
home of the folks I was staying with would have passed the cost
onto them!). Of course, parents seem to like to talk for long
periods of time, saying little -- oblivious to the fact that I'm
standing on the side of the road calling from "nowhere".

Periodically, the operator would come on the line to tell me to
deposit another $3 (or so).

The first time I did this (to initiate the call), the solenoid that
transfers the monies from the "holding area" (from which they can
easily be RETURNED to the caller) to the "cash box" appeared to
malfunction; returning the coins to *me* instead!

pleasant surprise

Even more pleasant was that the next request for $3 resulted in the
same behavior. And, the one after that! (did I mention that parents
like to talk for a long time??) I just kept taking the coins out
of the coin return and redepositing them!

So, the call cost me nothing.

Next day, I drove by that same phone booth and, on a whim, tried
again. grin Same "problem" as the day before!

I did this for the better part of a week.

Until, one day, the activation of the solenoid resulted in the
coins being *accepted*. It was a very sad sound! :-(

What interesting times those were. My guess is that if I never "paid up" they
would have reversed the charge, I don't know.


I don't think they can legally do that -- though that might not
stop them from trying!

In school, we would "discover" unrestricted telephone "extensions"
in unusual places -- phones from which '9' got you a "regular"
phone line that wasn't limited to local calls only. We'd venture
out with small groups and take turns making calls.

If you were smart, you'd only call people that you knew were "cool"
with the whole concept!

Friend opted to call his grandparents in Germany (!) Eventually,
someone trying to sort out who was making all these long distance
calls (from this very "off the beaten track" telephone) opted
to call some of the numbers.
"Oh, hello! Our grandson goes to your school! He's such a NICE boy..."

busted
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On 02/12/2016 07:21 AM, Don Y wrote:


I don't think they can legally do that -- though that might not
stop them from trying!

In school, we would "discover" unrestricted telephone "extensions"
in unusual places -- phones from which '9' got you a "regular"
phone line that wasn't limited to local calls only. We'd venture
out with small groups and take turns making calls.

If you were smart, you'd only call people that you knew were "cool"
with the whole concept!

Friend opted to call his grandparents in Germany (!) Eventually,
someone trying to sort out who was making all these long distance
calls (from this very "off the beaten track" telephone) opted
to call some of the numbers.
"Oh, hello! Our grandson goes to your school! He's such a NICE
boy..."



Way back a million years ago when for my job, they gave me a pager
I was in a hospital waiting room...

This was a time when one could just go the the emergency room if one was
unable to get an immediate appoint with one's own doctor
(turned out there was nothing wrong with me)

Anyway I had to call someone in Mexico so just used the phone they had
sitting there and called straight through. I was expecting to be asked
for my company's credit card number...but that never happened.

busted


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On 2/12/2016 8:23 AM, philo wrote:
Way back a million years ago when for my job, they gave me a pager
I was in a hospital waiting room...

This was a time when one could just go the the emergency room if one was unable
to get an immediate appoint with one's own doctor


You can still do that. Expect to wait a VERY long time (unless triaged
as a "priority case") and pay a VERY large sum! :

(turned out there was nothing wrong with me)

Anyway I had to call someone in Mexico so just used the phone they had sitting
there and called straight through. I was expecting to be asked for my company's
credit card number...but that never happened.


In the 70's, the phone company "credit cards" (calling cards) used a
simple checksum to verify the integrity of the "calling card number".
I.e., when you called the operator and asked to charge a call to
a particular calling card, the operator (or, some software she had)
would perform this simple checksum to determine what the "check digit"
for the number *should* be. If it did NOT match the number you
presented, then the charge would be declined.

But, if it *did* match, the charge would be accepted and the call
placed!

So, you could fabricate arbitrary calling card numbers -- by knowing
the checksum algorithm. Of course, this was to be a TPC secret!

But, conveniently, was published by certain "underground" groups
(e.g., TAP, 2600).

grin

The same groups who gave us Black, Red, Blue and Green "boxes"...

