SMS the new command line.

May 15th, 2007 | Under UI, mobile 2.0, research |

The idea: to reverse engeneer Twitter — a port of the SMS culture into the social websphere — to operate web services via SMS.

People, and particularly teenagers, have developed a peculiar way to chit-chat via SMS due to the inherent constraints of poorly usable keypads and the necessity to write concisely. This SMS lingo uses a lot of abbreviations and shortcuts that, while highly questionable in terms of belles lettres, is higly efficient, light and quite fun too.

This weird lingo is close in its form with command lines scripting, although the syntax is purely human and not structured at all. There are also a lot of variations depending on the real language it derives from, and on the tribe the user belongs to.

As strange as it may seem, with between 1.5 or 2 trillions SMS sent worldwide in 2006, it’s obvious that users are considering SMS as a perfect communication tool for their needs, despite its primitive aspect.

I recently worked for a media company that offers a nice way to get any web and personal content on your cell phone via a personal repository called the “Locker”. From you computer, you can grab stuff and put it in your locker; from your cellphone you browse your locker’s content and use it as you wish (wallpapers, ringtones, videotones, etc.).

In this context, I just sketched out what a SMS dialog could be with such a service. I transcript it “as is”, it’s pretty rough, but I would be definitely interested to get your feedback.

Let’s say I am a Stuff2Phone.com user, my locker name is “guillaume”. In my Locker I have different default directories containing my medias (videos, ringtones and images) and my friends. My locker is RSS enabled, a friend can subscribe to it and get my news, or my listings, etc.

To communicate with the service, I just text commands to a specific number, say 1-123-456-7890, this number is the root. The number I’m calling from (my cell phone) is my ID, so there’s no need for login.

From the root, to access my locker, I just send the following SMS to number 1-123-456-7890:

guillaume

In reply, I get a SMS reading:

Locker content: 1-recent | 2-videos | 4-ringtones | 5-images | 0-more

OK, this is pretty poor.

But what if we use a set of basic commands and abbreviation anyone can learn and store into their cellphone’s dictionary ? Let’s say I want to browse my videos:

guillaume.video

…that returns something like:

video content: 1-videoName | 2-videoName | 3-videoName | 4-videoName (…) | 0-next

… to get video #4 on my phone:

guillaume.video.4:get

or simply:

4:get (because the user is already in directory root/guillaume/video/)

OK, now let’s get wild. I want to send an image from y locker to a friend of mine, I type:

send guillaume.image.5 to myFriendNickname

or, if I’m already into my image folder:

5:send 2 myFriendName

… my friend receives a SMS with a weblink to download the image on his phone.

If I want to drop an image from my cameraphone in my friend’s locker, I would just select an image, click “send”, choose the service’s number and write:

send to myFriendNickname.image text=bla bla bla
(I also added a short text description to the file)

Now I want to keep updated of my friend’s new images (i.e. subscribe to RSS)

subscribe 2 myFriendNickname.images

Request friendship

request newFriendNickname
or newFriendNickname B my friend

Send a note to all my friends

write to guillaume.friends.all text=bla bla bla bla

Simple requests:

recent?
myFriendNickname.video.rank=top
myFriendNickname.ringtones.tag=rap
myFriendNickname.images.search=britney
subscribe 2 myFriendNickname.ringtones.rank=top (subscription to my query)

Etc. Etc.

It could be fun too with, say, a wine store. Let’s say you have an account at your local wine store, you have registered your mobile phone number plus your home address (for proximity). You are invited for a supper at your friends’, the menu is foie gras, osso bucco and pear pie.

You send a SMS to your store:

foie gras osso bucco pear pie 2 bottles max 40$

Reply from your store’s SMS service:

Our advice: 1 white Sauterne, 1 red Buzet. 36,98$. Type: 1-buy+take away | 2-buy+deliver | 0-more choices

You send: 1

You get the reply: Your command will be ready in 15min at your local store. Type: 1-change store | 00-cancel

Any comments and alternate ideas are MUCH welcome.

4 Responses to “SMS the new command line.”

1

I love using SMS as a command line. There’s a longer history of using chatbots over IM and in IRC.

I coded my own little chatbot one week-end after trying a couple others. The menu paradigm gets really old for power users. I want a consistent CLI with simple words, and I think it can be extremely concise.

“help”, “h”, “?” — lists most common commands

“cal?” gets help for the calendar, or a list of matching commands if there is ambiguity.

As much as possible, I’d make elements implicit, and shorten the rest.
write to guillaume.friends.all text=bla bla bla bla
would become
msg all is there a cool 5 a 7 friday in Montreal?

I should get back to that project once I’m done studying adwords and freebase. I’d love your feedback. Is my approach doomed to only appeal to nerds? :)

2

It’s a good approach too. The idea is too navigate and operate a web service with SMSs. If someone here has a project connected to mobile telephony and is interested in an experiement, seems like Daniel and I would be quite interested :)

3

When Daniel first introduced the idea, the first application that seems so useful to me was an organizer: calendar, todo list, contacts. Who needs a Palm when you can chat with your own personal assistant (YOPAtm)?

Open GTalk on your cell and ask Yopa:

>today?

Meetings
1-@10.00: Guillaume
2-@14.30: Bank
Todos
3-Organize meeting w/ Susan
4-Call David for proposal

And you could get more infos by entering the number afterwards.

>phone Guillaume
514 555-2345
514 786-0987

Etc. We would have to find a way to enter stuff to. To me this seems very useful.

And BTW, I think that a chat client is better than SMS since you can use it on other platforms than your cell.

4

[...] TroyWorks wrote an interesting post today onHere’s a quick excerptFrom you computer, you can grab stuff and put it in your locker; from your cellphone you browse your locker’s … In my Locker I have different default directories containing my medias (videos, ringtones and images) and my friends…. [...]

Leave a Reply




You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>