Googling will tell you all about Jenny & Tommy Tutone.
  -----Original Message-----
 From: cctalk-admin(a)classiccmp.org
 [mailto:cctalk-admin@classiccmp.org]On
 Behalf Of Jeffrey Sharp
 Sent: Sunday, April 27, 2003 15:27
 To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
 Subject: Nationwide LD Calling (Was: Depressing realization...)
 On Saturday, April 26, 2003, VaxCat wrote:
  I hook up my old Everex 2400 modem, run zlink,
type in ATDT and...
 (pause)
 There's nothing left to call. 
 An interesting development I'm seeing in telephone service
 (at least, here
 in Oklahoma) is the land line telcos offering unlimited
 nationwide long
 distance calling for a flat monthly fee.  I presume this is
 an attempt to
 compete with cell phone companies, with whom such service is the norm.
 A side effect of the service, if indeed it is being offered
 in most areas of
 the country, might be a renaissance of the dialup BBS in the
 USA.  A lack of
 LD charges is also a lack of economic boundaries between BBS
 communities,
 enabling a level of interconnection we have seen only on the
 Internet thus
 far.  The service may also enable other enthusiast dialup activity,
 including UUCP networking.
 I'm very tempted to sign on to this service.  Back in my BBS
 days, I lived
 in a rural town of about 1200 people that was not a member of
 any LATA.  Any
 call out of the town's 867 prefix was a LD call.  There were,
 of course, no
 BBSes reachable without a LD call, so BBSing was a very rare
 pleasure.  It
 would be quite cool to be able to make up for all that lost
 experience!
 As a neat note, all the numbers in that town were in the
 4000-5999 range.
 There was an 867-5309, which matches the name of a song that
 was popular
 some years ago.  Folklore says that it used to be the number
 of the grade
 school cafeteria, but that may be a myth.  Families of two of
 my friends
 from high school, however, did take a turn each of having
 that number.  They
 reported occasional calls from strangers asking for Jenny
 (who, I guess, was
 a character in the song).  IIRC, one of these friends may have used an
 answering machine greeting specially tailored to entertain
 these callers.
 --
 Jeffrey Sharp