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Home » Article » Computers-and-Technology SMS for Redundant Communications
Lew Newlin filed under "Computers-and-Technology"
Most wireless handheld devices such as Blackberries offer the
ability to send and receive email messages to some degree.
Despite the fact the PDA devices and services vary, handheld
email has become a popular business communication tools. Using
PDA devices has become so prevalent in fact, that most senior
executives that use Blackberries understand the term
“crackberry” all too well.
A downside to business wireless email lies in the way in which
it is used and infrastructure components involved. For example,
an assistant may send an email to an executive that is attending
a meeting, or a support person may receive a network based alert
while performing a service call. Both of these examples increase
productivity and efficiency. However, both examples also depend
upon your companies IT infrastructure to function.
Could your company electronically communicate if your Blackberry
Enterprise Server (BES), SMTP gateway, internet connection, or
other core email component failed? What would happen during an
emergency event or natural disaster? Would your ability to
communicate via electronically be crippled?
If the answer is yes, you may wish to consider Short Message
Service (SMS) text message for message redundancy. SMS, or text
messaging as it is commonly referred, offers the ability to send
short text messages without involving your companies IT
infrastructure. The diagram below illustrates basic SMS message
flow.
Just about all wireless providers offer SMS packages. If your
wireless devices are SMS capable, implementation requires
nothing more than enabling the service and a little user
education. The first step in SMS utilization is to contact your
wireless service provider. Providers normally offer a given
number of SMS messages with each wireless packages, so before
you spend additional resources review your current plan to see
what is included. If SMS is to be used for redundant or
emergency communications only, your current plan may offer the
capacity you need. If you find your current plan does not offer
SMS or the desired capacity, exercise caution when dealing with
your provider. Most wireless providers view SMS as an
outstanding revenue source.
The second step is educating your users on how to send SMS
messages. It is actually quite simple. Wireless providers
provide 'SMS email addresses' with their service. The table
below lists some well known providers and their SMS email
address formats. | Provider | Information | Max Length |
| Alltel | <10
digit phone number>@message.alltel.com (web
page) | 160 |
| Ameritech SBC Paging | <10 digit phone number>@paging.sbc.com (web
page) | 230 |
| Arch | <10 digit phone
number>@archwireless.net (web
page) | 160 |
| ATT Wireless | <10
digit phone number>@mobile.att.net (web page) | 160 |
| Cingular Wireless | <10 digit phone number>@cingularME.com (web page) | 160 |
| Metrocall | <10
digit phone number>@airmessage.net (web
page) | 200 |
| Nextel | <10 digit
phone number>@messaging.nextel.com (web page) | 500 |
| Qwest | <10
digit phone number>@qwestmp.com (web page) | 160 | | Rogers |
<10 digit phone number>@pcs.rogers.com (web page) | 160 | | SkyTel |
<7 digit PIN>@skytel.com
(web page) | 500 |
| Sprint | <10
digit phone number>@messaging.sprintpcs.com (web page) | 160 | | T-Mobile | <10 digit phone
number>@tmomail.net (web page) | 140 |
| US Cellular | <10 digit phone number>@mms.uscc.net (web
page) | 160 |
| Verizon Wireless | <10
digit phone number>@vtext.com (web page) | 160 | Armed with the SMS email
address it is just a matter of typing then sending the message.
As the chart above shows, different providers support different
message lengths. When sending a SMS message across providers,
message length should be limited to 140 characters to insure
cross-provider compatibility. Update your wireless handheld
contact list to include SMS addresses and you will have an
emergency messaging method if needed.
What happens if I need to send an SMS message to a wireless
device and I do not have a wireless device? The SMS address is
the key. If the SMS is known, you can send the device a message
from a normal email client, the providers web site, or
programmatically. Most providers offer the ability to send their
customers SMS message via a web page. Text or a button labeled
“send a text message” is prominently displayed on most provider
web sites. As this is a revenue source, providers offer everyone
the ability to send their customers SMS messages.
Normal email clients can also be used to send SMS messages as
long as the SMS address is used and maximum message length
requirements are followed.
An often overlooked use for SMS is in alert messaging. Services
that perform email, web site, and other network infrastructure
monitoring could, and probably should, be setup to use SMS
addresses. Since key components could fail and leave normal
infrastructure components unusable, SMS offers an alternate way
to insure message delivery.
Short Message Service can provide your organization with a
redundant message path during emergencies, disasters, and for
alert notifications. The service is relatively inexpensive and
chances are your devices are SMS capable.
About the author:
Lew Newlin is CTO of SiteRecon, a provider of
internet ema
il monitoring and
web site monitoring services for business.
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