With the advent of Facebook, Hike & WhatsApp Messengers, SMS texting is gradually fading into oblivion.
You don’t always have to squint at a 6-inch screen and tap out your communications on a little touch keyboard.
Most messaging apps now let you use your laptop or desktop computer as well as your phone.
To get this working, go to Messages in Settings on iOS, tap Text Message Forwarding, and make sure your Mac is enabled.
Next, from the main Settings screen, tap your name and iCloud, then toggle Messages on.
It only works with Android phones, as you might expect considering iOS doesn’t give any other app text message access, and you also need the Your Phone Companion app for Android installed.
It’s just a question of signing in with your Microsoft ID and linking your phone number, and your text messages then show up by magic.


It is not a concept of the present era, in fact, it has been into existence for years for now.
Before the invention of the Internet and even before it became popular; people used only text messages as a medium of conversation with the other people.
But with the advent of technology, as soon as the internet became popular; people shifted their focus from SMS to emails and other social networking platforms.
Yes, you read that right.
These texting apps are majorly used by those organizations which use Salesforce to manage their huge databases.
As we all know that, earlier emails were used for the same but now the industries have been shifting their focus from other methods of marketing campaigns to texting.


Short Message Service (SMS) is the technology that enables user to send and receive text messages via mobile phones.
Short Message Service (SMS) is the technology that enables user to send and receive text messages via mobile phones.
There are two basic types of SMS:
Point-to-point communication service is the service that supports messages between two subscribers of the SMS services.
SMS network architecture is based on the architecture of Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM).
Instead, messages are routed and stored in SMS Message Centre (SMSMC), and then forwarded to the destination.





