Singapore Reverse Phone Directory

There is a small chance you could get a prank call from overseas due to different time zones and cost of calls. Any way you can find an unknown number on your missed calls. You have to find who had called you before you can get in contact with him if it might be important. Use search engines to find something. Due to regional targeting of all search engines this can be a tricky task.




First pages will return results relevant to the area you live in; they decide where you live by locating your IP. First of all, if you don’t know search in an encyclopedia something about country codes around the world to identify which country belongs that number. A good site to help you dial abroad is http://www.howtocallabroad.com/, from here you could get useful information about all numbers around the world.

After you have found that you missed an international call from Singapore, there is a good chance that you remember the last symposium or meeting when a person exchange a business card with you and you start searching for that card to find. What if you haven’t participated ever in your life time to a symposium or a meeting to exchange business card with someone? Well there is a chance that the person from Singapore has miss-dialed an has figured out in time his mistake.

If none of the above apply you still have a chance to find for the unknown owner of the number through the following sites http://www.rednano.sg/footer/help_people.html, http://www.heavenlygardens.org/telephone/asia-32/singapore.htm, http://www.yellowpages.com.sg/newiyp/yp/jsp/ConsumerSearch2008.jsp, http://yoolk.sg/, http://www.search.com.sg/, http://sg.dir.yahoo.com/Reference/Phone_Numbers_and_Addresses/Reverse_Lookup_Directories/. Using these sites you can search also for businesses or people after their name.

When calling from another country to Singapore firs dial 65 country code and international call prefix according to the network the number belongs to 008 for StarHub, 001 for landlanes and 002 for M1. Phone numbers from Singapore have eight digits. There are no area codes; all IP telephony, radio network and public switched telephone network belong to a numbering area. First digits make the difference between categories. Thus making possible the existence of ten categories, just six are used.

Here is the exemplification of categories of phone numbers you find in Singapore services VOIP are this format 3xxx xxxx, fixed line services including VOIP, SingTel mio voice and StarHub Digital Voice have this type of number 6xxx xxxx. If you are using messaging services you dial a number that begins with 7. Number starting with 7 and 8 are for mobile phone. Tall free services from Singapore begin with 1800 and the international begin with 800. Numbers beginning with 1900 are for Premium Services.

Singapore had in June 2009 6,513,500 mobile customers. The main providers for mobile telecomunications are M1 with over 1.62 million customers, Starhub Mobile with more than 1.82 million customers and with 2.98 million subscribers Singtel Mobile. Singapore has more than 134.6% mobile phone penetration rate. The existence of this three companies has led to a very competitive market with lots of attractive plans for every call. Singapore hase public phones installed all over the island. This can be used either by inserting a coin, with ten cents you can call for 3 minutes or operated with a prepaid phone card with credit of  $3, $5, $10, $20 and $50 and phones operated with credit card (found in airports, and major hotel).

Written by , date Feb 16, 2010 in Uncategorized
no comments

Print Friendly
Did you like this? Share it:


If you liked this post, subscribe to our blog by filling your e-mail address below:
Delivered by FeedBurner

Want to add something? Post your comments

Resources

Resources



Resources



Resources



Resources



Resources



Resources



Resources