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Tuesday, 10 December, 2002, 15:02 GMT
Putting directory service to the test
It may be quicker to consult the phone book
From Tuesday, for the first time, Britons have a choice of which directory enquiries service to use - but how will they decide?
BBC News Online picks up the receiver to check out the new numbers. With the launch of a raft of new companies, customers have been promised the prospect of cheaper directory enquiry calls - but the sums could prove confusing. BT is scrapping its fixed 40p charge for the service and replacing it with a time-based one. Callers will be charged an initial 25p per call and another 30p for every minute they spend connected to the service. The Number UK is charging 49p and 9p per minute, while Conduit offers the same rate per minute but with an initial charge of just 39p.
And One Tel charges a flat rate of 35p per call. So far, so complicated - and it gets worse.
Some services will simply tell you the number you require - but others will offer to connect you without the need to redial. Callers can also now choose between a bewildering array of new services beyond just residential and business numbers. Given the variety of call charges, it seems wise that callers should keep an eye on the speed at which their call is dealt with against the cost per minute. Phone for the telephone number of a cinema and you could be offered information about the films that are showing there, a list of alternatives in the same area and even a guide to what is on television in case you can't make up your mind.
And if you want to book a restaurant for the way home, find out how your shares are doing or even whether you have won the Lottery, simply dial 118 followed by ... well, the choice is yours. At least that's the theory - but when BBC News Online road-tested eight of the new numbers, six of them failed to offer anything more than telephone numbers and "call completion". Only The Number UK and British Gas were able to offer event listings or classified business searches by category and area. The Number also offered directions to the cinema - but to find out where and when the new James Bond film, Die Another Day, was showing in south London took four minutes and 47 seconds at a cost of about 94p. And to obtain the same information from British Gas cost about �2.05 and took six minutes.
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