1-800 number puzzler:

1-800 number puzzler:

Posers and Puzzles

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s
Fast and Curious

slatington, pa, usa

Joined
28 Dec 04
Moves
53223
03 Dec 12

The number I was trying to dial was 408 445 3010, a real company in San Jose called Wafer Process Systems. We use some of their controllers.

What I actually dialed was 1-800 445 3010 purely by accident.

It is bizarre.

A robot voice comes up spitting out a series of numbers the meaning of which I have no idea. Maybe some of you can tell?

You can dial that # and hear it for yourself.

So the first time:

it spit out 900-32-7-1-1-4-0-7-8-5-8-1

second time: 200-18-7-1-1-4-5-7-8-5-8-1

Third time I tried: 100-32-7-1-1-4-0-7-8-5-8-1

What in the world is going on here?

Joined
26 Apr 03
Moves
26771
03 Dec 12

hmm, that is (9 or 2 or 1)00-(32 or 18)-7-1-1-4-(5 or 0)-7-8-5-8-1

Does everyone who rings it get the same pattern? (I'm in the uk so iI'll be charged for an international call if I ring it). 1-800 numbers know the number that is ringing them, so it could be derived from that.

s
Fast and Curious

slatington, pa, usa

Joined
28 Dec 04
Moves
53223
03 Dec 12

Originally posted by iamatiger
hmm, that is (9 or 2 or 1)00-(32 or 18)-7-1-1-4-(5 or 0)-7-8-5-8-1

Does everyone who rings it get the same pattern? (I'm in the uk so iI'll be charged for an international call if I ring it). 1-800 numbers know the number that is ringing them, so it could be derived from that.
I called it from my house (I had called from work) just now and got this:
300, 68, 7, 1, 1, 4, 0,7, 8, 5, 8, 1

Second call:
900, 55, 7, 1, 1, 4, 0, 7, 8, 5, 8, 1

Anyone in the US want to call?

f
Defend the Universe

127.0.0.1

Joined
18 Dec 03
Moves
16687
04 Dec 12
1 edit

900, 46, 7, 1, 1, 4, 0, 7, 8, 5, 8, 1

900, 29, 7, 1, 1, 4, 0, 7, 8, 5, 8, 1

Australia

Joined
20 Jan 09
Moves
386354
06 Dec 12

Possibility of a line conditioning diagnostic of some kind, only meaningful to the technician who's making the call.

s
Fast and Curious

slatington, pa, usa

Joined
28 Dec 04
Moves
53223
09 Dec 12
2 edits

Originally posted by Kewpie
Possibility of a line conditioning diagnostic of some kind, only meaningful to the technician who's making the call.
A possibility I guess. How it would relate to signal to noise ratio's I don't know.
Latest #'s: 1800, 32, the rest the same. Again: 900,32 etc.

Joined
26 Apr 03
Moves
26771
11 Dec 12

If it was designed for a technician to ring then I think the useful info would be in the first, and perhaps the second number, and they do seem to be the most variable. The rest of the numbers could be a software version or something.

s
Fast and Curious

slatington, pa, usa

Joined
28 Dec 04
Moves
53223
12 Dec 12

Originally posted by iamatiger
If it was designed for a technician to ring then I think the useful info would be in the first, and perhaps the second number, and they do seem to be the most variable. The rest of the numbers could be a software version or something.
It's a bit bizarre no matter how you look at it.