Are we finally hearing the last of everyone’s favourite mantra? I’m sure I haven’t heard it for ages (or have I finally managed to blot it from my consciousness?) GWR - if you really have sorted for good - thank you!
If the announcements aren't being played I recommend you text 61016 and report it!Are we finally hearing the last of everyone’s favourite mantra? I’m sure I haven’t heard it for ages (or have I finally managed to blot it from my consciousness?) GWR - if you really have sorted for good - thank you!
The one they currently have on London Underground is particularly bad. All the stresses are in the wrong place when the man says '61016'. Also, why does he repeat it twice anyway?
The one they currently have on London Underground is particularly bad. All the stresses are in the wrong place when the man says '61016'. Also, why does he repeat it twice anyway?
Anne does it best.
Except most of the alternatives in London are also plagued by see it, say it, sorted!It is *appalling*. It is too loud, very jarring, and extremely annoying. It actually puts me off using the Underground when an alternative is available.
Ooh, I never thought of it that way, now that makes sense!I have never understood why all the announcements say:
"Six-one-oh-one-six"
Where it's clear the intention was:
"Six... one-oh-one... Six"
Because 101 is the police non-emergency number. It's obvious that's why the shortcode was chosen in the first place! So why not say it like that?!
Zero in phone numbers has traditionally been rendered as “oh”.I'm not sure why they say 61O16.
it's 61016; the SMS isn't going to go through if you try to include a letter in the number.
As I'm sure you're aware (and are simply milking for the sake of pedantry) "oh" is quite commonly substituted in for zero when announcing phone numbers. In fact, in this context the Oh is actually derived as a shortening of Zero, rather than from the letter.I'm not sure why they say 61O16.
it's 61016; the SMS isn't going to go through if you try to include a letter in the number.
As I'm sure you're aware (and are simply milking for the sake of pedantry) "oh" is quite commonly substituted in for zero when announcing phone numbers. In fact, in this context the Oh is actually derived as a shortening of Zero, rather than from the letter.
I doubt it's gone. It's a mandatory announcement across the rail industry.
Yes, the trouble is, try doing that with airline PNR codes and other situations and it won't work.
Why not just be accurate?
People do know that the number zero exists.
It accurately describes how people say phone numbers. Hardly anyone says "zero seven one two three", it's always "oh seven...".
It accurately describes how people say phone numbers. Hardly anyone says "zero seven one two three", it's always "oh seven...".
I suppose if you're used to the phonetic alphabet and safety-critical comms "zero" is second nature.
Even worse are the online forms which won't let you enter it in the correct format with the space, i.e. 07xxx yyyyyy.
Are we finally hearing the last of everyone’s favourite mantra? I’m sure I haven’t heard it for ages (or have I finally managed to blot it from my consciousness?) GWR - if you really have sorted for good - thank you!
Except most of the alternatives in London are also plagued by see it, say it, sorted!![]()
Probably so, but 99.9999% of the population aren't, and "oh" is normal.
Given that the "area code" on a mobile number is utterly meaningless to the end user (and landlines are headed into Scotty's "how quaint" territory), does this format have or even need a future?
Which is of course the mark of a well-devised slogan!There is a special place in hell for whoever devised this phrase. That place is in an isolated room, hands tied down, and it playing loudly and on repeat for all of eternity.
It is a question of readability.
Breaking it up is yes, but the old format that ascribed meaning to the chunks isn't relevant any more.
You could write 07 123 456 789, or 071234 56789, or even go all French and write 07 12 34 56 78 9 or something, individuals would debate which was more readable.