I went ove rmy SMS quota by 100 messages last month. As is the normal practice of carriers both the sender and the receiver of a message are charged so that extra 100 messages was closer to 50 messages that I sent and their associated responses. It is easy to use up ones messaging quota. The only reason I use SMS is becaus emy associated don't have push e-mail on their device.
I have no plans to go over my quote this month. So I've looked up all the e-mail addresses patterns associated with the nation's carriers. From hereon I'll be sending SMS e-mails to my associates with no data plan to save money (after all 0.20 USD for ever message send and received is way too expensive). If you to find a way to save SMS fees then you may want to do the same. Of course this means that you need to ask your friends what carriers they use. The following are the e-mail patterns used by the different carriers.
| Carrier E-mail patterns |
| Carrier |
e-mail pattern |
| T-Mobile |
phonenumber@tmomail.net |
|
| Virgin Mobile |
phonenumber@vmobl.com |
|
| AT&T |
phonenumber@txt.att.net |
|
| Sprint |
phonenumber@messaging.sprintpcs.com |
|
| Verizon |
phonenumber@vtext.com |
| Metro PCS |
phonenumber@mymetropcs.com |
| Nextel |
phonenumber@messaging.nextel.com |
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