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Twitter partners with Axis in Indonesia

I had a feeling something was up a couple of months ago when Three announced their Twitter by SMS feature. They pushed it hard and even collaborating with @infoll, and @lewatmana to co-promote their services during the Idul Fitri homecoming period. However there was no peep from Mashable or even on Twitter's own blog. Today, Twitter's Director of Mobile Products and Partnerships Kevin Thau announced that they're partnering with Axis (@axisgsm) to provide Twitter's SMS services in Indonesia.

This pretty much confirms that Three's Twitter service was not official. If you send via SMS, normally it would show up as a tweet sent via txt but with Three, it's via TwitPakeTri. Bottom line, does it matter if it's official? Not really, it just means that now there are two providers that let you use Twitter via SMS.

Twitter Blog: SMS for AXIS Indonesia

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Filed under  //   axis   mobile   sms   socialnetworking   three   twitter  

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Twitter via SMS is back in Indonesia

If you've been meaning to try Twitter as it was meant to be used, Twitter is now available again via SMS in Indonesia. It's certainly not something that hardcore Twitter users would use but if you just want to get your feet wet in the twitter stream, this could be a good place to start.

I've used Twitter via SMS before back in 2007 before they yanked the service globally because it was getting way too expensive for them to deal with. The experience was certainly different and it encourages you to be much less conversational. While it's practical for updating what you're doing at that moment, it's not something I would use as the main way to tweet. Also, back then it cost an international rate of Rp. 500 per message because you had to send the SMS to a UK number. Now it's local and it's free.

The catch is you have to be using Three (Tri) as your provider. Oh and it doesn't support reply threads which would suck if you got a reply and you forgot the topic. You might need to clean up your SMS storage a bit more often if you decide to hit full time tweeting via SMS. The good news is you can select which tweets to receive. I'll leave you to check out the details for yourself.

http://www.tri.co.id/twitter/

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Filed under  //   indonesia   mobile   sms   three   tri   twitter  

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Telco Spam

Some people in the US say you don't get spam via SMS because the telco screens third party sources. WRONG. It's one of the most prolific ways to spam subscribers and the providers are also in on it, spamming you with their own promos.
 
Another kind of spam is via location service. While I'm glad the iPhone is I think immune to this, I still get it on my other phone.
 
The line beneath the operator info is usually reserved for location info telling you where you are in the city or at least the location of the network tower currently serving your handset.
 
Sometimes however the provider would use this to send ads and this is annoying. First of all, yes you can turn it off but it deprives you of location info when the ad isn't shown. Secondly, this breaks whatever trust level you have remaining with the operator. And lastly, while this is not exactly new-I've seen this a few times before-eventually this will open the door for third parties to come in and spam you with more unwanted and unexpected ads.

Sent from my iPhone

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Filed under  //   indosat   location service   mobile   spam  

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iPhone Messaging

No matter what kind of phone they have, Indonesians in general want two things from their phones (aside from being able to make calls and send sms): Yahoo Messenger and forwarding SMS*. Yahoo's messaging network is so prevalent in this country it's almost unthinkable that anyone would drop their YM account**.

 I also just discovered tonight at id-iPhone's gathering that many business people still have partners and clients that don't do email but they know sms. Forwarded SMS usually means a joke, spam, or some other type of junk, just like with email, but it struck me tonight that there might just be a significant portion of the market that actually use sms as business tools. Not just forwarding contacts but sending payment details, account numbers, product lists, and plenty of other commerce activities.

 I suppose I should have realized this earlier seeing that smart phones, while prevalent, are used mostly by people who don't even know how to use emails. Many are close to being tech illiterates. The lack of proper support for messaging system in the iPhone highlights one of the reasons why people jailbreak their iPhones here. They want to be able to chat continuously just like with Blackberries, receiving updates as they arrive, not when they open the application, and being able to forward text messages. I can tell you that the majority, perhaps 95% of id-iPhone members, jailbreak their iPhones and will talk others into jailbreaking them.

 Many of the members also said cut, copy, and paste wold be nice too but not as crucial as messaging. Not too many people complain about lack of physical keyboards though.

 In other words, iPhone OS 3.0 should solve most of their problems.

  
*) I don't do SMS much. I tend to ignore SMS that come in unless it is an urgent matter
**) I don't do chat either. GTalk and Skype occasionally but that's it.

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Filed under  //   apple   communications   iphone   mobile   phone   yahoo  

Comments [19]

New Options on Gmail Mobile

I don't remember seeing "Mute" and "Label as…" options yesterday.

Sent from my iPhone

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Filed under  //   gmail   iPhone   mobile  

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