On Oct 30, 2016, at 3:27 PM, Brent whodo678@yahoo.com [apple-iphone] <apple-iphone@yahoogroups.com> wrote:The issue was that the OP was trying to send text from a Mac not a iOS cellular device.
BrentSent from my iPhone, please excuse any brevity.
On Oct 30, 2016, at 13:19, Alice Saunders lwr32@mac.com [apple-iphone] <apple-iphone@yahoogroups.com> wrote:I have unlimited texting, so I don't worry about whether it's iMessage sent or SMS. I know if I'm sending SMS if there text bubble is green. If the text bubble is blue, the message is being sent to another iMessage user.On Oct 27, 2016, at 10:03 PM, Jim Saklad jimdoc@icloud.com [apple-iphone] <apple-iphone@yahoogroups.com> wrote:> What good is iMessage if it can only send messages to Apple phones?
The cost of sending iMessages is practically zero.
Every iPhone is also able to send standard, pay-as-you-go, SMS text messages over the cellular networks.
> I do not want to keep track of what kind of phone everybody has and use different apps to text each one.
> Bim
A version of the iOS Messages application with support for iMessage was included in the iOS 5 update on October 12, 2011.
After 1 year, Tim Cook announced that Apple device users had sent 300 billion messages using iMessage. By February 2016, the number of iMessages sent had grown to 200,000 per second.
I am astounded that you've never read anything about how they work.
The same App works for both.
You compose a message and send it.
If the users are both using iPhones and have set up iMessage, it is sent as an iMessage.
If either of those conditions is not met, it is sent as a standard SMS text message.
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Jim Saklad mailto:jimdoc@icloud.com
Posted by: Pat Taylor <pat412@mac.com>
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