usually it doesnt. your minutes are only for talk.
take his phone away while he's in school....
It is only free with UNLIMITED texting. With unlimited texting, you can text ANY phone for FREE. It's awesome! Be careful with it, your parents can take it away. Then they tell you a week later and.... sorry.
Well, 1st thing, nothing is deducted for reading it, it is deducted for receiving it to your phone. 2nd thing, the only phones that deduct minutes for texts are Go Phones and Prepaid phones. These phones don't have minutes, they have credits. So if you buy a phone from a carrier and pay a monthly bill on it, then there is no dedution of "minutes," but it might take away from amount of texts, although once it goes over the limit, you will have to pay fees. Same with minutes and data. Although if you have Unlimited texting on your new phone, you will not have anything deducted (aside from battery power) from your phone.
Unfortunately yes. I currently have a Tracfone and it takes .3 units (minutes) away from your minutes available for use. So do you have to pay for texting or does it just take minutes off your calling? I'm sorry I forgot to say that. It does just take .3 minutes off of your calling.
Well if you take the hour away you are left with 2 hours and 27 minutes then if you take away 27 minutes you are left with 2 hours and you still need to take away 12 minutes so the answer is 1 hour and 48 minutes.
No it will not!
no
38 minutes
When phone companies advertise "unlimited nights and weekends" it means that you have an unlimited amount of minutes. For example, if you have a 200 minute per month plan, talking on the phone during weekends and nights (usually after 7pm or 9pm) will not take away from those minutes.
By adding hours.
Minus 45 minutes.
Not everything in life is fair. With that said, have you stopped to think that maybe it wasn't the number of text messages but the amount of time spent sending and receiving them? My little sister averages 1-2,000 texts a day, it is very arragavating to try and talk to her or do anything with her because her phone is glued to her hand. Children with cell phones are becoming so obsessed with texting it takes away family time. Another point I'd like to make is that if you paid for the phone and pay for your portion of the phone plan, then yes it would be considered "unfair", but I assume that you did not pay for the phone or put any money towards the bill then your parents allowed you the privilage to use it and have the right to take away the phone for any reason they choose.