Path: ...!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail From: Frank Slootweg Newsgroups: comp.mobile.android Subject: Re: texst to a landline Date: 3 Apr 2025 09:49:59 GMT Organization: NOYB Lines: 63 Message-ID: References: X-Trace: individual.net OZKfoL8fXnvXqvFaczMz1AnIB0sekyRuQkuUSu4LxkUEzXt/Dv X-Orig-Path: not-for-mail Cancel-Lock: sha1:RI/+whGoBT0rNSEWq8TApv+0Krg= sha256:kMNi6epLhEqiktPgfqLTpRcw/UqaYpBqzmZ7p2L8d7Q= User-Agent: tin/1.6.2-20030910 ("Pabbay") (UNIX) (CYGWIN_NT-10.0-WOW/2.8.0(0.309/5/3) (i686)) Hamster/2.0.2.2 Bytes: 3663 micky wrote: > In comp.mobile.android, on 3 Jan 2025 18:23:22 GMT, Frank Slootweg > wrote: > > >micky wrote: > >> In comp.mobile.android, on Fri, 3 Jan 2025 13:38:34 +0000, Andy Burns > >> wrote: > >> > >> >micky wrote: > >> > > >> >> When someone unknowingly sends a text to a landline, does he get some > >> >> indication back that the text did not reach the destination, because it > >> >> can't receive texts? > >> > > >> >Here in the UK, text messages *can* be delivered to landlines, either to > >> >text-capable phones using an extension of the caller-ID delivery > >> >mechanism, or via a robot voice ... don't you have similar over there? > >> > >> I don't know. I don't think so. For several years I have beeen the > >> contact person for the people who plow (plough?) our streets when it > >> snows. I saw the contract yesterday and it has my landline first, and > >> my cell number. I'm still living in the 1950's and I envisioned them > >> calling me on the phone, but now I see they send texts. I got one on > >> the cell a year ago and another yesterday. I've never gotten any > >> message from them on my landline, so I wonder if they tried and realized > >> it wasn't accepting texts and they switched to the other number. > > > > Sigh! As you have a landline, why don't *you* try/test it, instead of > >asking here for an impossible to give answer (because it depends on your > >and their telco and setups). > > It never occurred to me that one could get texts on a landline until > someone here, I think, suggested it. And I couldn't find any > information on how to do it. Sigh! Use your mobile phone and (try to) send a 'text' (SMS message) to your own landline number. You have everything needed for such a test, so you can test it yourself instead asking others: > > Sigh! As you have a landline, why don't *you* try/test it, instead of > >asking here for an impossible to give answer (because it depends on your > >and their telco and setups). > > If it works for you, it will also work for them, because in that test > >your landline telco and their setup is the deciding factor. > > > > If it does not work for you, > > If what works for me? Your 'text'/SMS test from your mobile phone to your landline. > > it doesn't mean it doesn't work for them, > >so it's undecided and the only things you can do is ask them to test it > >or remove your landline number from their contact list. In most cases, > >the 'customer', i.e. you, should be able to do that themselves, but that > >depends on how customer-friendly their IT is. > > > >[...]