Thursday, November 11, 2010

Kik messenger frees text messaging from systems

Every smartphone user are now able to download the re-launched Kik. The program was 1st launched in April 2010. Cellular phone providers can no longer have a stranglehold on texting. Kik plans on expanding their service. Now that they have over 1 million users, they have the user base needed for their plans. Source of article – Kik messenger frees text messaging from networks by Personal Money Store.

How to use Kik messenger

Smartphones are what the Kik messenger is made for. More or less, text messaging is what the Kik is used for when downloaded onto smartphones. The service also expands on traditional text messaging, by offering “personal assistant” auto-replies whenever you cannot immediately respond to messages. Data systems are where the info is sent rather than on SMS networks like normal. The point is that your cellular phone network will acknowledge the message as data. It can't see it as other things from Kik. The Kik can be downloaded on numerous devices. The iPhone, iPod, Android and BlackBerry can all have the application acquired.

What Kik messenger has that is great

Kik messenger has several benefits. First, it provides a way to text message without running up a huge cell-phone bill. Calls and texting are separate from data plans at most cellular phone corporations. You can get an unlimited data plan without having a really great phone plan. With that minimal plan and data access, you can text message and chat to your heart’s content. Broadening to personal profiles and music service are things that Kik messenger is preparing to do.

Connections with community unnecessary with Kik

The cell service may have to change things quite a bit since Kik has shown it is an excellent data network text messaging service. A cell phone with a wifi connection could be fully functional without any community with this and with Google Voice. Data traffic is becoming worse and worse. This is because smartphones have become so popular. the public has begun to get more involved in these issues. The issues of public wifi and high-speed data connections are part of this. So what do you think? Are you thinking of just sticking with only wifi, or are you keeping the Smartphone?

Articles cited

Kik

kik.com/



No comments: