Entries in ClearSMS (5)

History of SMS Messaging

The history of SMS messaging started in the 1980s when telecommunication experts started discussing the technical specifications of sending short messages between mobile phones thru a network. This would be known later as GSM services.

These technical discussions culminated in the sending of the first ever SMS message over Vodafone GSM network in the United Kingdom on December 3, 1992. It was said that Neil Papworth, an engineer of Airwide Solutions, sent the first SMS message from his personal computer to Richard Jarvis of Vodafone. The message was a short and sweet "Merry Christmas".

This initial success was later followed in the succeeding year with the successful deployment of SMS messaging services in Norway and UK. In its early history, SMS messaging growth was very slow as GSM customers were only sending 0.4 messsages per month on the average. The reasons for the slow growth were: billing fraud, inefficient charging setups, and non-existent interoperability among the telecom networks.

When these initial problems were addressed, and with the efficient implementation of pre-payment schemes, SMS messaging usage took off in the year 1999. The teenagers were credited as early adopters of SMS messaging followed by adults and business people.

It was now all history, SMS messaging was said to be the triumph of the consumer. What started as a technology used only for alerting a mobile user of a stored voice mail or a technical applications such as telemetry, SMS messaging is now used by all segments of the society.

The high learning curve in using the SMS messaging services spurred a new form of SMS communication which gave rise to abbreviations and acronyms to save time in typing the messages over a small keyboard. Curiously, most of these abbreviations are understood by the majority of the population.

Today, SMS messaging is not only a part of GSM but also available on other networks like 3G. Unlike in its infancy years, SMS now is being used in a wide range of applications: from ringing tones, to information services, American Idol voting, and even fortune telling. Recently, businesses started using SMS broadcasting thru the Internet for its marketing campaigns. Using web-based SMS providers like www.clearsms.com, business owners must have recognized the advantages of SMS over other mode of communications. SMS messaging offers the fastest form of transmission; it can reach areas unreachable by voice services; and at minimal costs.

In its 15-year history, SMS messaging has gone far and wide and deep. Commercially, SMS is a massive industry worth over 80 billion dollars globally. In the coming years, we should see other applications of SMS messaging especially in the areas of business development and marketing. When that happens, make sure your business is not left behind.

Money Talks

We've been working on upgrading our payment system so that it's integrated with the ClearSMS application.  This means that you don't have to go through the external cart to buy credits. 

We'll it took 3 times the amount of time we had expected (banks are ruthless), but we're finished.  This reminds me of a post I had read a while back from a Web start-up, that they had spent more time writing the payment system than the actual product.  I said to myself - no way! I don't believe it...

Posted on Monday, December 17, 2007 at 12:28PM by Registered CommenterThe ClearSMS Team in , | Comments Off

Steady as She Goes

As you may have noticed on our Web site, the sign-up procedure for a new account is automatic and instantaneous.

On the other hand, requesting a custom logo takes about two days, and the approval process for buying credits takes about half a day.  Why?
 
We are very cautious about m-spam and we require these manual steps to ensure that our users are serious and also willing to agree to our anti-spam policy.

This helps keep ClearSMS fast, safe and secure.

Posted on Tuesday, July 3, 2007 at 04:32PM by Registered CommenterThe ClearSMS Team in , | Comments Off

Revs

We've just finished tuning the SMS relay engine.  Even though ClearSMS is simple to use, under the hood, it's pretty complex.

We adjusted the load balancing so that even if you're sending millions of messages, they'll get there reliably.  For international users, we minimized the encoding length, so that no matter what language you're using, the available words are optimized.

One thing we didn't touch was the user interface.  It's actually very cool... except maybe for the colors.  Kyriakos designed it, and we don't want to hurt his feelings, but somebody's got to break the news to him.  

We'll keep you posted.

Posted on Sunday, May 27, 2007 at 06:21PM by Registered CommenterThe ClearSMS Team in , | Comments Off

Welcome to ClearSMS

We've just launched ClearSMS, and we're excited.  We've got stories to tell, but maybe we'll leave it for another blog.  The important thing is the product, and you.

It took a lot of work to develop the software.  So people ask, "How many things can it do?"  The answer; it does one thing, and it does it well.  "How about the features?" As few as possible.  Why? because the longer the list of features Web software has, the more cumbersome, unproductive and slow it is. 

We're proud of ClearSMS, it's fast, it's smooth, it's easy-to-use.  But that doesn't mean anything if it can't help your business.  We think it can.

Posted on Wednesday, April 18, 2007 at 07:06AM by Registered CommenterThe ClearSMS Team in , | Comments Off