The True Cost of SMS Messages
nilbog writes "What's the actual cost of sending SMS messages? This article does the math and concludes that, for example, sending an amount of data that would cost $1 from your ISP would cost over $61 million if you were to send it over SMS. Why has the cost of bandwidth, infrastructure, and technology in general plummeted while the price of SMS messages have risen so egregiously? How can carriers continue to justify the high cost of their apparent super-premium data transmission?"
Next up on Slashdot: Why do cars cost so much?
512 MB RAM, 20 GB disk, 200 GB transfer, five datacenters. $19.95/month.
Just use
T-Mobile: phonenumber@tmomail.net
Virgin Mobile: phonenumber@vmobl.com
Cingular: phonenumber@cingularme.com
Sprint: phonenumber@messaging.sprintpcs.com
Verizon: phonenumber@vtext.com
Nextel: phonenumber@messaging.nextel.com
Just buy the cheapest data-plan and it's still better if you're a heavy user.
IIRC it had cost about a million Euro (most of which was the price of SW) and just sits there, generating a revenue of roughly a million Euro per day. Maintenance costs: almost zero. Network load: almost zero, because messages are transmitted only in pauses between calls. Modulo New Year, nationwide televoting or football world cup, of course, where the assumption of a few messages between a few calls is no longer valid.
Say out loud: I'm an Aspie and I'm somewhat proud, I guess. Uh. Can I write an email in all caps instead? Hm...
I know the true cost of SMS messages!
I made a paper for the univeristy some years ago. The marginal cost of a SMS is 0.
They do have a little cost/opportunity. As a matter of fact SMS messages are sent on the control channel. Initially SMS were implemented in the GSM standard as a control system, just like the ICMP protocol of the IP stack. Then NOKIA though to implement a actual instant message function using SMS. The Contol channel is the channel that your mobile listens to in order to receive calls. So for receiving a SMS a control signal is sent. Since bandwidht is somehow limited on these channels it could happen that in a situation of massive usage of texting the control channel gets saturated and normal voice protocol initiation is disrupted. To prevent this carriers nowadays apply a kind of QoS delaying SMSs until there is no risk of congestion. So we can state that the marginal cost is 0 and the cost/opportunity is also 0
Another story is for the MMSs. Their cost/opportunity is even lower since they run almost enterely on GPRS thus using most bandwidht on normal data channels. Thus a MMS with pictures sounds and maybe video SHOULD cost less than a SMS.
So you wonder, why do I pay so much for a SMS or a MMS or even a Call: after the debts for the initial hardware infrastructure have been paid by the carrier you are still paying because of market segmentation (You won't change the carrier on the fly) and a little monopoly (Almost impossible to start a new carrier from 0).
I hope ou liked the summary!
What about actually reading the posting you are replying to?
I never said that GSM cost is zero. I said that the cost of SMS within GSM is zero, because SMS is just a part of GSM (its stderr channel). So if you deploy a huge GSM network to work as a provider of mobile voice services, you get the SMS service for free. When GSM first was deployed it was never thought to have SMS as a separate service. Thus the first huge SMS networks were paid for by voice users who weren't even using SMS. Then the providers which already had a complete SMS infrastructure in place saw that the usage of SMS started to grow and they could just print money by increasing the SMS prices.
When GSM was introduced in the U.S., the SMS facility was already been known to the providers as a big cash cow, and the calculations were already taking that in account.
But still the cost to send an short message is much lower than the cost to send a phone conversation with about the same price. Here in Austria the charge for 1 min of mobile phone conversation is often 1 ct (up to 5 ct/min for prepaid plans). So for the cost of a single short message (19 ct) I can have a conversation for about 19 minutes. Which one will be more expensive to transmit for the provider?
actually, thats bull, as the firmware that routes GSM in the networks is also used for SMS, actually, SMS uses the same channel your mobile uses to announce itself to the base stations and exchanges status information with. other services like reversed billing were developed later, and you pay for an SMSC because it adds convenience to you, not because you are technically not able to do it yourself... they make the contracts with all the providers, reserve those nice short numbers in all networks and give you a convenient web service or other interface to talk to... and for that you pay. I too used SMS when it first emerged in Europe for zilch... billing it would have cost them more than just letting you use it in those days, at least so they thought before they saw what ridiculous prices they could charge and get away with. When they finally started billing it was 23 cent for the first 100 messages, and 2.3 cent for every message more ... imagine, after it got up to 39 cent for every message... for them it's like printing money.
Surely with the added services they developed ON TOP of SMS, like the afore mentioned reversed billing, premium SMS and so on they have slightly increased their costs for the service itself, but basic SMS started as an accidental byproduct of GSM
Oh, i worked two years in a business that developed and distributed mobile applications, so this is not theoretical stuff.
Your post surprised me as the advantages of texting seem very obvious to me. As I see it, they are:
It's less intrusive to the recipient than a call. It's not demanding immediate attention, it doesn't make them stop what they're doing, it can be replied to at their convenience or not at all.
It's perfect for sending information that you would otherwise have to find a pen and paper and write down, which aren't always immediately to hand.
It's less annoying to people around you, if you're in a public space.
Sometimes you don't want to have a full conversation on the phone with somebody - sometimes you just want to let them know something, or ask something, that's not important enough to go through the ritual of interrupting whatever they're doing with a call, making small talk, etc etc.