Thank you very much, Nikos, for your reply.  I have learned more from your 
responses.

If anyone on the list could point me to a resource or a basic tutorial on the 
installation of Kannel and the various options and requirements to achieve sms 
messaging, I would appreciate that very much. 
 
In the meantime, I will keep digging ..
 
Best regards,
 
David

--- On Fri, 27/11/09, Nikos Balkanas <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Nikos Balkanas <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two Basic Questions, Please?
To: "David Halliday" <[email protected]>, "Kannel Users" <[email protected]>
Date: Friday, 27 November, 2009, 2:32



Hi,
 
Yes, a GSM modem (or a bank of those) are fully supported by kannel. I have no 
clue what is the volume restriction, it depends solely on your operator. I just 
use dedicated SMSc links, but some other guys in the list have more experience 
with it. Bear in mind that in both cases the final step is an SMSc. The only 
difference is that with a GSM modem, the SMSc is your provider's responsibility.
 
BR,
Nikos

----- Original Message ----- 
From: David Halliday 
To: Kannel Users 
Sent: Friday, November 27, 2009 3:18 AM
Subject: Re: Two Basic Questions, Please?






Hi Nikos,
 
Many thanks for your repsonse.  It is really useful.

Before actually sending my enquiry to this list, I had done some searchig for a 
while on google, and I understood that the only way to send sms message to 
recepints is by going through an SMS Centre for the dsetination network.
 
In your reply, you mentioned as an option:
 
Application -> Kannel -> GSM modem
 
Can it really be done that way - *bypassing* the SMS centre?
 
And if yes, what is considered as "low volume"?  Would 1000  messages per day 
be 'OK' with a sim card provider?

And of course, it all depends on the destination network.  Real SS7 
connections may not be an option.  

I would appreciate your advice.

Best regards
 
David

--- On Thu, 26/11/09, Nikos Balkanas <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Nikos Balkanas <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two Basic Questions, Please?
To: "David Halliday" <[email protected]>, "Kannel Users" <[email protected]>
Date: Thursday, 26 November, 2009, 1:27





Hi,
 
1) To push SMS you will need:
 
Application -> Kannel -> GSM modem
 
-or-
 
Application -> Kannel -> SMSc link
 
Application is some kind of web interface to facilitate and schedule pushes. 
Optionally you can substitute one of kannel's components, smsbox, with SQLbox 
for sending bulk.
 
GSM modem provides for a low volume, cheaper usually interface using a SIM 
card. But volume is restricted else SIM maybe disabled. SMSc provides for a 
more reliable interface, however, throughput is restricted according to your 
contract. Volume is unlimited (of course you are charged for each SMS). You can 
also shop around to get the lowest price globally, whereas with a SIM you are 
restricted by what your operator gives you.
 
2) Cost depends on your volume and destination. If Clickatell is an 
aggeragator, ie routes SMS to other SMScs, you can do better than them. If, 
however, they have real SS7 connections, given their volume, it is unlikely.
 
BR,
Nikos

----- Original Message ----- 
From: David Halliday 
To: Kannel Users 
Sent: Wednesday, November 25, 2009 9:54 PM
Subject: Two Basic Questions, Please?






Hello,
 
I have windows xp on my pc, and am very interested in Kannel.

Before installing Linux and going through the whole process, I would like to 
know, if possible, please:-
 
1. To send sms messages, what else would one need apart from:-
 
Kannel + GSM modem + SMSC connectivity (for recepients' network)
 
Anything else apart from the above 3 'components'?
 
2. Would that arrangement be actually cheaper than to go through some bulk SMS 
suppliers like Clickatell, for example?  I think it should, but I am not sure.
 
I would greatly appreciate an answer.
 
Best regards,
 
David
 
 




      

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