[Amusingly, you could "detune" an organ (musical instrument) to create
a nice 2600Hz -- from something around E or F 7 (I'd have to do the math)]
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On 02/12/2016 09:56 AM, Don Y wrote:
wn doctor

You can still do that. Expect to wait a VERY long time (unless triaged
as a "priority case") and pay a VERY large sum! :


Though it was not a hospital emergency room, it was one of those
immediate care facilities. One weekend I freaked out because I went deaf
in one ear so went in.

It was just wax, which he cleaned out in five minutes then billed my
insurance $500


They refused to pay unless he lowered the bill to $400!

I think I had $250 deducatble

pened.

In the 70's, the phone company "credit cards" (calling cards) used a
simple checksum to verify the integrity of the "calling card number".
I.e., when you called the operator and asked to charge a call to
a particular calling card, the operator (or, some software she had)
would perform this simple checksum to determine what the "check digit"
for the number *should* be. If it did NOT match the number you
presented, then the charge would be declined.

But, if it *did* match, the charge would be accepted and the call
placed!

So, you could fabricate arbitrary calling card numbers -- by knowing
the checksum algorithm. Of course, this was to be a TPC secret!

But, conveniently, was published by certain "underground" groups
(e.g., TAP, 2600).



Never knew that one, but had a company calling card so never would have
pay from my own pocket.

grin

The same groups who gave us Black, Red, Blue and Green "boxes"...

[Amusingly, you could "detune" an organ (musical instrument) to create
a nice 2600Hz -- from something around E or F 7 (I'd have to do the math)]



Though I never knew anyone who built one of those boxes, I was amazed
that the whole thing was just controlled by tone. Always figured it was
something more complicated.


Supposedly there were people who could whistle correctly to get a free call.



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On 2/12/16 8:21 AM, Don Y wrote:
On 2/12/2016 4:58 AM, philo wrote:


SNIP

In the early 80's, I was in a little town in Southern CO (Florence).
I called home (east coast) from a pay phone (as calling from the
home of the folks I was staying with would have passed the cost
onto them!). Of course, parents seem to like to talk for long
periods of time, saying little -- oblivious to the fact that I'm
standing on the side of the road calling from "nowhere".

Periodically, the operator would come on the line to tell me to
deposit another $3 (or so).

The first time I did this (to initiate the call), the solenoid that
transfers the monies from the "holding area" (from which they can
easily be RETURNED to the caller) to the "cash box" appeared to
malfunction; returning the coins to *me* instead!

pleasant surprise

Even more pleasant was that the next request for $3 resulted in the
same behavior. And, the one after that! (did I mention that parents
like to talk for a long time??) I just kept taking the coins out
of the coin return and redepositing them!

So, the call cost me nothing.

Next day, I drove by that same phone booth and, on a whim, tried
again. grin Same "problem" as the day before!

I did this for the better part of a week.

Until, one day, the activation of the solenoid resulted in the
coins being *accepted*. It was a very sad sound! :-(


Back in the day, there was a way to multi-bend a foot-long length of
coat hanger wire which could then be inserted up the open coin return
slot of the old Bell System pay phones-- the ones before they installed
pull-down doors on the coin returns-- that would lodge behind the
holding box and prevent the operator-activated solenoid from tipping it
backward into the money box. A skillful jiggle on the wire would tip the
holding box forward sending the coins back down the coin return slot.
Free call!

The increasingly widespread use of these "pay phone hooks" back in the
50's and 60's was a contributing factor in Ma Bell's replacing all the
old open-slot coin return slot phones with the pull-down door kind...


--
If a man speaks in the woods and there is no woman around to hear him,
is he still wrong?
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On 2/13/2016 9:50 AM, Wade Garrett wrote:

Back in the day, there was a way to multi-bend a foot-long length of
coat hanger wire which could then be inserted up the open coin return
slot of the old Bell System pay phones-- the ones before they installed
pull-down doors on the coin returns-- that would lodge behind the
holding box and prevent the operator-activated solenoid from tipping it
backward into the money box. A skillful jiggle on the wire would tip the
holding box forward sending the coins back down the coin return slot.
Free call!

