in send-sms url as a parameter

On Wed, May 6, 2009 at 6:18 PM, Latitude Berlin
<latitude...@googlemail.com>wrote:

> Under which group alt-dcs is to be defined?
>
> - Latitude
>
>
> On Wed, May 6, 2009 at 6:17 PM, Elton Hoxha <elt...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I face the same problem:
>>
>> - With alt-dcs = 0 I get the following
>> 2009-05-05 22:22:33 [5168] [3] INFO: sendsms sender:<test2:1517>
>> (10.1.21.146) to:<355672000000> msg:<>
>> 2009-05-05 22:22:33 [5157] [7] DEBUG:   short_message: ""
>>
>> The content is %00, but kannel converts it to empty space.
>>
>> - With alt-dcs=1;
>> 2009-05-05 22:23:48 [5168] [3] INFO: sendsms sender:<test2:1517>
>> (10.1.21.146) to:<355672000000> msg:<>
>> 2009-05-05 22:23:48 [5157] [7] DEBUG:   short_message: "?"
>>
>> Regards
>> Elton
>>
>>
>>
>> On Wed, May 6, 2009 at 5:49 PM, Jovan Kostovski <chomb...@gmail.com>wrote:
>>
>>> On Wed, May 6, 2009 at 5:32 PM, Latitude Berlin
>>> <latitude...@googlemail.com> wrote:
>>> > Hi,
>>> > I am sending some text with some german characters like: "test chars
>>> ÄÖÜ
>>> > äöü" and I dont get the original content on my device. If I use UTF-8,
>>> then
>>> > it works fine. But I wanna use GSM charset for this since Ä, ä, Ö, ö,
>>> Ü, ü
>>> > are are of GMS charset.
>>> > Kindly advise.
>>>
>>> Try the following test:
>>> set alt-dcs=0
>>>
>>> send %00 as message text. Yyou should get the @ character if GSM 7 bit
>>> encoding is used
>>> If you don't get that character set
>>> alt-dcs=1
>>> and repeat the test.
>>>
>>> If you get the @ character, by sendind %00 as message test, then try
>>> the umlauts, you should get them on your ME.
>>>
>>> HTH, Jovan
>>>
>>>
>>
>

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