Have you looked at Google Voice much? I have mine set up to SMS all my devices, including email delivery, and can enable/disable devices as needed. The big benefit, is that I have an inbox full of all my old inbound and outbound text messages. It might be that I am missing a key element, but it looks like you want a virtual (VoIP) SMS number, and be able to decide which devices in the US receive the messages. On Oct 9, 2012 12:56 PM, "Lyle Giese" <lyle@lcrcomputer.net> wrote:
On 10/09/12 14:35, William Herrin wrote:
Hi Folks,
I'm looking for a way to do wireline access to send and receive cellular phone short message service (SMS) messages. Despite all my google-fu, I have had limited luck finding anyone that meets my needs, so I'm hoping someone here has found the path through. My main criteria are:
1. Low quantity, high reliability. I'll want a few dozen phone numbers and effectively I'll be sending to and receiving from phones I own. 2. Wireline delivery to Honolulu and Northern Virginia. Dynamically move numbers between the two locations for failover purposes. 3. U.S. based carrier. Tying in to the SMS system via Europe isn't acceptable to my customer. 4. Solution must reach phones on all U.S. cellular carriers. 5. Price is a very distant fifth criteria to the preceding four.
I can consider Internet based systems where the provider uses U.S. based facilities and ties in to a U.S. phone network, provided that my standards of reliability and redundancy are met by their infrastructure.
Alternately, I can also consider a wireless carrier that can provide two SIM-based phones with the same phone number for sending and receiving SMS messages. I'd put the sims in a pair of modems and manage deduplication of the received messages in software.
Has anybody had any luck with this kind of requirement? Which vendors should I talk to and who at the vendor?
Thanks, Bill Herrin
If these are your phones, you will be controlling the carrier. If they are all one carrier, you can find out how to send to that carrier. For other uses where you don't control the carrier, it becomes a nightmare and where you may want to get a service provider to do that for you.
Most carriers have a way to send messages directly to phones and I use a phone from one specific carrier that has access via modems(using TAP protocol and I use qpage(www.qpage.org)). You can also use qpage via a public(but carrier specific) snpp server, but I have not had a need for that as I need/want off Internet delivery of messages to the carrier's network.
On the expensive side, lookup 'sms short code' and you will see information on how that works and more info on service providers in this area.
Lyle Giese LCR Computer Services, Inc.