The ongoing Fido (and Rogers) r*poff continues. The math: 0.10/0.15 = 66.67%. In a world where every other form of electronic messaging is decreasing in price, Rogers and Fido continue to raise their messaging prices. Needless to say the knock on effect for businesses and innovation and Canada is a net negative. I h*te SMS but it's essential for today's real time business and this is a tax by a member of the Canadian bandwidth oligopoly on businesses and consumers.
From Options you can add:QUOTE
U.S. TEXT MESSAGING RATE CHANGE
Please note that effective July 15, 2008, the rate for sending a text message from Canada to the United States is changing to $0.25 (from $0.15). This change also applies to Text messaging options and certain Value packs, as text messages sent to the United States will no longer be included in the options. Pricing does not include applicable taxes.
Visit fido.ca/text for text messaging rates and other important information.
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International text message Options
25 international text messages $4
50 international text messages $7
END QUOTE
Ken Camp is doing a great job of explaining why the Jaiku mobile client is the future (or at least the ideas are behind it are the future). The key idea is that you can see the presence of your friends and then participate in multi-threaded public conversations as well as (I hope) in the future private messages as well as voice over ip calls and heck even SMS to those people who don't have fancy phones. All of this is done over IP (so it obviously requires a world of affordable unlimited mobile internet); no need to pay the ridiculous phone call, IMS, or SMS "tax" er charge :-) and it's better because of the presence information! Imagine if this was combined with something like Iotum's Relevance engine.... hmmmm. This will happen; just not as fast as early adopters like myself would like.
SMS is dead was controversial which was not a big surprise. It was called stupid and many other things.
Here are some random "SMS is dead" related thoughts:
SMS sucks and twitter proves it. When a well funded startup like Twitter which is full of smart people can't get SMS to scale, then something is wrong. And the something that is wrong is wait for it .... the carriers. The carriers control SMS which is why it sucks. If SMS were NEA it wouldn't suck but it is not so good-bye and good riddance.
SMS is dead. Maybe not today maybe not tomorrow but as soon as we have flat rate affordable mobile internet. The replacement will be something over good 'ole IP. Probably Jabber.