No, definitely not. It is convention in the UK for mobiles to be allocated numbers started 07, but other countries can either use different blocks of numbers or mix mobile numbers in with numbers for regular landline phones.
For example:
United Kingdom
Mobiles usually in the format 07xxx xxxxxx (or +44 7xxx xxxxxx from overseas)
Ireland
08x xxxxxxx (or +353 8x xxxxxxx from overseas)
France
06 xxxx xxxx (or +33 6 xxxx xxxx from overseas)
Norway
9xxxxxxx (or +47 9xxxxxxx from overseas)
USA
Because mobile phone do not normally cost any more to call than a regular phone, they are mixed in with regular numbers, and just use the area code for wherever the phone's owner lived when they started their phone service.
Hundreds of thousands. I know of no one world wide source of information on the total numbers.
Mobile Security Deployment's motto is 'Protecting Americans Around the World'.
i wants to track my mobile phone which i have lost in bazar
Mobile phone numbers stay the same no matter where the phone is. Regardless of where in the world the phone is, it is called as if it were in its "home" country.
Numbers can never end. There are an infinite amount of numbers. You can only start at 0. Scientists cannot name all the numbers in the world. So far, they have gone up to a sextillion.
Longitude and Latitude
Mobile World was created in 1999.
bell because you can use it around the world unlike rogers...
To call an English mobile that is roaming in another country, dial the English mobile number exactly the same way you would if the mobile were in England. English mobile numbers begin with +44 74 through +44 79. On a GSM mobile, enter the number in international format, beginning with the plus sign. Otherwise, replace the plus sign with your international access prefix (most commonly 00, but many countries use other prefixes. Australia uses 0011 and other prefixes.).
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Plymouth
Actually, it doesn't. At least, it is not 10 digits all over the world. For example, in Bolivia, the mobile phone number has only 8 digits. The number of digits required (for any particular country) can depend on the following:The number of mobile phones (or similar devices) used. If in some country you have, say, 5 million mobile devices, you need at least seven digits.Mobile numbers may have to start with certain digits. This may require an additional digit. In the above example, if in a country all mobile phone numbers start with 6, 7 or 8, then 7 digits are no longer enough - the minimum requirement is 8 digits.The numbers may be organized so that the first few digits identify the phone company, or the geographical region. This also tends to increase the number of digits, since some areas will have few numbers, while others will have many.