How Reliable are Cell Phones?
Cellular phones and pagers are part of the "now"
generation, instant contact, anywhere at any time.
People are looking for convenience, comfort and
security. The question is how instantaneous and reliable
is the contact?
Talking with someone is the main use for a cell phone,
yet due to poor reception how often do calls not go
through, or important calls "dropped" due to flaky
coverage? Let us not forget, that in a time of tragedy,
lines were congested and the resounding "all circuits
busy" messages were heard from coast to coast. There is
certainly room for improvement if you want to reach out
and touch someone.
The alternative to voice communication is traditional
text messaging, enjoyed by the young as SMS, a 'hip'
communication method, and the older as the tried and
true paging, a trustworthy means of communication. A
carrier receives pages or text messages via a
traditional dial up modem or Internet connection to
their terminal, and then broadcasts the messages over
their network to the appropriate wireless device. How
instant is sending a text message? The answer might
surprise you...it depends.
Traditional means of sending text messages is
surprisingly reliable and fast. However, many cellular
carriers, wishing to merge technologies while keeping
costs down, have opted to utilize email technology to
send text messages. Why not, an email is nothing more
than a text message, using the Simple Mail Transfer
Protocol (SMTP). On the surface this sounds like a great
idea, nearly everyone has email access, and the use of
the Internet streamlines the sending of messages.
What is often overlooked, is the fact that email was not
designed to be time sensitive. There can be significant
delays and an instantaneous receipt can be lost when
sending email to a pager or cell phone. Text messages
sent via the email protocol SMTP could take a more
scenic delivery route. While in many cases, receiving
messages in a timely fashion is not critical; some
industries require and benefit from the receipt of
urgent messages. It is therefore important to realize
and make a distinction between the protocols that are
designed for instantaneous communication and those that
are not.
If sending messages immediately to a cell phone or pager
is required, more reliable protocols are available. When
sending text messages, via a modem, the Telocator
Alphanumeric Protocol (TAP) is extremely dependable,
albeit slower due to the modem dialing. If sending
messages with a high-speed Internet connection use the
newer time sensitive Internet protocols: Simple Network
Paging Protocol (SNPP) and Wireless Communication
Transfer Protocol (WCTP). If your carrier supports these
protocols they are the better options for sending
important messages.
If carriers understand the "now" generation is about
speed and reliability, customer satisfaction will
improve. Text messaging is a reliable and useful
communication method, especially since voice is not
always convenient or possible. With public awareness and
urging, carriers will increase their offerings of text
messaging protocols. Carriers should offer email or
SMTP, but they must also support time sensitive
protocols, regardless, of whether the protocols are
older such as TAP or newer such as WCTP.
Resources -
Carriers supporting SNPP -
http://www.notepage.net/snpp.htm
Carriers supporting WCTP -
http://www.notepage.net/wctp.htm
About the Author -
Sharon Housley manages marketing for NotePage, Inc.
http://www.notepage.net a company specializing in
alphanumeric paging, SMS and wireless messaging software
solutions. Other sites by Sharon can be found at
http://www.softwaremarketingresource.com , and
http://www.small-business-software.net
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