The increasingly widespread use of these "pay phone hooks" back in the
50's and 60's was a contributing factor in Ma Bell's replacing all the
old open-slot coin return slot phones with the pull-down door kind...


Back in my younger days, when a phone call cost a dime, we used to drop
a penny down the nickel slot and bump the coin return button as it was
going down. That would send the penny into the dime slot area and turn
the phone on. Another trick was to flatten out a plastic straw and shove
it down the dime slot and drop a penny down the nickle slot and pull the
straw out as the penny was going down. Had the same effect.
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On 2/13/16 11:15 AM, Mr. Emann wrote:
On 2/13/2016 9:50 AM, Wade Garrett wrote:

Back in the day, there was a way to multi-bend a foot-long length of
coat hanger wire which could then be inserted up the open coin return
slot of the old Bell System pay phones-- the ones before they installed
pull-down doors on the coin returns-- that would lodge behind the
holding box and prevent the operator-activated solenoid from tipping it
backward into the money box. A skillful jiggle on the wire would tip the
holding box forward sending the coins back down the coin return slot.
Free call!

The increasingly widespread use of these "pay phone hooks" back in the
50's and 60's was a contributing factor in Ma Bell's replacing all the
old open-slot coin return slot phones with the pull-down door kind...


Back in my younger days, when a phone call cost a dime, we used to drop
a penny down the nickel slot and bump the coin return button as it was
going down. That would send the penny into the dime slot area and turn
the phone on. Another trick was to flatten out a plastic straw and shove
it down the dime slot and drop a penny down the nickle slot and pull the
straw out as the penny was going down. Had the same effect.


Another old trick I read about was to bring a portable tape recorder
into a deserted phone booth and record the "bong" noises a series of
quarters made as they dropped into the coin slot. From then on, when
making long distance calls and the operator asked you to deposit X
dollars, you just played back the proper number of bongs with the phone
handset's mouthpiece close to the speaker on your recorder.

The only way operators determined how much you deposited was to listen
to the sound a coin made as it hit the bonger under the quarter slot,
the single bing under the nickle slot and the double bing under the dime
slot. She couldn't tell the difference between the real thing and a
recording of it. Remember the old ad slogan "Is it live or is it Memorex"?


The advent of electronic coin sensor/counters ended that little scammy-doo.

--
Some of the greatest minds in the world are right here in America.
Sadly, they have gone into hiding until the "War On Thinking” is over.
- @KelsowFarlander
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On 2/13/2016 8:50 AM, Wade Garrett wrote:
On 2/12/16 8:21 AM, Don Y wrote:
On 2/12/2016 4:58 AM, philo wrote:


SNIP

In the early 80's, I was in a little town in Southern CO (Florence).
I called home (east coast) from a pay phone (as calling from the
home of the folks I was staying with would have passed the cost
onto them!). Of course, parents seem to like to talk for long
periods of time, saying little -- oblivious to the fact that I'm
standing on the side of the road calling from "nowhere".

Periodically, the operator would come on the line to tell me to
deposit another $3 (or so).

The first time I did this (to initiate the call), the solenoid that
transfers the monies from the "holding area" (from which they can
easily be RETURNED to the caller) to the "cash box" appeared to
malfunction; returning the coins to *me* instead!

pleasant surprise

Even more pleasant was that the next request for $3 resulted in the
same behavior. And, the one after that! (did I mention that parents
like to talk for a long time??) I just kept taking the coins out
of the coin return and redepositing them!

So, the call cost me nothing.

Next day, I drove by that same phone booth and, on a whim, tried
again. grin Same "problem" as the day before!

I did this for the better part of a week.

Until, one day, the activation of the solenoid resulted in the
coins being *accepted*. It was a very sad sound! :-(


Back in the day, there was a way to multi-bend a foot-long length of coat
hanger wire which could then be inserted up the open coin return slot of the
old Bell System pay phones-- the ones before they installed pull-down doors on
the coin returns-- that would lodge behind the holding box and prevent the
operator-activated solenoid from tipping it backward into the money box. A
skillful jiggle on the wire would tip the holding box forward sending the coins
back down the coin return slot. Free call!

