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Google Voice Grabs 1 Million Phone Numbers

alphadogg writes "Google has reserved 1 million phone numbers with Level 3, signaling that it may finally be ready to roll out its long-anticipated Google Voice service. The free service, announced in March, lets users unify their phone numbers, allowing them to have a single number through Google Voice that rings a call through to all their phones. Sources could not say when the 1 million numbers may be assigned. Level 3 has been supplying Google with phone numbers since the introduction of Google Voice, so the 1 million numbers are an indication Google is close to adding a significant number of users. A public launch has been anticipated since Google said in March the service would be 'open to new users soon.' One early user said: 'I've only been using Google Voice for a few months, but it's completely changed the way I use voicemail and communicate... When it goes public, I think the rush to grab Google Voice numbers is going to be stunning. I know some of my friends check the Google Voice page almost every day to see when they can grab a number and get started using it.'"

16 of 198 comments (clear)

  1. Oh, that's just great... by rodrigoandrade · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Now telemarketers, religious freaks, and campaign-donation guys will be able to find me no matter where I am.

    I wonder if we'll be able to register that line on the DNC list.

    1. Re:Oh, that's just great... by bennomatic · · Score: 4, Informative

      I've already registered mine on the DNC list, but additionally, you can also do fun things like push all unknown callers directly to voice mail. Then you can quickly review and delete your VM's on their web site.

      --
      The CB App. What's your 20?
    2. Re:Oh, that's just great... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Now telemarketers, religious freaks, and campaign-donation guys will be able to find me no matter where I am.

      I am a Google voice user.
      Zero automated telemarketing calls get through to me. The system defaults to requiring callers with previously unseen caller-id's to state their name before it will even ring my real phone(s). No automated system knows how to do that so far.

      Even if a real person calls and does get past the name prompt, I can "answer" the phone by sending the call to voice-mail and listening in, the way you can with a real physical answering machine.

      I am also able to blacklist specific caller-id numbers to either go directly to voice-mail or to play the "this number has been disconnected" recording and tone pattern.

      Worst case, I can also configure all unknown caller-id numbers to go directly to voice-mail too.

      Since signing up with GrandCentral a year or two ago (the predecessor company that google purchased) my annoying call rate has gone to zero.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    3. Re:Oh, that's just great... by bennomatic · · Score: 4, Informative

      Not exactly innovative. Verizon gave me that at my apartment in 2002.

      What exactly is your point? The service as a whole is very useful, and somewhat innovative. There are precedents for many--if not all--of the features, but many of them would have required a staffed calling center not that long ago.

      So here's an example of what I like. I can always route my parents to my home number, and my friends to my office during the day, my cell phone at night. I can route colleagues to my office by day, direct to voice mail at night. If I'm going on vacation and staying at a cabin where cell signal is bad, and I want to be reached by one particular friend, I can route their calls to the cabin's land-line before I leave.

      And then beyond all that, when people leave a voice mail, GVoice automatically transcribes it. It's not perfect, but it's often faster to get the idea of what they called about without having to listen to a long, rambling VM.

      --
      The CB App. What's your 20?
    4. Re:Oh, that's just great... by religious+freak · · Score: 5, Funny

      Now telemarketers, religious freaks, and campaign-donation guys will be able to find me no matter where I am.

      Hey!

      --
      If you can read this... 01110101 01110010 00100000 01100001 00100000 01100111 01100101 01100101 01101011
  2. I want Jenny's number... by bennomatic · · Score: 4, Funny

    Oh yeah, it's 867-530-niiiiiii-eeee-iii-een.

    --
    The CB App. What's your 20?
  3. Re:I wonder.... by arootbeer · · Score: 5, Funny

    So, about 7 years after the general public gets their hands on it?

  4. Does... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...it bother you when people do that?

  5. Re:Will it work when my nets die? Or with 911? by bennomatic · · Score: 5, Informative

    This isn't a net phone, per se; it's a phone abstraction. A number that lives out there in the phone cloud, which you point to whatever number(s) you wish to receive calls at. You can still dial directly out from your cell phone, home phone, office phone, whatever. 911 is based on the number you're calling from. However, if you want your GVoice number to show up on caller ID, you would instead initiate the call from the GVoice web site or the android/iphone app. In other words, as long as you've got a working phone, you've got 911. The use of GVoice doesn't change that at all.

    --
    The CB App. What's your 20?
  6. Re:How big is the market? by jackspenn · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Nearly universally, everyone who I know in their mid 20s - early 30s don't have a landline

    The same used be be true for me, but now my parents, aunts and uncles, former teachers, etc. have all switched. I would say that nearly every person I know 15-62 have switched solely to cell phones in place of home phones. The two people I know with a home phone, my grandfather (85) and grandmother (82) switched to Vonage over two years ago to the complete surprise of the entire family. Reason they gave "It's a fixed monthly cost that works for what they need."
    I really think the traditional home phone line could be dead in a decade or so.

    --
    Respect the Constitution
  7. Re:I'm waiting.... by AntiRush · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I have a google voice account (transferred over from grandcentral) and in general I didn't find the GV android app to be all that usable. The extra overhead ended up making me miss a lot of calls that I wouldn't otherwise have. Another problem was that dialing out either involved using the GV application which dials your Google Voice number and places the call via their system or making calls from your real number. The former put a 10 - 15 second overhead on making a call and the latter tends to confuse people because they are receiving a call from a different number than the one they (were told to) call.

    I ended up giving my real number to anyone that mattered. I still use my Google Voice number for anything online or calls/text messages that I potentially want to screen. It's a great service but it didn't work for me as an every day number.

  8. Re:I'm waiting.... by Evan+Charlton · · Score: 5, Informative
    Disclaimer: I wrote the GV Android app in question.

    I didn't find the GV android app to be all that usable. The extra overhead ended up making me miss a lot of calls that I wouldn't otherwise have. Another problem was that dialing out either involved using the GV application which dials your Google Voice number and places the call via their system or making calls from your real number. The former put a 10 - 15 second overhead on making a call and the latter tends to confuse people because they are receiving a call from a different number than the one they (were told to) call.

    If you haven't tried the latest version, I recommend you do so; it makes the dialing process much more seamless. If you still have problems with, don't hesitate to shoot me an email: gv {at} evancharlton {dot} com (that goes for anyone else that has questions or suggestions).

  9. Re:I'm waiting.... by Evan+Charlton · · Score: 5, Informative

    Just a heads up: the current Android client (found here: http://www.cyrket.com/package/com.evancharlton.googlevoice) is *not* official in any way, shape or form.

  10. I think this joke might be just about played ou... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...t.

  11. You CAN intiate a call from your phone directly by Brit_in_the_USA · · Score: 4, Informative

    I just want to add that you can initiate a call from your phone directly. You can call your own Google number and then press "2" to dial out to a new number (including international) and end with a "#" to start ringing. I now have a few international numbers on speed dial on my cell phone (I have bought some google credit for this), the entries are in the format:
    my_google_number p 2 p destiantion_number #
    note that "p" inserts a ~2 second pause on most dialers.

    To get this working seamlessly you need to go to your account settings and disable PIN entry for mail box and use caller ID instead to identify your cell phone as authorized to go straight in. If you don't want to do that you need to include the right pauses and pin dialing codes in that example above.

  12. There you go by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 4, Funny

    .