How would it kill SMS if was using SMS?
If an app can MSG every platform plus SMS with any phone, while being transparent, it would take over SMS.
Eventually SMS users would move over to the new platform.
How would it kill SMS if was using SMS?
How bout telling all that to my dumbphone (touchscreen phones never appealed). Also, why would I want to pay for an expensive mobile internet plan when I have internet at home already. Too pricy for me to justify, not to mention far more limited for what you pay for.
Basically, unless providers want to throw data plans for the same price as an sms plan, sms is very likely going to stay.
These all seem to be issues of habit and nothing to do with the technology of email vs sms.My problem with just using email is that people tend to ignore it for long periods of time. SMS tends to get a pop-up, is seen pretty much immediately and much more likely to get a timely response. If I want to meet a buddy in a few days, I'll email. If I want to meet in a few hours I'll SMS.
Why would you spend an extra $180 per year for no good particular reason? Just to get IM support so some lazy friend doesn't have to pick up his phone when he's sitting at home 20 feet from his phome? That's just foolish, esp. when IM is less ubiquitous and sometimes less reliable.Here's what I have, and what you can still get as a new customer. It's somewhat difficult to find and not prominently offered, but it's there and it's real. From AT&T, of all places...
Services:
Data Unlimited for Non-Smartphones
Remove (shop via standard, non-smartphone)
$15.00
Is $15 that expensive?![]()
Yep. The only criticism I have of SMS is the length. On my provider you can go over 160 and it keeps it as one, but I still keep my messages to 160 or less to maintain compatibility for everyone, since I don't always know what carrier they're on.I've never had an issue with sms going through and i send thousands every month for the past 5 years. Just about everyone i know uses sms over email when communicating with other people from their phone to other, it's just the default and requires no setup or knowing of separate address.
What u would like to see is the character limit raised. However when I noticed when u send one that gets split into several on ATT that gets sent to another ATT phone the sms will appear as one large one instead of split up as several.
160 character messages that are limited to a particular device doesn't sound like desirable technology to me.
I bet it was an important one that simply couldn't wait until all the other terribly important messages being sent at that time had stopped saturating the local network.Try sending a text message at midnight on your new year's party. I had a handful of txt refuse to go through last week for no reason. They wouldn't even try to re-send, just sat there.
You're not really making a good case for why sms doesn't need binning.I bet it was an important one that simply couldn't wait until all the other terribly important messages being sent at that time had stopped saturating the local network.
You're not really making a good case for why sms doesn't need binning.
Why would you spend an extra $180 per year for no good particular reason? Just to get IM support so some lazy friend doesn't have to pick up his phone when he's sitting at home 20 feet from his phome? That's just foolish, esp. when IM is less ubiquitous and sometimes less reliable.
160 character messages that are limited to a particular device doesn't sound like desirable technology to me. Try sending a text message at midnight on your new year's party. I had a handful of txt refuse to go through last week for no reason. They wouldn't even try to re-send, just sat there.
Why would you spend an extra $180 per year for no good particular reason? Just to get IM support so some lazy friend doesn't have to pick up his phone when he's sitting at home 20 feet from his phome? That's just foolish, esp. when IM is less ubiquitous and sometimes less reliable.