Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Telephone numbers in the Philippines follow an open telephone numbering plan and an open dial plan. Both plans are regulated by the National Telecommunications Commission, an attached agency under the Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT). The Philippines is assigned an international dialing code of +63 by ITU-T.
There are also free-phone numbers (starting with 0800 or 0508) that are given in the format 0800-AAA-AAA. It is not uncommon for the 0800 and 0508 to be enclosed in brackets, although this is not strictly correct as the brackets denote optional parts of the number, and the 0800 and 0508 is required. [6]
Worldwide distribution of country calling codes. Regions are coloured by first digit. Telephone country codes, originally termed International Codes by the International Telegraph and Telephone Consultative Committee (C.C.I.T.T.) in 1960, [1] but also sometimes referred to as "country dial-in codes", or historically "international subscriber dialing" (ISD) codes in the U.K., are telephone ...
Users can now switch carriers and keep their cell phone numbers, including prefix. Usually NSN are 10 digits long for mobile and personal services. 31100: Telespazio: 31101: Telespazio: 31105: Spal Telecommunications 313: Rete Ferroviaria Italiana: 319: Intermatica 320: Wind: 322: 13 (3 10) Wind operator reserved (routing number) 323: 12 ("32 ...
NOTE: A number of temporary ICAO codes (with the last two characters being numbers instead of letters) have also been assigned to several notable airports. RP10 (LAC) – Swallow Reef (Layang-Layang) Airport – currently administered as part of the Malaysian state of Sabah, but claimed by the Philippines as part of the North Borneo dispute
Camp Zama is the earliest barrack in Japan. The camp faced many changes as a result of the defeat suffered by the Japanese in World War II. Route 51 is the road to Camp Zama that was specifically built in order for the Emperor to travel to review the graduating classes from Machida Station. The Emperor Showa visited Camp Zama in 1937.
The Academy was abolished along with the Imperial Japanese Army at the end of 1945, and its Sagamihara grounds are now part of the United States Army base of Camp Zama. Currently the corresponding institution for the modern Japan Ground Self-Defense Force is the National Defense Academy of Japan .
Zama, Kanagawa, Japan Camp Zama, a United States Army base in Kanagawa, Japan; Tulum or Zamá, Mexico; Zama (Tunisia) Zama (Turkey) Zama, Mississippi, United States;