OMG, the text message turns 20. But has SMS peaked?

Steve williams

Site Founder, Site Owner, Administrator
By Heather Kelly, CNN

(CNN) -- It's been hailed for its succinctness and blamed for everything from sore thumbs to the decline of conversation. Love it or hate it, the text message is 20 years old.
The first-ever text message was sent December 3, 1992, by software engineer Neil Papworth, to Vodafone director Richard Jarvis, who received the message on his husky Orbitel 901 cell phone. It read simply, "Merry Christmas."
As of Monday, the text is no longer in its teens -- the age group it's probably most associated with. In fact, it's more of a senior citizen in technology years.
At just 190 bytes and 160 characters, the modest text message isn't the most glamorous or elaborate form of communication, and that's a major reason it's become so pervasive.
Texting is popular around the world, across age groups and cultures, because it is simple, concise, and compatible with every mobile device, whether it's a $500 smartphone or a disposable flip phone.

Six billion SMS (short message service) messages are sent every day in the United States, according to Forrester Research, and over 2.2 trillion are sent a year. Globally, 8.6 trillion text messages are sent each year, according to Portio Research.
It seems tacky to bring this up on its birthday, but this may also be the year the text message peaks. After two decades of constant growth, text messaging is finally slowing down as people move to smartphones and use third-party messaging tools to circumvent wireless carriers' costly per-text charges.
SMS messaging is expected to be a $150 billion-a-year industry in 2013, with carriers charging set monthly fees for unlimited texting, or as much as 20 cents per text. The actual cost to carriers for sending a text message is about 0.03 cents.
By using popular apps and services, including Apple's iMessage, Facebook messages, GroupMe and WhatsApp, smartphone users can send all the texts they want over Wi-Fi or cellular networks without paying per message. But smartphones still only account for 50% of all cell phones, so text messaging is likely to be around for years to come.
Since a birthday is a day of celebration, LOLs and HBDs, let's take a look at some fascinating text messaging trivia.
• In the United States, 75% of teenagers text, sending an average of 60 texts a day. According to Pew Internet research, texting is teens' most common form of communication, beating out phone conversations, social networks and old-fashioned face-to-face conversations.
• Women are twice as likely to use emoticons in text messages, but men use a wider variety of emoticons, according to a recent study by Rice University. :)
• The practice of exchanging sexual messages or photos (yes, "sexting") isn't just for single people and politicians. It's also popular among committed couples. According to a study by psychology professor Michelle Drouin, 80% of young adults in relationships sent or received naughty texts, and 60% upped the ante by exchanging photos or videos.
• Some emergency response call centers are beginning to accept text messages sent to 911. There are still lingering concerns about the practice, including lack of location information, confirmation that the message was received, and timeliness of messages. Verizon plans to launch limited SMS-to-911 services in early 2013.
• The world of competitive texting can be lucrative for the fastest thumbs. At this year's fifth annual National Texting Championship in New York City, 17-year-old Austin Wierschke was crowned the winner for the second year in a row, taking home $50,000 in prize money.
• According to Guinness World Records, Melissa Thompson set the record for fastest text. In 2010, she took 25.94 seconds to type and send, "The razor-toothed piranhas of the genera Serrasalmus and Pygocentrus are the most ferocious freshwater fish in the world. In reality they seldom attack a human."
• Text messages have a dangerous side. Texting while driving is a risky activity, and sending or reading a single text can distract a driver for approximately 4.6 seconds, according to the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute. Thirty-nine states have banned text messaging while driving. Distracted texters have also been injured or killed while biking and walking.
• Text messaging technology has popped up in some fascinating places over the years, including cows' reproductive organs. Swiss dairy farmers have implanted sensors in cows to detect when the cows are in heat. A second sensor with a SIM card in the cow's neck sends a text message to the farmer, who can then inseminate the animal, according to The New York Times.
• Text messaging has been used in medical fields to improve treatment for malaria, depression, diabetes and addiction.
 
