On 31 Jan 2004 21:11:48 -0800,
plane@usa.com (plane) chose to add this to
the great equation of life, the universe, and everything:
>David S <dwstreeter@spamisnaughty.att.net> wrote in message news:<s8tn1017ie3i7hlqggvjhuk9mai4ja2v9m@4ax.com>. ..
>> On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 15:15:58 GMT, "Steven M. Scharf"
>> <scharf.steven@linkearth.net> chose to add this to the great equation of
>> life, the universe, and everything:
>>
>> >So 300 peak plus 1000 MTM really means closer to
>> >1300 peak, as long as you don't squander MTM on N&W calls.
>>
>> Everything I've seen says m2m calls made during n/w time count as n/w and
>> are not charged against the m2m bucket.
>>
>> But of course I can't find it right now on VZW's web site.
>
>It is detailed on the current verizon brochure, and still is different
>depending if you have unlimited n&w or not.
I found it on a letter they sent me:
What it boils down to is, if any kind of unlimited minutes are applicable
to a call, they will be applied before any limited supply is used; if both
n/w and m2m are limited amounts, an m2m call will be charged as m2m before
it is charged as n/w.
(That has always made me wonder... follow this scenario:
you have 1000 minutes each of m2m and n/w
toward the beginning of the month, you use 800 m2m minutes during n/w time
toward the end of the month, you use 400 m2m minutes
you have used all of your peak minutes for the month
you have used less than 800 actual n/w minutes
Will they reclassify 200 minutes of those early m2m calls as n/w so your
m2m won't go over?)
--
David Streeter, "an internet god" -- Dave Barry
http://home.att.net/~dwstreeter
Expect a train on ANY track at ANY time.
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celery is limp.'" - Dave Barry