Why Do People Still Text
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@scottalanmiller said in Why Do People Still Text:
@Dashrender said in Why Do People Still Text:
But yeah - I have dealt very little with the extremely poor. But as you said, in doing so, I would fully expect an alternative to be in place for situations exactly as you mention - i.e. not relying as something as completely unreliable as SMS. Instead, you'd have an email address already setup as the main, even if not instantaneously available (though often it would be), solution.
Which then begs the question... why use a service that requires all of that, when you could get all aspects of it, better, by simply not having it?
That's a great question - you'd have to ask your person why indeed?
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@scottalanmiller said in Why Do People Still Text:
@Dashrender said in Why Do People Still Text:
Instead you and they find themselves stuck in a horrible setup with zero communications because they don't have the ability to fix their SMS problem because of lack of funds. They didn't take the planning you mentioned into account before this situation occurred.
"Planning" to protect against data loss with SMS can only mean: not having SMS at all. Because the people sending you information have no way to know when SMS starts to fail, it doesn't tell the sender. And the recipient never finds out. So even when SMS appears to work (both parties get messages sometimes) it is an unreliable system that tends to leave both parties never sure what data is lost. In a case like this, she only knew that she lost a month of messages because I told her.
So when SMS fails, you are stuck, because messages keep going there, but you can't retrieve them. There's no good protection against that other than stopping it in the first place.
You're not telling me anything that I haven't been preaching to people for 20+ years of texting/paging. It's not a reliable system.
And while email has more reliability in it - it's has zero timeliness ensured. Because of that complete lack of timeliness, I don't understand you disdain for phone calls in cases of emergencies. Phone calls either work right now or they don't. If you're the one in an emergency - if the person you call doens't answer right flippin' now, you call someone else, if they don't answer, call someone else, etc. Email doesn't give you this instantaneous response setup like a phone call does.
Now sure - anything less than an actual emergency can and maybe should go to email or another ensured delivery form of communication (slack perhaps? not sure if it ensures delivery).
But back to your "planning" bit - clearly there was no planning in case of your associate because they only had SMS as a communication option, which we all agree with, is a failure.
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@Dashrender said in Why Do People Still Text:
And while email has more reliability in it - it's has zero timeliness ensured.
Same with SMS, in the real world I never see email delays over a few minutes. But see hours on SMS with some frequencies.
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@Dashrender said in Why Do People Still Text:
I don't understand you disdain for phone calls in cases of emergencies. Phone calls either work right now or they don't.
Right, but because so often they don't. And even when they do, it's often just to give information that is still needed in an email. Phone calls are fine as an alert only, but almost never as the primary point of contact. Because what emergency situation, especially in business, can you do purely over the phone? What emergency requires no direct information, can go to just one person, can be relaying accurately over voice, doesn't need to be forwarded, doesn't need to the documented, is okay if the person doesn't answer, and doesn't require any security?
Telling you that the house is on fire? Sure. But whether you are telling someone about a system outage or you are telling them that you are trapped in the trunk of a car, email is more likely to get the necessary information out to more people, more quickly, than a phone call. Phones calls are great, when they work. And useless when they don't. Emails work even when someone stepped away to get coffee or went to the bathroom.
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@Dashrender said in Why Do People Still Text:
But back to your "planning" bit - clearly there was no planning in case of your associate because they only had SMS as a communication option, which we all agree with, is a failure.
Right, SMS being a failure is the point. Planning around SMS has to result in not using SMS at all. So that gets back to the original point - SMS should be avoided.
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@scottalanmiller said in Why Do People Still Text:
Telling you that the house is on fire? Sure. But whether you are telling someone about a system outage or you are telling them that you are trapped in the trunk of a car, email is more likely to get the necessary information out to more people, more quickly, than a phone call. Phones calls are great, when they work. And useless when they don't. Emails work even when someone stepped away to get coffee or went to the bathroom.
This makes a huge assumption that someone is basically sitting on their email all day every day. I'd say most people are more likely to be sitting on their phone all day every day than their email (you being the obvious exception). I have notifications for emails/non SMS chats disabled on my phone. The stupid device would never shutup otherwise, and basically would simply become white noise that would be ignored. And while SMS has all the failings you've mentioned - the ringing phone is the one most likely to get my attention the quickest. Email would only match that if I was in my email at the time the message arrived.