Facebook turns Messenger into a text message killer

By Charles Arthur

The text message might be 20 years old – but Facebook is now looking to hurry it into the grave. The giant social network, which has now passed a billion users, has just announced that it is updating its "Messenger" app for Android so that anyone can sign up using just their name and phone number, and then send messages to Facebook contacts via their data plan, rather than as texts.

The app connects the phone number and name to a Facebook account, and validates against that.

The move means that a potentially huge number of smartphone users will be able to pass messages back and forth in much the same way as texting, but without incurring the cost of an SMS as long as they have a data plan or are connected to a Wi-Fi network.

That, in turn, puts Facebook Messenger directly into conflict with SMS and with other "over the top" services such as WhatsApp, RIM's BlackBerry Messenger and Apple's iMessage.

Of those established ones, WhatsApp is the biggest – and the only cross-platform one – with an estimated 250m users, but the advent of Facebook Messenger on iPhone, Android and BlackBerry means that the social network could eclipse all of them, as well as working across multiple smartphone platforms.

The new version is available on Android today, and Facebook says that "Messenger accounts will become available over the next few weeks". A spokesperson said that "The feature will be available first on Android in Australia, India, Indonesia, South Africa and Venezuela and roll out globally in the coming weeks."

The text message might be 20 years old – but Facebook is now looking to hurry it into the grave. The giant social network, which has now passed a billion users, has just announced that it is updating its "Messenger" app for Android so that anyone can sign up using just their name and phone number, and then send messages to Facebook contacts via their data plan, rather than as texts.

The app connects the phone number and name to a Facebook account, and validates against that.

The move means that a potentially huge number of smartphone users will be able to pass messages back and forth in much the same way as texting, but without incurring the cost of an SMS as long as they have a data plan or are connected to a Wi-Fi network.

That, in turn, puts Facebook Messenger directly into conflict with SMS and with other "over the top" services such as WhatsApp, RIM's BlackBerry Messenger and Apple's iMessage.

Of those established ones, WhatsApp is the biggest – and the only cross-platform one – with an estimated 250m users, but the advent of Facebook Messenger on iPhone, Android and BlackBerry means that the social network could eclipse all of them, as well as working across multiple smartphone platforms.

The new version is available on Android today, and Facebook says that "Messenger accounts will become available over the next few weeks". A spokesperson said that "The feature will be available first on Android in Australia, India, Indonesia, South Africa and Venezuela and roll out globally in the coming weeks."
 
SMS is 20 years old but most of the first 10 years it was mostly used in pagers. It was not until cell phones became main stream that the text message became really popular. Now that is included free in most cell phone plans it is even more popular.
 
The text message turns 20, and I have yet to send one!
 
On Sexting, there is legislation that is being proposed in US to force the phone companies to retail text message for up to two years! That will enable police then to go and use them as evidence. So don't think your messages are private!
 
On Sexting, there is legislation that is being proposed in US to force the phone companies to retail text message for up to two years! That will enable police then to go and use them as evidence. So don't think your messages are private!
(I think you mean retain text messages)

NOTHING on the internet is private. It may be encrypted and "erased" by the user, but it still exists on all the severs.
 
SMS is 20 years old but most of the first 10 years it was mostly used in pagers. It was not until cell phones became main stream that the text message became really popular. Now that is included free in most cell phone plans it is even more popular.

In the first 10 years, the US had not discovered it. When I first came here in 2002, no one knew what a SMS message was - but it was already huge in Asia where GSM was the dominant cell phone system. I remember sending someone here a text message, and he called me wondering how I got his phone to write to him! At that time, the cell phone systems in the US could already receive SMS messages, but no one knew about it.
 
(I think you mean retain text messages)

NOTHING on the internet is private. It may be encrypted and "erased" by the user, but it still exists on all the severs.

That's the thing Gary. SMS is not on the Internet. Your messages stay on carrier computers only. Most of them today delete them immediately. A few keep it for a few days. The legislation is being designed to force them to archive it.

