Aussie Phorums Eyo Technologies For your PC needs

Go Back   Aussie Phorums > USENET / Newsgroup gateway > aus.* > aus.comms.mobile

Reply
 
Thread Tools
  #1  
Old 04-04-2005, 08:29 PM
Simon VK3XEM
Guest
 

Posts: n/a
Re: Telstra launches SMS from fixed lines

Giles wrote:
> FYI - Telstra media release
> http://www.telstra.com.au/communicat...ObjectID=33317
>
> =-=-=
> 28 February 2005
> Home phones join the texting revolution today
>
> Telstra today launched Australia's first text message service for home
> telephones, giving more than 10 million households the chance to join
> the "texting" revolution.
>
> The launch of this text message service means home phone users with
> compatible services can now read and send text messages on their
> landlines using specially designed telephones in the same way they do
> with mobile phones.
>
> Telstra's Head of Consumer Marketing, Jenny Young, said the new home
> text messaging service would provide an important bridge between text
> savvy mobile phone users and the home phone market.
>
> "Text messaging is already extraordinarily popular in Australia with
> more than 100 million SMS sent by Telstra customers each month," she
> said. "We anticipate that having text messaging available on the home
> phone will trigger a new wave of text messaging popularity,
> particularly among mums, dads and grandparents.
>
> "Text messaging on home phones is set to help families stay in touch.
> For example, teenagers who are out and about can now text home to let
> their parents know where they are, or that they need a lift home.
>
> "Conversely, parents can now send a text message from their home phone
> to their teenager's mobile asking what time they'll be home."
>
> Cathy Freeman today sent Australia's very first text message from a
> home phone. Her message was sent to athlete, Kyle Vander Kuyp, who is
> training for the Melbourne 2006 Commonwealth Games. Cathy wrote:
>
> "Kyle. Keep up the training - 2006 Comm Games will b awesome. Cathy."
>
> Sending text messages from your home phone is simple. Telstra customers
> with a compatible service and an SMS-enabled home phone use their
> keypad to send text messages just as they would to send text on a
> mobile phone.
>
> To send text messages to a home phone, simply type the message, key in
> the full 10-digit fixed phone number including the STD area code
> without spaces (eg. 0297101234) and press send.
>
> Reading a text message on one of the new telephones is identical to
> reading a text message on a mobile phone. Even homes without a new
> SMS-enabled phone can receive SMS using Telstra's Talking Text" service
> that was launched in 2004 and converts text messages into speech that
> is relayed to the person answering the home phone.
>
> Ms Young said the new text messaging service was the latest example of
> Telstra striving to deliver products and services that enhance the
> lives of its customers.
>
> "Text messaging makes the home phone more versatile than ever before,"
> she said. "It follows the roll-out of hundreds of SMS-enabled public
> payphones across Australia."
>
> SMS-enabled phones are priced from $129.95 from Telstra Shops and are
> also available at other retailers. Telstra home phone customers pay no
> additional monthly fee for access to the text messaging service and SMS
> cost 25 cents each to send from the home phone.
>
> To help first-time-texters, Telstra has launched an online SMS
> dictionary designed to assist in deciphering text message
> abbreviations. The dictionary can be found online at
> http://www.telstra.com.au/talkingtext/dictionary.cfm
>
> Text messaging on home phones is currently exclusive to Telstra, and
> customers of Telstra resellers. Other operators expected to follow and
> introduce the service later in the year.
>
> For more information on text messaging from your home phone visit
> http://www.telstra.com.au/talkingtext/index.htm or telephone 1800 008
> 135.
>
> Warwick Ponder
> Tel: (02) 9298 4619 or Mob: 0409 369 711
>
> Reference Number: 073/2005


Does anyone know if there is any software we can run to access SMS via
our PC, rather than going out and buying an SMS landline phone?



--
The views I present are my own and NOT of any organisation I belong to.

