Hi Matt,

 

So, you want to send and receive messages to multiple carriers in the US
without using an aggregator? I believe you would need to go to
www.usshortcodes.com <http://www.usshortcodes.com/>  and reserve a short
code. This would be reserved on all US based carriers who participate (I
believe that is all of the major ones). You would then have to go to
TMO, AT&T, Verizon, etc. and setup accounts and pricing and the whole
deal. I am willing to bet that the pricing they give you as a small user
will be far more expensive than what they give an aggregator. Never mind
the fact that setting up an SMPP client at a place like TMO (trust me, I
know) can take a long time. I still would have no idea how you would
keep track of which carrier to send the messages.

 

Kent Walker

Senior Wireless Network Engineer

________________________________

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Matt Hart
Sent: Monday, September 28, 2009 9:50 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: kannel over using SMSC API....

 

Thank you Kent,

I hope to reach as many carriers as possible.  I understand that
aggregators and such are a service that is required and need to be paid.
I would like to use kannel though, and I was wondering what this buys me
over such aggregator's APIs that they offer that allow me to directly
connect to their services.  Do I need to do my own aggregating foot work
if I wish to use kannel and a single short code?  What part am I
missing?

 

Thanks again,

Matt

 

________________________________

From: Kent Walker <[email protected]>
To: Matt Hart <[email protected]>; [email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, September 23, 2009 4:12:48 PM
Subject: RE: kannel over using SMSC API....

Hello Matt,

 

Are the destination MSISDNs for these messages all on the same carrier
or are they on a variety of carriers? If you are mixing and matching US
carriers, you are paying the aggregator to send the message to the
correct carrier. They take care of little things like local number
portability so that you don't have to track which MSISDN belongs to
which network.

 

Kent Walker

Senior Wireless Network Engineer

Jasper Wireless

501 Macara Avenue, Suite 202

Sunnyvale, CA  94085  USA

(w) 408-328-5269

(m) 425-233-9859

(f)   408-328-5201

________________________________

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Matt Hart
Sent: Wednesday, September 23, 2009 12:59 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: kannel over using SMSC API....

 

Hello, 

I have a question concerning kannel.  It's not that technical, but I've
been reading through the list and it seems it would still be a good
place to inquire.  I have been working towards a SMS application where I
simply need to send quite a few messages out from a central server,
pretty much all at once.  Probably  several thousand an hour max, but
not continuosly.  Then a response is expected back , but not mandatory.
I should say I am in the US , and all messaging will be within the US .


 

As I have reluctantly learned, in the US one needs a short code to do
any sort of business like this.  Fine, so I am stuck with a $500/mo bill
whether I send receive messsages or not.  (The corporate lobbies here
have apparently won that battle before the public really knew what hit
them.. sorry, I am digressing.)

 

In my searching for how to go about performing this task I have found
there's lots of folks that want to be a middle man in this business and
frankly I can't afford to pay a middle man to do this sort of business.
This lead me to kannel.  I enjoy working through my linux server at
home, and it seems like it can cut out a middle man at least to some
extent - I think. If I am on track, then I see that one still needs a
SMSC connection, that charges per SMS, and the short code is by law, so
there's really no way around most of it.  Now, these commercial SMSCs
have their own APIs (e..g. clickatell) to connect and transfer the text
messages that can work fairly straight forwardly.  Personally I don't
like giving them any more reason to exist than I have too, and very much
like the idea of having something like kannel to chop out whatever part
they have in this game. Utilizing my linux box is an even better plus.
My question is finally, what does kannel do that the commercial SMSC
APIs cannot do for the small intities, like myself, that just want to
send and receive lots of texts as simply (and of course cheaply) as
possible?

 

Sorry this is so long winded, I promise any additional replies won't be!

 

-Matt

 

 

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