Let’s take a look at how to use the SMSGTE service to protect the phone numbers of those you send text message to from your APRS radio.
Category: News
In the process of configuring and testing a fill-in digipeater with the local iGate, I discovered a bug with the SSID Alias feature in SMSGTE […] Read More
Recently I was up in the Northern part of Wisconsin on Madeline Island in the Chequamegon bay volunteering with the Madeline Island Marathon. Madeline is part of the Apostle Islands on the southern shores of Lake Superior…
I have run APRS for awhile and have used it for tracking and sending messages to other APRS users and sending packets through the International Space Station, and while I have known that APRS was capable of sending SMS text and emails I had not looked into it until recently.
I have run APRS for awhile and have used it for tracking and sending messages to other APRS users and sending packets through the International Space Station, and while I have known that APRS was capable of sending SMS text and emails I had not looked into it until recently.
The Canadian Amateur, July/August 2015 Issue – Page 42 – Shortly after obtaining
my Amateur Radio licence,
I became very interested in the
Automatic Packet Reporting
System (APRS) and its
applications for emergency
communications. I quickly
discovered that I could send
and receive APRS messages
from areas that were well out of
cellular range and I had the idea
that it would be very useful if the
APRS network could exchange
messages with the cellular
Short Message Service (SMS).
How can someone send from one technology to another? In the case of APRS we use gateways. Gateways are hardware components setup by 3rd parties to act like a bridge between differing communication methods, in this case APRS and SMS. By sending a message to one of these gateways it will be retranslated to the other “side” and sent.