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Cellular forums Home > Archive > Cingular cell phone service > November 2005 > Rollover = 11 months or 12 months
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Rollover = 11 months or 12 months
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| Watashi.wa.ichiban@gmail.com 2005-11-29, 11:48 pm |
| "Unused Anytime Minutes expire after the 12th billing period."
Does this mean that the month I "added to rollover minutes" counts as
one month towards the 12 month expiration (11 month rollover) OR does
the 12 month clock start with the month after I added (a true 12 months
of available usage) ???????????
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| Kevin 2005-11-29, 11:48 pm |
| Explained on the Cingular website. But, I would hazard a guess that the
rollover minutes expire after the 12th billing period. Should be
interesting to go over to www.cingular.com to find out.
As an aside, a friend got his daughter a phone last year. They got her a
plan with 1000 minutes and rollover. Now, as you may be aware, 1000 minutes
is equal to 32.258 minutes per day, in a 31 day month. That's a lot of
talking when the aforementioned daughter is supposed to be working 8 hours,
going to school 4 hours, sleeping 8 hours and using the remaining 4 hours in
a day to do whatever it is she has to do.
So, the daughter is responsible with the phone and over the months the
rollover minutes gather. The last month of the rollover cycle comes and she
has 2400 minutes, more or less, to talk out or lose them. 2400 minutes is
40 hours! So, keep the whole rollover thing in some kind of perspective.
<Watashi.wa.ichiban@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1133301140.685863.298290@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
> "Unused Anytime Minutes expire after the 12th billing period."
>
> Does this mean that the month I "added to rollover minutes" counts as
> one month towards the 12 month expiration (11 month rollover) OR does
> the 12 month clock start with the month after I added (a true 12 months
> of available usage) ???????????
>
>
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| Merlin 2005-11-29, 11:48 pm |
| As it was explained to me, in month 13, only the minutes rolled over
in month 1 would expire - not all of them. In other words, you always
have (up to) 12 months of rollover minutes available.
"Kevin" <webman6@hotmail.com> wrote:
>Explained on the Cingular website. But, I would hazard a guess that the
>rollover minutes expire after the 12th billing period. Should be
>interesting to go over to www.cingular.com to find out.
>
>As an aside, a friend got his daughter a phone last year. They got her a
>plan with 1000 minutes and rollover. Now, as you may be aware, 1000 minutes
>is equal to 32.258 minutes per day, in a 31 day month. That's a lot of
>talking when the aforementioned daughter is supposed to be working 8 hours,
>going to school 4 hours, sleeping 8 hours and using the remaining 4 hours in
>a day to do whatever it is she has to do.
>
>So, the daughter is responsible with the phone and over the months the
>rollover minutes gather. The last month of the rollover cycle comes and she
>has 2400 minutes, more or less, to talk out or lose them. 2400 minutes is
>40 hours! So, keep the whole rollover thing in some kind of perspective.
>
>
><Watashi.wa.ichiban@gmail.com> wrote in message
>news:1133301140.685863.298290@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
>
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| On Tue, 29 Nov 2005 18:53:15 -0600, Merlin <mm1245@netzero.net> wrote:
>As it was explained to me, in month 13, only the minutes rolled over
>in month 1 would expire - not all of them. In other words, you always
>have (up to) 12 months of rollover minutes available.
>
That's exactly how it works. Of course you will only "always" have rollover
minutes if you re-collect them starting with the 13th month and so on.
>"Kevin" <webman6@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>
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