73 de Simon, VK3XEM.
http://www.aca.gov.au/pls/radcom/cli...IENT_NO=157452
VoIP http://www.TALKonIP.com.au/
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 04-04-2005, 08:29 PM
Rod Speed
Guest
 

Posts: n/a
Re: Telstra launches SMS from fixed lines


"Simon VK3XEM" <usenet@vk3xem.net> wrote in message
news:422b7d16$1_2@news.melbourne.pipenetworks.com. ..
> Giles wrote:
>> FYI - Telstra media release
>> http://www.telstra.com.au/communicat...ObjectID=33317
>>
>> =-=-=
>> 28 February 2005
>> Home phones join the texting revolution today
>>
>> Telstra today launched Australia's first text message service for home
>> telephones, giving more than 10 million households the chance to join
>> the "texting" revolution.
>>
>> The launch of this text message service means home phone users with
>> compatible services can now read and send text messages on their
>> landlines using specially designed telephones in the same way they do
>> with mobile phones.
>>
>> Telstra's Head of Consumer Marketing, Jenny Young, said the new home
>> text messaging service would provide an important bridge between text
>> savvy mobile phone users and the home phone market.
>>
>> "Text messaging is already extraordinarily popular in Australia with
>> more than 100 million SMS sent by Telstra customers each month," she
>> said. "We anticipate that having text messaging available on the home
>> phone will trigger a new wave of text messaging popularity,
>> particularly among mums, dads and grandparents.
>>
>> "Text messaging on home phones is set to help families stay in touch.
>> For example, teenagers who are out and about can now text home to let
>> their parents know where they are, or that they need a lift home.
>>
>> "Conversely, parents can now send a text message from their home phone
>> to their teenager's mobile asking what time they'll be home."
>>
>> Cathy Freeman today sent Australia's very first text message from a
>> home phone. Her message was sent to athlete, Kyle Vander Kuyp, who is
>> training for the Melbourne 2006 Commonwealth Games. Cathy wrote:
>>
>> "Kyle. Keep up the training - 2006 Comm Games will b awesome. Cathy."
>>
>> Sending text messages from your home phone is simple. Telstra customers
>> with a compatible service and an SMS-enabled home phone use their
>> keypad to send text messages just as they would to send text on a
>> mobile phone.
>>
>> To send text messages to a home phone, simply type the message, key in
>> the full 10-digit fixed phone number including the STD area code
>> without spaces (eg. 0297101234) and press send.
>>
>> Reading a text message on one of the new telephones is identical to
>> reading a text message on a mobile phone. Even homes without a new
>> SMS-enabled phone can receive SMS using Telstra's Talking Text" service
>> that was launched in 2004 and converts text messages into speech that
>> is relayed to the person answering the home phone.
>>
>> Ms Young said the new text messaging service was the latest example of
>> Telstra striving to deliver products and services that enhance the
>> lives of its customers.
>>
>> "Text messaging makes the home phone more versatile than ever before,"
>> she said. "It follows the roll-out of hundreds of SMS-enabled public
>> payphones across Australia."
>>
>> SMS-enabled phones are priced from $129.95 from Telstra Shops and are
>> also available at other retailers. Telstra home phone customers pay no
>> additional monthly fee for access to the text messaging service and SMS
>> cost 25 cents each to send from the home phone.
>>
>> To help first-time-texters, Telstra has launched an online SMS
>> dictionary designed to assist in deciphering text message
>> abbreviations. The dictionary can be found online at
>> http://www.telstra.com.au/talkingtext/dictionary.cfm
>>
>> Text messaging on home phones is currently exclusive to Telstra, and
>> customers of Telstra resellers. Other operators expected to follow and
>> introduce the service later in the year.
>>
>> For more information on text messaging from your home phone visit
>> http://www.telstra.com.au/talkingtext/index.htm or telephone 1800 008
>> 135.
>>
>> Warwick Ponder
>> Tel: (02) 9298 4619 or Mob: 0409 369 711
>>
>> Reference Number: 073/2005


> Does anyone know if there is any software we can run to access SMS via our PC,
> rather than going out and buying an SMS landline phone?


You're gunna need a lot more than just software for receiving particularly.


Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 04-04-2005, 08:29 PM
John Smith
Guest
 

