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by chrisandchris 756 days ago
The article links to [1] which says

> Nearly half of the 80,000 calls received daily by BT operators in the UK do not involve requests for help.

I would never have estimated such a high quote of unnecessary emergency calls.

And that‘s a fun fact

> Experts chose 999 rather than 111 for technical reasons. In pre-optical fibre days telegraph wires rubbed together in the wind and transmitted the equivalent of a 111 call

[1] https://web.archive.org/web/20090302014433/http://www.btplc....

1 comments

The “dial” on a rotary phone broke the connection in rapid sequence a number of times corresponding to the number dialed. If your dial broke, you could place calls by “flashing” the “hook” the right number of times with pauses between.
You could do the same with a touch tone phone, too.
Heck, you could do it with a pair of alligator clips at a punch down panel. The telco was fun before everything went digital.