@Madchatthew said in TNG + Nodebb:
you have to try and use duck tape and super glue to change something to make it do what you want it to do
I couldn’t have put that better myself.
Very nice! Thanks for the two options. I have also read some reviews about Signal. You can’t do sms with that one though. It seems like people are moving away from sending texts and moving more towards apps that just do messaging and are more secure.
I installed the Quik Messages from F-Droid. I am going to try that one out and see how I like it. There are a lot of nice features with Google messages. They have the RCS for encryption and such and there are a couple other things that I like about it, but I just hate that they steal your data and sell it.
I will probably try textra too and see what I think about it
@Madchatthew yes, agreed. I’m no Google fanboy and also have an issue with their data harvesting model.
I think SMS is a dying breed considering the onset of instant messaging clients such as WhatsApp, Telegram, and a plethora of others.
SMS has its origins in the 1980’s so I’d fully expect it to become extinct at some point in the not so distant future.
Interesting article here concerning the future of SMS
https://www.tanla.com/blog-posts/the-future-of-sms-is-it-still-relevant-in-2024
@phenomlab that is an interesting article. I wonder if that is why a lot of messaging apps don’t include sms portion of messaging. It is too bad there isn’t a universal messaging so that no matter what messaging app you are using you can receive and send messages from any app. There may be an app that does that, but it is hard to get people to use the same messaging app that you are using. Which is what makes sms so nice is that not matter which sms app you use you can receive and send your messages and don’t have to try and convince people to use the same messaging app you are using.
@Madchatthew Most technology firms view SMS as a legacy product - which in fairness, it actually is if you consider the lack of encryption etc, which is a staple and standard on today’s messaging technologies. I do agree with the article though. SMS is still hugely popular around the globe, and you’re right in the respect of it just “working” without having to worry if the recipient of your message is using the correct platform.
@phenomlab It is too bad that they can’t just upgrade it to include the security, but then maybe the other messaging apps are the upgrade. It would be nice to be able to add people by phone number. Then you could use whatever messaging app you liked and it would just route through the phone number means, but not using sms.
@Madchatthew I think it’s mostly the protocol and infrastructure not supporting those functions to be honest. As a developer myself, I too would not be interested in writing code or improving functions for code that was developed in the 80’s.
@phenomlab said in Text Messaging App:
I think it’s mostly the protocol and infrastructure not supporting those functions to be honest. As a developer myself, I too would not be interested in writing code or improving functions for code that was developed in the 80’s.
This makes sense. I also tried out the two messaging apps from above, and with both of them the text messages were delayed severely. I didn’t get a text message for two hours after it was sent. So for now I went back to google messages. I just may switch to a messaging app and invite people and tell them they can get a hold of me on there. See what happens I guess. I am thinking Signal. That way I am not being mines by Meta (Facebook) or google. Then use google messages as backup texting.
@Madchatthew said in Text Messaging App:
tried out the two messaging apps from above
I actually did the same. I have to admit that I wasn’t exactly blown away.