From: Elias Bizannes <elias.bizan...@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 17 Aug 2008 17:58:02 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Mon, Aug 18 2008 10:58 am
Subject: Re: New project idea: Bringing back Twitter SMS
People definitely want this. I'll see if I can get some people to put
their hands up, if people on this mailing list don't volunteer to guide Bart. I know personally I would pay for the SMS service. On Aug 18, 1:05 am, Bart Jellema <bart.jell...@tjoos.com> wrote:
> I don't think pricing is an issue at all... I just build it with my
> modem for fun... using a gateway is just as easy and just as cheap... > 5c to 7c per message...http://www.clickatell.com/pricing/pricing_wizard.php > On Aug 17, 8:57 pm, Geoff McQueen <geoff.mcqu...@internetrix.com.au>
> > Bart,
> > I'm thinking you might be onto something here. There has recently been a dramatic increase in the number of "unlimited" mobile plans on the market, which include unlimited text. While there are of course going to be massive fine-print caveats on these plans (haven't had a chance to read up on them yet), I imagine they'll come back to not running a commercial service, and a fair use policy that you don't go completely nuts.
> > As a result, buying a couple of these plans and then opening up shop would likely end up getting one into hot water pretty quickly, but, what if we could do something a little more "community" with it, and run the service in a bit of a decentralised fashion, so that a number of individuals with these sorts of unlimited plans put up their hands and take a small bit of the load in a way which doesn't breach fair use or commercial provisions in these sort of plans?
> > I haven't thought about it enough to consider its mechanics, but the concept would probably be to have a central marshalling point where messages are read from Twitter (XMPP, API, whatever), and then a random user who's signed in is selected and the central point sends it through to their machine via the internet at which point it is then sent out. The user could nominate what they're prepared to offer, so, say 250 SMS messages per month, with a cap of 30 per day (less than your average teenager sends, so, again, they don't earn unwanted attention) could be what a user could choose, and once they have used up their quota, they're not part of the random selection list.
> > Methods that come to mind include something like the HSDPA modem you're talking about, or via an iPhone application (Apple are promising to be able to "wake up" applications on handsets using push technology aren't they?), or a Windows Mobile 6 application. Ideally, the "from" number for this sort of service would be changed to be the +44 UK gateway (which twitter will still receive messages via), so the innocent are protected.
> > Anyway, this is a whole lot more engineering than other suggestions, but it could have the advantage of being a cost-less solution, and, personally, I'd say the world would have to be in awe of Aussie ingenuity for coming up with this work around (and since Twitter's domestic support is limited to USA, Canada and India for the time being (I think?), open sourcing the effort could result in a massive peer supported network of these gateways.
> > That's enough weekend dreaming for me... back to the 300+ item to do list... ;-)
> > Geoff
> > From: silicon-beach-australia@googlegroups.com [mailto:silicon-beach-australia@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Davis Weddi
> > Interesting stuff here on SMS.
> > Davis
> > On Fri, Aug 15, 2008 at 8:59 PM, Bart Jellema <bart.jell...@tjoos.com<mailto:bart.jell...@tjoos.com>> wrote:
> > Just got home from official friday and read (parts of) this thread...
> >http://www.tjoos.com/Img/Tweet2Sms.png
> > Twitter sends notifications to my email. I poll my email every 30 secs
> > So..... who would pay something like 10 cents per received sms? Should
> > Time for bed.
> > On Aug 15, 10:09 am, Elias Bizannes <elias.bizan...@gmail.com<mailto:elias.bizan...@gmail.com>> wrote:
> > > --------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------
> > > Hi Elias and Geoff,
> > > I tried posting to the group but got an error message - maybe I'm not
> > > Anyways heres my email.
> > > ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> > > SMS
> > > Hi there,
> > > Thanks for including me on this email and thanks to Elias for
> > > A few things I've learnt about running a premium SMS business that you
> > > That being said, I think that your idea has a lot of merit. Twitter
> > > Geoff and some of the other posters correctly pointed out some of the
> > > Not too make it sound too trivial as I know there'll be some gotchas
> > > I have a good premium SMS shortcode already set up (19961996) with
> > > To be perfectly honest - the most expensive part of my agreement is
> > > I'd like to be involved in this project as I think its got a lot of
> > > Ivo
> > > On 8/14/08, Geoff McQueen <geoff.mcqu...@internetrix.com.au<mailto:geoff.mcqu...@internetrix.com.au>> wrote:
> > > - Show quoted text -
> > > > Sounds interesting. As someone who's messed around with premium SMS before,
> > > > 1. A "short code" or 19 number be registered in AU
> > > > If that is the plan, this would require:
> ...
> read more »- Hide quoted text -
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