Posts: n/a
Re: Telstra launches SMS from fixed lines

Simon VK3XEM wrote:
> Giles wrote:
>
>> FYI - Telstra media release
>> http://www.telstra.com.au/communicat...ObjectID=33317
>>
>> =-=-=
>> 28 February 2005
>> Home phones join the texting revolution today
>>
>> Telstra today launched Australia's first text message service for home
>> telephones, giving more than 10 million households the chance to join
>> the "texting" revolution.
>>
>> The launch of this text message service means home phone users with
>> compatible services can now read and send text messages on their
>> landlines using specially designed telephones in the same way they do
>> with mobile phones.
>>
>> Telstra's Head of Consumer Marketing, Jenny Young, said the new home
>> text messaging service would provide an important bridge between text
>> savvy mobile phone users and the home phone market.
>>
>> "Text messaging is already extraordinarily popular in Australia with
>> more than 100 million SMS sent by Telstra customers each month," she
>> said. "We anticipate that having text messaging available on the home
>> phone will trigger a new wave of text messaging popularity,
>> particularly among mums, dads and grandparents.
>>
>> "Text messaging on home phones is set to help families stay in touch.
>> For example, teenagers who are out and about can now text home to let
>> their parents know where they are, or that they need a lift home.
>>
>> "Conversely, parents can now send a text message from their home phone
>> to their teenager's mobile asking what time they'll be home."
>>
>> Cathy Freeman today sent Australia's very first text message from a
>> home phone. Her message was sent to athlete, Kyle Vander Kuyp, who is
>> training for the Melbourne 2006 Commonwealth Games. Cathy wrote:
>>
>> "Kyle. Keep up the training - 2006 Comm Games will b awesome. Cathy."
>>
>> Sending text messages from your home phone is simple. Telstra customers
>> with a compatible service and an SMS-enabled home phone use their
>> keypad to send text messages just as they would to send text on a
>> mobile phone.
>>
>> To send text messages to a home phone, simply type the message, key in
>> the full 10-digit fixed phone number including the STD area code
>> without spaces (eg. 0297101234) and press send.
>>
>> Reading a text message on one of the new telephones is identical to
>> reading a text message on a mobile phone. Even homes without a new
>> SMS-enabled phone can receive SMS using Telstra's Talking Text" service
>> that was launched in 2004 and converts text messages into speech that
>> is relayed to the person answering the home phone.
>>
>> Ms Young said the new text messaging service was the latest example of
>> Telstra striving to deliver products and services that enhance the
>> lives of its customers.
>>
>> "Text messaging makes the home phone more versatile than ever before,"
>> she said. "It follows the roll-out of hundreds of SMS-enabled public
>> payphones across Australia."
>>
>> SMS-enabled phones are priced from $129.95 from Telstra Shops and are
>> also available at other retailers. Telstra home phone customers pay no
>> additional monthly fee for access to the text messaging service and SMS
>> cost 25 cents each to send from the home phone.
>>
>> To help first-time-texters, Telstra has launched an online SMS
>> dictionary designed to assist in deciphering text message
>> abbreviations. The dictionary can be found online at
>> http://www.telstra.com.au/talkingtext/dictionary.cfm
>>
>> Text messaging on home phones is currently exclusive to Telstra, and
>> customers of Telstra resellers. Other operators expected to follow and
>> introduce the service later in the year.
>>
>> For more information on text messaging from your home phone visit
>> http://www.telstra.com.au/talkingtext/index.htm or telephone 1800 008
>> 135.
>>
>> Warwick Ponder
>> Tel: (02) 9298 4619 or Mob: 0409 369 711
>>
>> Reference Number: 073/2005

>
>
> Does anyone know if there is any software we can run to access SMS via
> our PC, rather than going out and buying an SMS landline phone?


Get a nokia phone and download windows drivers/apps, then get say a
cheap vodafone capped plan, and SMS away...
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 04-04-2005, 08:31 PM
Paul Worsley
Guest
 

Posts: n/a
Re: Telstra launches SMS from fixed lines

snip
>>
>> "Text messaging makes the home phone more versatile than ever before,"
>> she said. "It follows the roll-out of hundreds of SMS-enabled public
>> payphones across Australia."
>>
>> SMS-enabled phones are priced from $129.95 from Telstra Shops and are
>> also available at other retailers. Telstra home phone customers pay no
>> additional monthly fee for access to the text messaging service and SMS
>> cost 25 cents each to send from the home phone.
>>
>> To help first-time-texters, Telstra has launched an online SMS
>> dictionary designed to assist in deciphering text message
>> abbreviations. The dictionary can be found online at
>> http://www.telstra.com.au/talkingtext/dictionary.cfm
>>
>> Text messaging on home phones is currently exclusive to Telstra, and
>> customers of Telstra resellers. Other operators expected to follow and
>> introduce the service later in the year.
>>
>> For more information on text messaging from your home phone visit
>> http://www.telstra.com.au/talkingtext/index.htm or telephone 1800 008
>> 135.
>>
>> Warwick Ponder
>> Tel: (02) 9298 4619 or Mob: 0409 369 711
>>
>> Reference Number: 073/2005

>
> Does anyone know if there is any software we can run to access SMS via our
> PC, rather than going out and buying an SMS landline phone?
> 73 de Simon, VK3XEM.