The increasingly widespread use of these "pay phone hooks" back in the 50's and
60's was a contributing factor in Ma Bell's replacing all the old open-slot
coin return slot phones with the pull-down door kind...


There's also a spot on the "Fortress" where you can drill a little
hole and get similar results.

Ma Bell went to great lengths to protect the cash it had collected;
not so much *future* cash!

Coin mechanisms (and coin handling) suffer from being a relatively
complex task *and* one that you would ideally NOT like to spend
lots of resources ($$) on -- as it adds no direct value (it's
more of an insurance policy).

Early dollar bill validators could be hacked by attaching a length
of clear plastic to the bill (most typically, a long piece of tape
that is then folded back on itself to double its thickness/strength
*and* cover up the exposed adhesive soas not to get caught in the
mechanism).

The coin mechanisms in pin-tables (and other arcade pieces) can almost
always be conned into accepting a penny as "payment" (in lieu of a quarter).

Red boxes can con TPC into thinking you've inserted coins.

Some slot machines could be "confused" to miscount dispensed coins
(on a payout) by flashing a light *inside* the hopper (coin
dispenser) to blind the photoelectric "coin detector".

Etc. The number of vulnerabilities that folks will uncover
"to make/save/steal a buck" is amusingly large: "Why didn't
anyone think of PREVENTING this *obvious* hack?"
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On Fri, 12 Feb 2016 05:58:25 -0600, philo wrote:

On 02/12/2016 03:43 AM, wrote:
You'll need a VERY LARGE Wallet to make this call....
(Or a fleet of Semi-Trucks filled with Dimes).

http://www.thisisarecording.com/z/248-771-0023.mp3

Sometime back around 1968 I called a friend... on the East coast... from
a pay phone. The operator would have me put in a quarter every three
minutes or something like that until I eventually ran out of change.

When I ran out, she told me that I could complete my conversation at
which time I was informed that I owed a dollar and when I got the proper
change all I had to do was dial "operator" and ask for #23, tell her who
I was and then deposit what I owed.

What interesting times those were. My guess is that if I never "paid up"
they would have reversed the charge, I don't know.


Heck, around 1965 or 6, one could call long distance from a pay phone
and just charge it to another phone. I was in college and I used my
mother's phone, in a 3rd state. They might call her to check, but if
no one answered, they did it anyhow. But too many people did this
with people who weren't their parents and didn't know them, so now
none of us have this convenience.

So around 2008, I was coming back from Indiana, running late, and
going to miss a meeting in Baltimore that night, and I'd look bad if I
just didn't show up. So I stopped at a pay phone in West Virginia,
and was going to charge it to my credit card. For some reason I
checked the price in advance, $26 for the first 3 minutes!!! I
ended up borrowing a cell phone from a museum hostess, who got free
long distance. I had to go outside to the curb to get a signal and
even that didn't bother her.


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On 02/12/2016 07:53 AM, Micky wrote:
On Fri, 12 Feb 2016 05:58:25 -0600, philo wrote:

On 02/12/2016 03:43 AM, wrote:
You'll need a VERY LARGE Wallet to make this call....
(Or a fleet of Semi-Trucks filled with Dimes).

http://www.thisisarecording.com/z/248-771-0023.mp3

Sometime back around 1968 I called a friend... on the East coast... from
a pay phone. The operator would have me put in a quarter every three
minutes or something like that until I eventually ran out of change.

When I ran out, she told me that I could complete my conversation at
which time I was informed that I owed a dollar and when I got the proper
change all I had to do was dial "operator" and ask for #23, tell her who
I was and then deposit what I owed.

What interesting times those were. My guess is that if I never "paid up"
they would have reversed the charge, I don't know.


Heck, around 1965 or 6, one could call long distance from a pay phone
and just charge it to another phone. I was in college and I used my
mother's phone, in a 3rd state. They might call her to check, but if
no one answered, they did it anyhow. But too many people did this
with people who weren't their parents and didn't know them, so now
none of us have this convenience.

