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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Do You Use Your Mobile Phone to Access the Internet? Post 302308422 by Neo on Saturday 18th of April 2009 07:45:07 AM
Old 04-18-2009
I use the Internet on my mobile for many tasks, including:
  • Normal Email
  • Read Headline News
  • Read Breaking RSS News Feeds
  • Check and Compare Prices when Shopping
  • Download Maps (related to GPS)
  • Read, Reply and Moderate Forums
  • Monitor Server Stats
  • Review Server Alerts (Exception Conditions)
  • SSH into Server if Emergency

If there is a free WiFi hotspot in range, I use that; otherwise, I use GPRS.

I think I use my E61 for Internet much more than for actually talking on the phone or SMS! (FWIW: I also send between 200-300 SMS per month.)

Speaking of SMS, I get critical server alerts on my mobile via SMS using an email-to-SMS gateway.
 

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SMS::Send(3pm)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					    SMS::Send(3pm)

NAME
SMS::Send - Driver-based API for sending SMS messages SYNOPSIS
# Create a sender my $sender = SMS::Send->new('SomeDriver', _login => 'myname', _password => 'mypassword', ); # Send a message my $sent = $sender->send_sms( text => 'This is a test message', to => '+61(4) 1234 5678', ); # Did the send succeed. if ( $sent ) { print "Message sent ok "; } else { print "Failed to send message "; } DESCRIPTION
"SMS::Send" is intended to provide a driver-based single API for sending SMS and MMS messages. The intent is to provide a single API against which to write the code to send an SMS message. At the same time, the intent is to remove the limits of some of the previous attempts at this sort of API, like "must be free internet- based SMS services". "SMS::Send" drivers are installed separately, and might use the web, email or physical SMS hardware. It could be a free or paid. The details shouldn't matter. You should not have to care how it is actually sent, only that it has been sent (although some drivers may not be able to provide certainty). METHODS
installed_drivers The "installed_drivers" the list of SMS::Send drivers that are installed on the current system. new # The most basic sender $sender = SMS::Send->new('Test'); # Indicate regional driver with :: $sender = SMS::Send->new('AU::Test'); # Pass arbitrary params to the driver $sender = SMS::Send->new('MyDriver', _login => 'adam', _password => 'adam', ); The "new" constructor creates a new SMS sender. It takes as its first parameter a driver name. These names map the class names. For example driver "Test" matches the testing driver SMS::Send::Test. Any additional params should be key/value pairs, split into two types. Params without a leading underscore are "public" options and relate to standardised features within the SMS::Send API itself. At this time, there are no usable public options. Params with a leading underscore are "private" driver-specific options and will be passed through to the driver unchanged. Returns a new SMS::Send object, or dies on error. send_sms # Send a message to a particular address my $result = $sender->send_sms( text => 'This is a test message', to => '+61 4 1234 5678', ); The "send_sms" method sends a standard text SMS message to a destination phone number. It takes a set of named parameters to describe the message and its destination, again split into two types. Params without a leading underscore are "public" options and relate to standardised features within the SMS::Send API itself. text The "text" param is compulsory and should be a plain text string of non-zero length. The maximum length is currently determined by the driver, and exceeding this length will result in an exception being thrown if you breach it. Better functionality for determining the maximum-supported length is expected in the future. You input would be welcome. to The "to" param is compulsory, and should be an international phone number as indicated by a leading plus "+" character. Punctuation in any form is allowed, and will be stripped out before it is provided to the driver. If and only if your driver is a regional driver (as indicated by a ::-seperated name such as AU::Test) the "to" number can also be in a regional-specific dialing format, "without" a leading plus "+" character. Providing a regional number to a non-regional driver will throw an exception. Any parameters with a leading underscore are considered private driver-specific options and will be passed through without alteration. Any other parameters without a leading underscore will be silently stripped out and not passed through to the driver. After calling "send_sms" the driver will do whatever is required to send the message, including (potentially, but not always) waiting for a confirmation from the network that the SMS has been sent. Given that drivers may do the actual mechanics of sending a message by quite a large variety of different methods the "send_sms" method may potentially block for some time. Timeout functionality is expected to be added later. The "send_sms" returns true if the message was sent, or the driver is fire-and-forget and unable to determine success, or false if the message was not sent. SUPPORT
Bugs should be reported via the CPAN bug tracker at http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=SMS-Send <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=SMS-Send> For other issues, contact the author. AUTHOR
Adam Kennedy <adamk@cpan.org> COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2005 - 2011 Adam Kennedy. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module. perl v5.14.2 2012-04-07 SMS::Send(3pm)
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