- Apr 17, 2012
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Yep yepVery true. I would assume that most major texting app will update to have RCS support within the next 6 months to a year.

Yep yepVery true. I would assume that most major texting app will update to have RCS support within the next 6 months to a year.
The main thing hindering it right now is that the carriers want to use it as an exclusive feature to them so it'll only work full featured between users of the same carrier even if other carriers support it. As soon as they get over themselves and open it up, it should take off, at least on Android.RCS doesn't appear to gaining any traction, except for Sprint all the other carriers have already shunned it, plus Apple continues to focus solely on its own proprietary iMessage. At this point we're lucky iMessage even includes support for SMS/MMS, the odds that Apple will contradict their current statements on Google's RCS don't appear to give us much hope. Haven't read much of anything as far as Facebook's official stance on RCS, if FB Messenger and WhatsApp were to change that would at least be a big step. Looks like texting will continue to only have the very, very dated SMS/MMS protocols as a common exchange while all the competing and incompatible proprietary formats keep consumers locked into separate services.
But it's pretty obvious there's absolutely no incentive for the carriers to actually 'get over themselves'. If anything regulations are being rolled back so corporations can increase, not decrease, their moves to monopolize and build up closed, vendor-locked environments. Even if Google did add RCS support into every Android device and if all the carriers did eventually support it, there's still major conflicting competition with Apple's iMessage in the American market and Facebook's WhatsApp in multiple other countries. Until texting in general becomes as universally compatible as email, it's always going to be a fractured way to communicate, the problem being consumer benefit simply isn't the priority....As soon as they get over themselves and open it up, it should take off, at least on Android.
But at least with text you can reach anyone with a cell phone vs Facebook messenger or whatsapp you can only message someone that that has Facebook or whatsapp. And yes, I know that nearly everyone these days has a Facebook but I am honestly more likely to get a response from my mother or wife via text than Facebook or whatsapp.But it's pretty obvious there's absolutely no incentive for the carriers to actually 'get over themselves'. If anything regulations are being rolled back so corporations can increase, not decrease, their moves to monopolize and build up closed, vendor-locked environments. Even if Google did add RCS support into every Android device and if all the carriers did eventually support it, there's still major conflicting competition with Apple's iMessage in the American market and Facebook's WhatsApp in multiple other countries. Until texting in general becomes as universally compatible as email, it's always going to be a fractured way to communicate, the problem being consumer benefit simply isn't the priority.
Android message. Nice to have RCS but how can it place nice with iMessage?
And yes, I know that nearly everyone these days has a Facebook but I am honestly more likely to get a response from my mother or wife via text than Facebook or whatsapp.
I know. Was just mentioning my situation.Please re-read my comment, I said nothing about who is or isn't on Facebook, it's a matter of lack of compatibility between different texting services.
Textra here, too. Only had the V20 for a month, but I also used that there. Just can't stand most stock messaging apps lighting up the screen when you get a text.
It's been years since I've used handcentI am using Handcent Next. I love how easy it is to customize it.
Textra here, too. Only had the V20 for a month, but I also used that there. Just can't stand most stock messaging apps lighting up the screen when you get a text.
you can turn that off through textra's settings.