Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

Article misses that little ol' Haleyville, Alabama was the first city to roll-out 911.



It was the first city to use those particular numbers, but the service existed as 999 elsewhere before it was introduced to the USA.


999 on a rotary dial phone? Dear heavens.


Hard to dial accidentally, but no much thought involved.


All the 9's was used as you could get a high winds which would cause a 1 to be generated accidently (this was telegraph poles)


That was, and still is, in the UK. Efficiency is apparently not their strong point.


It's a balance of efficiencies. On the one hand, false "1"'s can be generated by wind, etc, on the line. "111" calls can butt-dialled by sagging trees. With the rotary, "9"'s are nice and distinct.

On the other side of the balance, users perceived "9" as taking aaaaages, partly because they're bloody users and never satisfied, and partly because in emergencies perception of time gets tweaked. Anyway, 999 it was, and remains.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/999_(emergency_telephone_numbe... gives the, eminently reasonable, reason why this number was chosen:

> The 9-9-9 format was chosen based on the 'button A' and 'button B' design of pre-payment coin-operated public payphones in wide use (first introduced in 1925) which could be easily modified to allow free use of the 9 digit on the rotary dial in addition to the 0 digit (then used to call the operator), without allowing free use of numbers involving other digits; other combinations of free call 9 and 0 were later used for more purposes, including multiples of 9 (to access exchanges before STD came into use) as a fail-safe for attempted emergency calls, e.g. 9 or 99, reaching at least an operator.


I assume rotary dial phones are now all but extinct. I used one about 20 years ago (to win free tickets from a radio station, and succeeded!) but even then they were rare.


Yeah, but according to the article, 999 was introduced in 1937.




Consider applying for YC's Fall 2025 batch! Applications are open till Aug 4

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: