In a country that prides itself as the home of innovation and the technology revolution, the US has lagged behind in mobile (cell phone) space. Just two decades ago, a company called Nokia was making rubber boots in Finland and Motorola dominated the wireless handset space. The US FCC had taken a laissez faire attitude towards regulations of the wireless industry, so there is a plethora of different types of cell phone networks: IDEN, D-Amps, CDMA, TDMA and GSM. With so many different types of cell phone networks, it was difficult to get one text message (SMS) sent to another network, seamlessly. The US operators have worked out the message delivery issues. They have worked on bringing down the walled garden approach, where one cell phone subscriber can only send messages to another cell phone subscriber of that same network, and text messaging is taking off to the tune of 48.7 billion in the last half of 2005, according to the CTIA.
SMS or text messaging was just an accident, launched by the GSM operators. Text messaging was designed in the GSM specification to give GSM subscribers voice mail notification. Some of the carriers in Europe and Asia started to form alliances and allow one subscriber of one network to text another subscriber of another network. “The price per text message was less expensive than a voice call, so the pre-paid users started to adopted it very quickly.” according to Tom Sheahan, CEO of Red Oxygen. “In fact some countries reported a drop in teenage smoking, because the kids weren’t buying cigarettes but pre-paid mobile vouchers for texting their friends and “staying in the know” with their allowances and baby sitting money”
This is where it all starts with the early adopters - teenagers. They don’t have a lot of money, so if they can send 10 text messages instead of one voice call – it value for money, and it works anywhere. Users also like the fact the message will be read sooner than an e-mail and you don’t have to interrupt someone’s day with a voice call.
According to the CTIA (Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association)
“We have a large global airline partner, which sends out mission critical information via text messaging to all of their staff around the globe about crisis information. Sure, their CEO has a Blackberry, but their baggage handlers, flight attendants or pilots don’t! Text messaging is the most ubiquitous form of communication on the planet. It works when voice and wireless e-mail – wont” according to Tom Sheahan
The Financial Time quotes Jim Ryan, Vice president of Consumer data services at Cingular Wireless, who claims that TV programmer such as American Idol, where the viewer sends a text messages to vote for their favorite performer, have brought texting to a new and wider audience. Cingular reported 64.5 million SMS votes for the latest season of Pop idol, up 52% on the pervious year’s run.
www.redoxygen.com