Due to the way that Fixed Line SMS works (V23 half duplex), it is not
possible to use a normal modem. A UK company has developed a modem and
software for sending and receiving via a PC. You can find information at
www.z-text.com . The company are actively seeking a distribution partner in
Australia.

Paul
real is pjw at ntstelcom#co#uk


Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 04-04-2005, 08:31 PM
alice
Guest
 

Posts: n/a
Re: Telstra launches SMS from fixed lines

Simon VK3XEM wrote:

> Does anyone know if there is any software we can run to access SMS via
> our PC, rather than going out and buying an SMS landline phone?
>


Why don't you just use your UHF CB?

LOL!!
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 04-04-2005, 08:34 PM
The Family
Guest
 

Posts: n/a
Re: Telstra launches SMS from fixed lines

"Paul Worsley" <pjw@WRONGntstelecom.co.uk> wrote in message
news:422c1704$0$26740$cc9e4d1f@news.dial.pipex.com ...
> snip
>>>

> Due to the way that Fixed Line SMS works (V23 half duplex), it is not
> possible to use a normal modem. A UK company has developed a modem and
> software for sending and receiving via a PC. You can find information at
> www.z-text.com . The company are actively seeking a distribution partner
> in Australia.
>
> Paul


There are plenty of (older) v23 half duplex modems around Australia, many
now in land fill.

Netcomm, for example, marketed a bunch of them back in the days when Telecom
(ie pre-Telstra days!) was offering an online service called Viatel. Viatel
was a closed-system online service, marketed to retail consumers, with the
look and feel of Channel 7's Teletext. Only it had two-way data
transmission capabilities.



Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 04-04-2005, 08:34 PM
Paul Worsley
Guest
 

Posts: n/a
Re: Telstra launches SMS from fixed lines

"The Family" <someone@somewhere.com> wrote in message
news:422f1b9e$1@duster.adelaide.on.net...
> "Paul Worsley" <pjw@WRONGntstelecom.co.uk> wrote in message
> news:422c1704$0$26740$cc9e4d1f@news.dial.pipex.com ...
>> snip
>>>>

>> Due to the way that Fixed Line SMS works (V23 half duplex), it is not
>> possible to use a normal modem. A UK company has developed a modem and
>> software for sending and receiving via a PC. You can find information at
>> www.z-text.com . The company are actively seeking a distribution partner
>> in Australia.
>>
>> Paul

>
> There are plenty of (older) v23 half duplex modems around Australia, many
> now in land fill.
>
> Netcomm, for example, marketed a bunch of them back in the days when
> Telecom (ie pre-Telstra days!) was offering an online service called
> Viatel. Viatel was a closed-system online service, marketed to retail
> consumers, with the look and feel of Channel 7's Teletext. Only it had
> two-way data transmission capabilities.


The modems you are referring to would be 1200/75. Fixed Line SMS is
1200/1200 FSK.

The technical specification is ES 201 912, you can obtain a copy FOC from
the ETSI download area http://pda.etsi.org/pda/queryform.asp Telstra are
probably only utilising Protocol 1.

Paul
www.landlinesms.com


Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are Off
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Re: Telstra launches SMS from fixed lines Simon VK3XEM aus.comms.mobile 0 04-04-2005 08:28 PM
Re: Id requirements for pre-paid John aus.comms.mobile 14 17-01-2005 06:53 AM
Telstra wholesale business to be made a stand-alone division Tom N aus.comms.mobile 4 07-12-2004 02:21 AM
0448/0449 Telstra Allocation? Ivan Gotcha aus.comms.mobile 21 14-11-2004 06:39 PM
Foxtel Digital : ALP to push Telstra to quit Foxtel (Full) mrXX aus.tv.pay 0 12-02-2004 07:53 AM


All times are GMT +11. The time now is 11:58 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.0
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 2001 - 2006 Forum owner is not responsible for the contents of individual messages posted by others
Before you post a message, please understand that you are personally responsible for what you say on these forums