All that said - in a delayed notification situation, I completely agree that email is likely best - though chat clients that tell the sender that a message has been read is something I like a lot more than relying on email read relies, which most people disable (just stating a personal appreciation of that tech)
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@Dashrender said in Why Do People Still Text:
This makes a huge assumption that someone is basically sitting on their email all day every day. I'd say most people are more likely to be sitting on their phone all day every day than their email (you being the obvious exception). I have notifications for emails/non SMS chats disabled on my phone. The stupid device would never shutup otherwise, and basically would simply become white noise that would be ignored. And while SMS has all the failings you've mentioned - the ringing phone is the one most likely to get my attention the quickest. Email would only match that if I was in my email at the time the message arrived.
If all those emails would be SMSs instead, then you'd have that silent as well and never know it... but double never know it due to how unreliable SMS is, and you'd never know.
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@Obsolesce said in Why Do People Still Text:
@Dashrender said in Why Do People Still Text:
This makes a huge assumption that someone is basically sitting on their email all day every day. I'd say most people are more likely to be sitting on their phone all day every day than their email (you being the obvious exception). I have notifications for emails/non SMS chats disabled on my phone. The stupid device would never shutup otherwise, and basically would simply become white noise that would be ignored. And while SMS has all the failings you've mentioned - the ringing phone is the one most likely to get my attention the quickest. Email would only match that if I was in my email at the time the message arrived.
If all those emails would be SMSs instead, then you'd have that silent as well and never know it... but double never know it due to how unreliable SMS is, and you'd never know.
I completely agree - I don't think anyone is defending SMS here.
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@Dashrender said in Why Do People Still Text:
This makes a huge assumption that someone is basically sitting on their email all day every day. I'd say most people are more likely to be sitting on their phone all day every day than their email (you being the obvious exception).
Given that for nearly all people, both go to the same device, but one is far more likely to get through (email keeps trying, phone gets one shot), and essentially anyone that wants to be reached can do so trivially - it is only those intentionally going dark that don't get their email there, that it's the opposite. Sure, you CAN disable anything you want, that you have to go out of your way to cut off contact kind of proves the point
With phones being mostly ignored today, partially because they are heavily used for spam, the idea that people listen for them and react to them has gone away. Heck just watch @pchiodo he's a boomer and he still sees his phone ringing as something to completely ignore. He may or may not bother to look at it when it is ringing.
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Why is this still a topic. . .
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@Dashrender said in Why Do People Still Text:
All that said - in a delayed notification situation, I completely agree that email is likely best - though chat clients that tell the sender that a message has been read is something I like a lot more than relying on email read relies, which most people disable (just stating a personal appreciation of that tech)
It's the emergency to think about. When you HAVE to get a message to someone... knowing that they read it, hearing their voice... these are less critical concerns. What matters most in an emergency is maximizing the chance that the information will arrive. Email has the most reliably delivery, going to more devices, people, places and overcoming more technical obstacles than any other mechanism. It doesn't trust that one person or one device or one moment in time is the right one. That's what makes it so powerful, combined with being able to deliver concise information quickly. It also overcomes the majority of issues for people with disabilities. The deaf, for example, can't use a telephone for emergencies, it is too slow and often doesn't work.
Using a phone call to tell someone to check their email, sure. When we have emergencies at work, we always stop until we get it in writing. Any phone call first would simply tell us that it's not really that important. A phone call to verify that we are seeing the email that was already sent, sure. But calling to tell us what we need to have written down is just wasting time.
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@DustinB3403 said in Why Do People Still Text:
Why is this still a topic. . .
Because people still aren't thinking about how messages are actually delivered and made available.
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@scottalanmiller said in Why Do People Still Text:
Because people still aren't thinking about how messages are actually delivered and made available.
Qualifying @Dashrender as someone who thinks about how messages are delivered is a stretch. . . He appreciates modern approaches to modern messaging solutions (like iMessage, which isn't truly SMS).
Read receipts from email are dumb and worthless. Texting is also generally worthless as I've sent SMS that say "delivered" and the recipient never got them, or I never get their message.
Email communication is at least reliable from the try-again and error reporting functionality, but it's not a barn-burner type of communication method other than as you stated as an MSP you need things in writing.
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@scottalanmiller said in Why Do People Still Text:
Heck just watch @pchiodo he's a boomer and he still sees his phone ringing as something to completely ignore. He may or may not bother to look at it when it is ringing.
Well, if that truly has become the norm, then I guess their is no near instantaneous way to get a hold of someone.
