Just that - incoming calls. When someone calls your mobile phone number, this also eats up your 'anytime' minutes during peak use times.
Just that - incoming calls. When someone calls your mobile phone number, this also eats up your 'anytime' minutes during peak use times.
An incoming call is a phone you that you receive when someone calls your phone.
It simply means - the person who's number you have dialled, has set their phone to block anyone calling them. Maybe they don't want to be disturbed by telephone calls at the moment. They can change this setting at their discretion.
It means that they haven't paid their cell phone bill. The cell companies do this to help the customer "save face" in the event they're expecting an important call.
It means 'locking' the phone so that a person cannot makecalls from it - but they can receive incoming calls.
I think it means that you're in an restricted area where the phone can not pick up signals for incoming and outgoing phone calls.
it means that the person calling is not wanting you to know there number
it could mean anything from it is just off to he is ceating or doing something he is not suposed to or he does not want to be bothered
No. Incoming calls are not billed on basic land line service, so no record is made. Any billing information would be saved only at the location of the line that made the call, if it is a chargeable call.
I am not sure what you mean. You need to block calls to your land line from cell phones only? I don't think it's possible. You can call your phone company and ask them to block a particular phone number (for a fee), or you can buy one of those devices that let you block calls from 'unknown' numbers. Another option is to find out who calls you and ask them to stop. You can enter the number that calls you at 800notes.com, http://800notes.com , to see if other people have reported calls from it. If yes, then you might find our who the caller is and how to stop the calls.
Usually "airtime minutes" mean exactly that. Whether the call was incoming (someone else called you) or outgoing (you called someone), you're using airtime minutes. Some plans may have an option (it used to be reasonably common, but I haven't seen it so much lately) where the first minute of incoming calls was free, but you started getting charged after that. You should consult your contract for the details of how your particular plan works.
It could mean that you're not getting reception where you are at. Or, there could be a carrier issue.
Yeah it does. For most providers.
That depends on what you mean. On the phone that is making the call, and on that person's phone bill, the call will show up at the time in the time zone from which the call was placed. The phone of the person receiving the call, and that person's phone bill (if, for example, you pay for incoming calls on a cellphone), will show the call at the time it was received.