Texting Is 25 Years Old (cnet.com)
Readers share a report: The first text message was sent on Dec. 3, 1992, by British engineer Neil Papworth to Richard Jarvis, an executive at British telecom Vodafone. Typed out on a PC, it was sent to Jarvis's Orbitel 901, a mobile phone that would take up most of your laptop backpack. Although Papworth is credited with sending the first text message, he's not the so-called father of SMS. That honor falls on Matti Makkonen, who initially suggested the idea back in 1984 at a telecommunications conference. But texting didn't take off over night. First it had to be incorporated into the then-budding GSM standard. Today, about 97 percent of smartphone owners use text messaging, according to Pew Research, and along the way, a new set of sub-languages based on abbreviations and keyboard-based imagery has evolved.
As a GenXer, I could never text on a flip-phone numeric keypad. I just didn't have the patience to try to cycle through the numbers to get the letters I needed, nor could I accept that poor spelling, syntax and grammar that it required. Once we got proper QWERTY keypads I was all over it.
NT
in past I had to block txts to not get changed incoming ones I was paying for spam ones. Now they are part of your base plan.
Telegraphers were the first texters. They used abbreviations like WX for Weather, YL for Young Lady, HI for laughter, AGN for Again...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morse_code_abbreviations
In the rest of the world the sender pays the bill
Weiner jokes anyone?
Curiously, the OP fails to mention that the original intended use for what we now know as Texts or SMS Messages was in fact as a means to aid troubleshooting around the cellular network.
The mobile operators were in the process of switching over from the older, poorer quality but better-understood analogue mobile phone network, shifting to an all-digital future. The "SMS Message" came about - along with defining characteristics such as the limited message size - because that was the available "space" in the protocols which support the infrastructure.
In essence, Text Messages were a tool for engineers to help them diagnose problems with the new network.
The decision to actually sell them as a product was quite separate - and, as history has shown, a stroke of genius.
The crazy thing is that text messages are still a more universal platform, allowing any person with a mobile phone to message anyone else using a different service provider. The alternatives, such as Facebook Messenger, Viber, WhatsApp, Hangouts, Slack and Skype are all islands keeping communications with their borders. Even e-mail is still more universal.
I am looking forward to the day that I can text message anyone on any platform, from any other platform. Jabber tried doing that, but from what I understand suffered from technical limitations. Maybe we need a proper 'SX' (short message exchange) field in the DNS records and IETF define an RFC for some universal platform? Then again, without a government mandate, I doubt we will see this happen.
Jumpstart the tartan drive.
I'm still waiting for a solution to the text messages that people send me that insist on using stupid abbreviations for actual words. We don't pay by the character to send/receive text messages any more, please use real words. Even respectable companies do that with their text messages from time to time; please don't use "R" in place of "are", "U" in place of "you", "B" in place of "be", "2" in place of "to" (or "too") or make other such idiotic assaults on our language.
Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
Phones -> Texting -> Twitter ->
Desktops -> BBS -> Web forums ->
*merge*
-> normie / nagger infested social media dumpster fire
In the rest of the world the sender pays the bill
Yes, "receiver pays" is an American thing. The reason is that at the very beginning mobile phones were overlaid on top of the existing phone system, with the same area codes, and it was impossible for a caller to know if they were calling a landline or a mobile. In America, this is mostly still true.
In most of the rest of the world, mobile phones have a different prefix, and often even a different number of digits. You can look at a phone number, and in a glance you can tell that it is a mobile number. So "caller pays" is reasonable. This is one reason that other countries have a lot less phone spam, and a lot less robo-calling.
that SMS made it all the way to the ripe old age of 25 without running its car into a bridge abutment while texting.
slashdot: A failed experiment.
Here in the Netherlands, SMS was quite expensive, and (indeed as you say) no real competition between carriers to bring it down to sane levels.
Which is why especially in this country, IM (Whatsapp) was able to take over (almost) completely quite fast.
So, now barely anyone texts anymore, so the carriers can't make money from SMS, whatever they charge.
Since their product is so unattractive, and they always have plenty of it in stock (as it of course comes with the cell protocol "for free"), they make the best of this situation by just throwing "free" unlimited SMS in their plans. They won't make lots of money from it directly anyway, and they can handle the unlimited SMS traffic just fine as it's impopular anyway. But this way at least it makes their plans more attractive compared to other carriers.
All a result of IM competition.
(btw, personally I pay €2,50/month for 250min outgoing, 500MB, unlimited SMS (and incoming calls)).
Here, all this time, I thought write and wall were texting.
The idea to limite sms to something above 120characters? AFTER email and getting money for this. Hat's off :/
I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
Have to say, my first reaction was "why would anyone want to painfully type text on a flip phone, when you were literally holding a flip phone?!" I only "got it", when I realized it was a new method of communication that allowed you to carry on multiple, simultaneous discussions in complete privacy. Teenagers in front of their parents and teachers were the first big users of the technology.
I do think it is ironic that people laud the ability to talk to their Alexa/Cortana/Siri computers, but prefer to text their human friends. I cant help but feel if texting were introduced as a technology first, only old geezer luddites would insist on still using it. The younger generation would be carrying on about how backward texting is, and how delightful it was to use an amazing technology that lets you actually hear your friends voices!
E-mails, AIM, etc. don't work well to SMS. :(
Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
Txtg sux x25y..... LOL!
The abreviation sub language predates texting by over a decade. I remember using afk, brb, lol, and many many other less savory ones on Apple Link, IRC and dial in BBSs.