You have to work out a little matrix of your 'allowed' 'used' and 'rollover'
minutes.
A little Excel spreadsheet would work quite well.
I personally don't bother doing that. I simply make sure that I always have
about 2000 rollover minutes so I never get overage charges. When my
rollover minutes get low, I increase to a higher price plan and when the
rollover minutes get high, I change to a lower price plan. This way I have
the luxury of talking whenever I want without having to watch my minutes.
"AP" <cat@eveningstar.dyndns.org> wrote in message
news:MPG.1cffdd2335b2c8f898989e@news.dallas.sbcglo bal.net...
> In article <b8nle.1829$rY6.1729@newssvr13.news.prodigy.com> ,
> mbc@pcbell.net says...
>> "Ted B." <noway@nohow.not.ever> wrote in message
>> news:4295bbdc$0$90881$892e7fe2@authen.white.readfr eenews.net...
>> >
>> > pull out your statement from 12 months ago?
>>
>> I think this is the best option now. Cingular used to provide a rollover
>> matrix online but they discontinued it.
>
>
> Hmm... but how woudl you know that thar rollover balance has any balance
> from 12 months before? you might have 1200 because on 600 previous two
> months you didnt use phone .... or because you "saved" 10 minutes every
> month
>
> AP