So around 2008, I was coming back from Indiana, running late, and
going to miss a meeting in Baltimore that night, and I'd look bad if I
just didn't show up. So I stopped at a pay phone in West Virginia,
and was going to charge it to my credit card. For some reason I
checked the price in advance, $26 for the first 3 minutes!!!




Woow!!! a lot of $$$$
I
ended up borrowing a cell phone from a museum hostess, who got free
long distance. I had to go outside to the curb to get a signal and
even that didn't bother her.


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On Fri, 12 Feb 2016 09:24:42 -0600, philo wrote:

On 02/12/2016 07:53 AM, Micky wrote:
On Fri, 12 Feb 2016 05:58:25 -0600, philo wrote:

On 02/12/2016 03:43 AM, wrote:
You'll need a VERY LARGE Wallet to make this call....
(Or a fleet of Semi-Trucks filled with Dimes).

http://www.thisisarecording.com/z/248-771-0023.mp3

Sometime back around 1968 I called a friend... on the East coast... from
a pay phone. The operator would have me put in a quarter every three
minutes or something like that until I eventually ran out of change.

When I ran out, she told me that I could complete my conversation at
which time I was informed that I owed a dollar and when I got the proper
change all I had to do was dial "operator" and ask for #23, tell her who
I was and then deposit what I owed.

What interesting times those were. My guess is that if I never "paid up"
they would have reversed the charge, I don't know.


Heck, around 1965 or 6, one could call long distance from a pay phone
and just charge it to another phone. I was in college and I used my
mother's phone, in a 3rd state. They might call her to check, but if
no one answered, they did it anyhow. But too many people did this
with people who weren't their parents and didn't know them, so now
none of us have this convenience.

So around 2008, I was coming back from Indiana, running late, and
going to miss a meeting in Baltimore that night, and I'd look bad if I
just didn't show up. So I stopped at a pay phone in West Virginia,
and was going to charge it to my credit card. For some reason I
checked the price in advance, $26 for the first 3 minutes!!!




Woow!!! a lot of $$$$


I coudln't believe it. And yeah, it was some 3rd party company.


I
ended up borrowing a cell phone from a museum hostess, who got free
long distance. I had to go outside to the curb to get a signal and
even that didn't bother her.

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Default The Most Expensive Pay Phone Call in History

On Fri, 12 Feb 2016 08:53:26 -0500, Micky
wrote:




So around 2008, I was coming back from Indiana, running late, and
going to miss a meeting in Baltimore that night, and I'd look bad if I
just didn't show up. So I stopped at a pay phone in West Virginia,
and was going to charge it to my credit card. For some reason I
checked the price in advance, $26 for the first 3 minutes!!! I
ended up borrowing a cell phone from a museum hostess, who got free
long distance. I had to go outside to the curb to get a signal and
even that didn't bother her.


At some point in the 1990 era many of the pay phones were operated by
other long distance companies. They could charge whatever rates they
wanted. Some would pork you good.
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Default The Most Expensive Pay Phone Call in History

On Friday, February 12, 2016 at 4:45:36 AM UTC-5, wrote:
You'll need a VERY LARGE Wallet to make this call....
(Or a fleet of Semi-Trucks filled with Dimes).

http://www.thisisarecording.com/z/248-771-0023.mp3



Too bad there's no way to preview it...
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Default The Most Expensive Pay Phone Call in History

On 2016-02-12 4:43 AM, wrote:
You'll need a VERY LARGE Wallet to make this call....
(Or a fleet of Semi-Trucks filled with Dimes).

http://www.thisisarecording.com/z/248-771-0023.mp3


I know the person that runs that website, long time usenet friend.

--
Froz...

Quando omni flunkus, moritati


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Default The Most Expensive Pay Phone Call in History

On Fri, 12 Feb 2016 19:47:26 -0500, FrozenNorth
wrote:

On 2016-02-12 4:43 AM, wrote:
You'll need a VERY LARGE Wallet to make this call....
(Or a fleet of Semi-Trucks filled with Dimes).

http://www.thisisarecording.com/z/248-771-0023.mp3


I know the person that runs that website, long time usenet friend.


Thats a pretty fun website. I like listening to those old recordings...

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