Here in Vietnam, we are charged for text messaging by the letter (or number, or punctuation mark). This accounts for the strange abbreviations, which I have to have explained several times before I understand. Most of my friends know I can't read the abbreviations, so they spell everything out. Abbreviations get too expensive.
One of the worst parts about text messaging is when you get a wrong number. You'd think people would save all of the important people of their lives in their address books, but I can understand why they won't, since spouses often check how many unknown attractive people of the opposite sex are on the list...
I had a buddy get this on his phone...
VNSexy wrote:
thank U so much for last nite!
had to go to work at 5.30
i did wanna wake up with you...
He swears he was alone on a business trip that night in Hanoi.
________________________________________________________
You only have one chance to make a first impression. Don't blow it.
I had my phone blocked from texting. I would get messages (mostly from advcertisers wanting to sell something) and not knowing any better I would read them and then get billed for them. So i asked not to receive any text messages anymore and they blocked my number from texting. So i imagine you could do it the other way around as well.
Some of my friends make fun of my phone. I have an old Nokia phone (6100? which I proudly bought on ebay for $10) that I can actually make phone calls on! no camera, no keyboard, no internet, no flip open lid, etc. It is huge and heavy and makes a great paperwight too...
ken k
B&H imperial E flat tuba
Mirafone 187 BBb
1919 Pan American BBb Helicon
1924 Buescher BBb tuba (Dr. Suessaphone)
2009 Mazda Miata
1996 Honda Pacific Coast PC800
News of the WeirdTM
(c) 1999-2001 , Chuck Shepherd. All rights reserved.
WEEK OF FEBRUARY 17, 2008
LEAD STORY
Five of the 10 best-selling novels in Japan in 2007 were originally composed, and serialized, on cell phones, thumbed out by women who had never written novels, for readers who mostly had never before read one. The genre's dominating plotlines are affairs of the heart, and its characteristics, obviously, are simplicity of plot and character and brevity of expression (lest authors' sore thumbs and readers' tired eyes bring down the industry). Said one successful cell phone writer, for a January dispatch in The New York Times, her audience doesn't read works by "professional writers" because "their sentences are too difficult to understand." [New York Times, 1-20-08]
Instead of talking to your plants, if you yelled at them would they still grow, but only to be troubled and insecure?
Kevin Hendrick wrote:Even after all these years (it is an older model ), I still want one of these:
*cough*Doctor Who reference?*cough*
One of my friends had texting disabled on her phone-through the phone company. She couldn't send or recieve texts.
I personally just like texting or im-ing or writing over using the phone because I'm such an akward phone talker.
Not because it's the "cool" thing to do. Speed texters make me gag.
Senior Photography Major (who just can't leave band)
Illinois State University
Tau Beta Sigma National Honorary Band Service Sorority- Zeta Alpha Chapter