Though I guess calling and SMS'ing would be in the same boat there, only with calling, you do KNOW if the other party answers that they got the message right then.. if they don't answer - well, then it's the same as a missed/missing/ignored SMS.
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@scottalanmiller said in Why Do People Still Text:
@Dashrender said in Why Do People Still Text:
All that said - in a delayed notification situation, I completely agree that email is likely best - though chat clients that tell the sender that a message has been read is something I like a lot more than relying on email read relies, which most people disable (just stating a personal appreciation of that tech)
It's the emergency to think about. When you HAVE to get a message to someone... knowing that they read it, hearing their voice... these are less critical concerns. What matters most in an emergency is maximizing the chance that the information will arrive. Email has the most reliably delivery, going to more devices, people, places and overcoming more technical obstacles than any other mechanism. It doesn't trust that one person or one device or one moment in time is the right one. That's what makes it so powerful, combined with being able to deliver concise information quickly. It also overcomes the majority of issues for people with disabilities. The deaf, for example, can't use a telephone for emergencies, it is too slow and often doesn't work.
Using a phone call to tell someone to check their email, sure. When we have emergencies at work, we always stop until we get it in writing. Any phone call first would simply tell us that it's not really that important. A phone call to verify that we are seeing the email that was already sent, sure. But calling to tell us what we need to have written down is just wasting time.
I'm not undercutting the value of email at all - but I know many would disagree that calling when the system is emergent was a waste of time. If you're at a ER check in desk and you need to get a doctor up front ASAP, you're calling his ass - or paging/SMS - calling in this case would be MUCH better because you know if they answer they are coming (or not) - with paging - you have no clue what their situation is - and no bloody way in hell is any desk staff going to sit down and type up an email to that doc and press send hoping they will get their ass there ASAP.
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@scottalanmiller said in Why Do People Still Text:
@Dashrender said in Why Do People Still Text:
All that said - in a delayed notification situation, I completely agree that email is likely best - though chat clients that tell the sender that a message has been read is something I like a lot more than relying on email read relies, which most people disable (just stating a personal appreciation of that tech)
It's the emergency to think about. When you HAVE to get a message to someone... knowing that they read it, hearing their voice... these are less critical concerns. What matters most in an emergency is maximizing the chance that the information will arrive. Email has the most reliably delivery, going to more devices, people, places and overcoming more technical obstacles than any other mechanism. It doesn't trust that one person or one device or one moment in time is the right one. That's what makes it so powerful, combined with being able to deliver concise information quickly. It also overcomes the majority of issues for people with disabilities. The deaf, for example, can't use a telephone for emergencies, it is too slow and often doesn't work.
Using a phone call to tell someone to check their email, sure. When we have emergencies at work, we always stop until we get it in writing. Any phone call first would simply tell us that it's not really that important. A phone call to verify that we are seeing the email that was already sent, sure. But calling to tell us what we need to have written down is just wasting time.
Now, in your case as being a MSP, and hell, for the CYA of any IT person - I can see your point in saying that nothing should be accomplished without that CYA email, but seriously - typing up an email with all the details might take several mins - a phone call can convey the notion that the ABC that is critical is down - get working on it... and assuming you answer the call, they know you know, and you can start working on it... but if they email you - they have to wait for you to get that email, that could be now, that could be 3 hours from now when you next check your email.
Now, again, in your MSP - you likely have staff who's job it is to sit on that email queue for x-y hours, so you're less likely to have an email go mins, let alone hours without being seen.
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@DustinB3403 said in Why Do People Still Text:
@scottalanmiller said in Why Do People Still Text:
Because people still aren't thinking about how messages are actually delivered and made available.
Qualifying @Dashrender as someone who thinks about how messages are delivered is a stretch. . . He appreciates modern approaches to modern messaging solutions (like iMessage, which isn't truly SMS).
Read receipts from email are dumb and worthless. Texting is also generally worthless as I've sent SMS that say "delivered" and the recipient never got them, or I never get their message.
Email communication is at least reliable from the try-again and error reporting functionality, but it's not a barn-burner type of communication method other than as you stated as an MSP you need things in writing.
Precisely
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City texts at 5:30 that there is a tornado emergency and you should shelter in place till 6:45. Message arrives at 6:32. Real useful warning system.
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When I receive an Amber Alert on my iPhone is that a SMS?
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@black3dynamite I'm not sure, but I would guess so. What I know is that the SMS for these gets copied to my desktop so I see them happen there, too. That's how I know that the weather ones are SMS.