Remix.run Logo
Aachen 5 hours ago

Wtf! Why do I need to find this out via HN? I live in Germany and all info I've ever seen says you can always call 112 in Europe with any phone you have on hand, active subscription or not, and worldwide potentially a different number but that it's part of the GSM standard that it lets you call via any carrier because your emergency call is treated differently, always gets accepted and routed with priority

Also considering you're required to authenticate to the government before being allowed to have a mobile phone number in Germany, some people might choose to mainly use their device on WiFis and with downloaded maps and other data. It's not like mobile data is that reliable in Germany anyway. That'd be an unpleasant surprise if you are subsequently denied emergency services in the life-threatening situations that 112 is for

I didn't believe you, or that it was possibly a temporary thing, but I checked and it seems to be true since 2009 with no news since. I'm curious to try it (if there were a test number like 117 and 119 in Belgium¹) because I'm still a bit in disbelief, or to know if it e.g. works with a data-only SIM, or if an expired SIM works (if it ran out yesterday and you haven't had time to fix it or charge up the prepaid card), or if you forgot the SIM PIN due to stress (happened to me once when the phone needed a reboot, so I spent my trip abroad without mobile service until I got home and could reset it). Is it that easy to change the IMEI of a device, that pranksters abuse the service with it constantly if not blocked outright? Why isn't this a thing in other countries? I have so many questions

What a backwater this is in terms of communications infrastructure

¹ https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noodcentrale_112#Testnummers_n..., English translation on https://www.reddit.com/r/belgium/comments/191hryo/comment/kh...