Given a choice between email and SMS, I will definitely pick SMS as the more secure route to send information.
 
In the first 10 years, the US had not discovered it. When I first came here in 2002, no one knew what a SMS message was - but it was already huge in Asia where GSM was the dominant cell phone system. I remember sending someone here a text message, and he called me wondering how I got his phone to write to him! At that time, the cell phone systems in the US could already receive SMS messages, but no one knew about it.
I remember those days. I had to carry a pager in addition to the phone. The problem was that in US people just didn't think it was possible to type a message using a numerical keypad. I would go to Japan and see people not only do that, but deal with the complication that you could not spell words in Japanese (you type them long hand and a dictionary pops up the choices that it could represent). It seemed to be a cultural problem. While people did pick up SMS using feature phones and their numeric keypads to some extent, it was the smartphone and its touch screen that got a lot more people to use it.
 
Text messages have a dangerous side. Texting while driving is a risky activity, and sending or reading a single text can distract a driver for approximately 4.6 seconds, according to the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute. Thirty-nine states have banned text messaging while driving.
I witnessed the dangerous side to the extreme, right in front of me last year. A teenage girl was driving over the speed limit down a road while texting. Even though the road was wide enough for 4 lanes and it was a bright and sunny day with no traffic, she somehow managed to hit a family walking near the edge of the road (no sidewalk). The grandfather was killed instantly, the child's mother died moments later and I could not believe my eyes when I looked over to see the baby carriage. There was no way the baby could have survived but by some miracle or an incredible stroke of luck, she did. Now the 2 month old child must grow up in this world with no family [no idea what ever happened to the father of this child].

What bursts my bubble is that the young lady lied to the police and stated that she had bent over to pick her phone up and that's why she hit them. She got away with murder that day. I don't know whom I feel more sorry for. The girl who murdered a family, the folks that passed away or the sole surviving member of the family. After witnessing this and knowing the aftermath, I fume when I see folks texting while driving.

Sorry guys, I kinda went off on a rant there. My point is, the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute states that a driver can be distracted for 4.6 seconds. My experience states that it only takes a split second to take a life (or lives) of someone else. I won't even get into the amount of accidents I have witnessed because of folks texting while driving. That's another rant I'll just keep to myself. For the past 14 years, I have driven on average about 60 to 300 miles a day on any given weekday. Needless to say, I've witnessed it more than I've needed too. This, coming from someone who can count the amount of texts ever sent on two hands.

Tom
 
I don't see it slowing down here in the third world where telcos offer unlimited SMS for free in both pre and post-paid plans.
 
the killer here is the unlimited texting plan for 24 hours, roughly for $0.25. My teen kids, and other teen kids go crazy on this, feeling it's such a great value they begin to initiate social texts to their contacts, even for no apparent reason other than to consume as many text since it's unlimited. when we start to watch a family movie on dvd, i see my 2 kids still consumed on texting with their unlimited plan and not watching the movie. i wished there was no such plan. sigh.
 
-- Technology is great, no doubt about it; information highways of the world web.
...Communication, seeing people (family, friends) directly live (Skype) on your big front projector, anywhere they are in the world, and talking to them directly; wow, just wow!

I don't know much about Text Messaging (SMS), but I do know that twenty years ago we did not have all those things for viewing, talking, in those small screen toys that we carry everywhere. This is a different world, much different. ..Travelling is different, at home is different, everywhere.

Now there are so many iThings that it's the rage, pure and simple.
The contracts that give you privileges to do this and that are real tough on some kids; financially, socially, that we don't live in the same world as we used to. Is it a better world for us and our children? I dunno, you can't evaluate evolution now can you? Of course we can. ...And we can also adapt, but hopefully for the better.

Anyway, it is very sad to hear from Tom about that story earlier, very sad indeed for the tragic loss of life in the name of text messaging. And like I said, this is our new world, and twenty years from now it's going to get even more new, so fasten your seat belts.
 

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