Office Landlines to Disappear within Few Years

An inmate at Full Sutton Prison makes a phone call / PA
An inmate at Full Sutton Prison makes a phone call / PA
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Office Landlines to Disappear within Few Years

An inmate at Full Sutton Prison makes a phone call / PA
An inmate at Full Sutton Prison makes a phone call / PA

The office landline will likely become extinct in November 2028, new analysis predicts, with business numbers falling 370,000 in a year to 4.98million, according to the latest Ofcom data.

This is a dip from 2013 when there were more than eight million landlines in the UK's office and workplaces, business communications service Ringover Group revealed. It predicts this will fall below two million in spring 2024 and drop under one million in early 2026.

However, while some believe the office landline will be no more, others think it will be around for years to come.

Lockdown accelerated change for many businesses across the country and one central landline isn't always a viable solution, especially if multiple teams are working from home.

IP-based landlines and the flexibility they provide are already dominating the working world, due to the mobile nature of our work lives. Renaud Charvet, chief executive at Ringover Group, explained: "The office landline has kept businesses running for almost a hundred years, so it will be quite a milestone when the last one is terminated."

Ringover Group said it has seen demand for the Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) soar 230 percent in the past year as millions of users in Europe worked from home during lockdown.

Traditionally, landline phones rely on legacy analogue networks which have been around for decades.

However, over the next five years, there will be a UK wide industry-led program of analogue voice switches closures, which means providers will stop offering voice landline services using this 'aging' technology, according to Virgin Media. This is because the technology behind this is reaching the end of its life and becoming increasingly costly and difficult to maintain.



China’s First Atmospheric Monitoring Station in Antarctica Begins Operations

Penguins are seen on an iceberg as scientists investigate the impact of climate change on Antarctica's penguin colonies, on the northern side of the Antarctic peninsula, Antarctica January 15, 2022. (Reuters)
Penguins are seen on an iceberg as scientists investigate the impact of climate change on Antarctica's penguin colonies, on the northern side of the Antarctic peninsula, Antarctica January 15, 2022. (Reuters)
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China’s First Atmospheric Monitoring Station in Antarctica Begins Operations

Penguins are seen on an iceberg as scientists investigate the impact of climate change on Antarctica's penguin colonies, on the northern side of the Antarctic peninsula, Antarctica January 15, 2022. (Reuters)
Penguins are seen on an iceberg as scientists investigate the impact of climate change on Antarctica's penguin colonies, on the northern side of the Antarctic peninsula, Antarctica January 15, 2022. (Reuters)

China said its first atmospheric monitoring station in Antarctica started operations this week, a move aimed at helping observe changes on the southern continent and supporting the global response to climate change.

Like the United States, China has been expanding its presence in Antarctica and in the Arctic to explore polar resources.

The Zhongshan National Atmospheric Background Station will conduct "continuous and long-term operational observations of concentration changes in Antarctic atmospheric components," the official Xinhua news agency quoted China's Meteorological Administration as saying.

The station is located in Larsmann Hills in East Antarctica.

Polar regions are "amplifiers" of global climate change, said Ding Minghu, director of the Institute of Global Change and Polar Meteorology at the Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences.

He said the station's observation data would have "unique geographical advantages and scientific value" which would aid the study of the impact of human activities on the environment.

China in February opened its Ross Sea scientific research station in Antarctica. It also has five other research stations in Antarctica that were built between 1985 and 2014.