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Mobile Messaging Technologies and Services: SMS, EMS and MMS, 2nd Edition

ISBN: 978-0-470-01143-0
Hardcover
416 pages
March 2005
List Price: US $161.25
Government Price: US $92.76
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Mobile Messaging Technologies and Services: SMS, EMS and MMS, 2nd Edition (0470011432) cover image
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Preface.

About the Author.

Typographic Conventions.

1 Basic Concepts.

1.1 Generations of Mobile Communications Networks.

1.2 Telecommunications Context: Standardization and Regulation.

1.3 Global System for Mobile Communication.

1.4 General Packet Radio Service.

1.5 Universal Mobile Telecommunications System.

1.6 Wireless Application Protocol.

2 Standardization.

2.1 Messaging Roadmap.

2.2 MMS Standards.

2.3 Third Generation Partnership Project.

2.4 Third Generation Partnership Project 2.

2.5 GSM Association.

2.6 Internet Engineering Task Force.

2.7 World Wide Web Consortium.

2.8 WAP Forum.

2.9 Open Mobile Alliance.

2.10 Further Reading.

3 Short Message Service.

3.1 Service Description.

3.2 SMS Use Cases.

3.3 Architecture for GSM Networks.

3.4 SMS Basic Features.

3.5 Technical Specification Synopsis.

3.6 Protocol Layers.

3.7 Structure of a Message Segment.

3.8 Settings and Message Storage in the SIM.

3.9 Message Submission.9

3.10 Message Submission Report.

3.11 Message Delivery.

3.12 Message Delivery Report.

3.13 Status Report.

3.14 Command.

3.15 User Data Header and User Data.

3.16 Network Functions for Message Delivery.

3.17 SMSC Access Protocols.

3.18 SIM Application Toolkit.

3.19 SMS and AT Commands.

3.20 SMS and Email Interworking.

3.21 Index of TPDU parameters.

3.22 Pros and Cons of SMS.

3.23 Further Reading.

4 Enhanced Messaging Service.

4.1 Service Description.

4.2 EMS Compatibility with SMS.

4.3 Basic EMS.

4.4 Extended EMS.

4.5 Pros and Cons of EMS.

4.6 Further Reading.

5 Multimedia Messaging Service: Service and Architecture.

5.1 MMS Success Enablers.

5.2 Commercial Availability of MMS.

5.3 MMS Compared with Other Messaging Services.

5.4 Value Proposition of MMS.

5.5 Billing Models.

5.6 Usage Scenarios.

5.7 Architecture.

5.8 Standardization Roadmap for MMS.

5.9 WAP Realizations of MMS.

5.10 Service Features.

5.11 Message Sending.

5.12 Message Retrieval.

5.13 Message Reports.

5.14 Message Forward.

5.15 Reply Charging.

5.16 Addressing Modes.

5.17 Settings of MMS-Capable Devices.

5.18 Storage of MMS Settings and Notifications in the (U)SIM.

5.19 Multimedia Message Boxes.

5.20 Value-Added Services.

5.21 Content Adaptation.

5.22 Streaming.

5.23 Charging and Billing.

5.24 Security Considerations.

5.25 Multimedia Message.

5.26 Multipart Structure.

5.27 Message Content Domains and Classes.

5.28 Media Types, Formats, and Codecs.

5.29 Scene Description.

5.30 Example of a Multimedia Message.

5.31 DRM Protection of Media Objects.

5.32 Postcard Service.

5.33 Message Size Measurement.

5.34 Commercial Solutions and Developer Tools.

5.35 The Future of MMS.

5.36 Further Reading.

6 Multimedia Messaging Service, Transactions Flows.

6.1 Introduction to the MMS Transaction Model.

6.2 MM1 Interface, MMS Client–MMSC.

6.3 MM2 Interface, Internal MMSC Interface.

6.4 MM3 Interface, MMSC–External Servers.

6.5 MM4 Interface, MMSC–MMSC.

6.6 MM5 Interface, MMSC–HLR.

6.7 MM6 Interface, MMSC–User Databases.

6.8 MM7 Interface, MMSC–VAS Applications.

6.9 MM8 Interface, MMSC–Post-Processing Billing System.

6.10 MM9 Interface, MMSC–Online Charging System.

6.11 MM10 Interface, MMSC–Messaging Service Control Function.

6.12 STI and MMS Transcoding.

6.13 Standard Conformance and Interoperability Testing.

6.14 Implementations of Different Versions of the MMS Protocol.

References.

Appendices.

Appendix A: SMS TP-PID Value for Telematic Interworking.

Appendix B: SMS–Numeric and Alphanumeric Representations.

B.1 Integer Representation.

B.2 Octet Representation.

B.3 Semi-Octet Representation.

Appendix C: SMS–Character Sets and Transformation Formats.

C.1 GSM 7-bit Default Alphabet.

C.2 US-ASCII.

C.3 Universal Character Set.

C.4 UCS Transformation Formats.

Appendix D: EMS–iMelody Grammar.

Appendix E: MMS–Content Types of Media Objects.

Appendix F: MM1 Interface–Response Status Codes (X-Mms-Response-Status).

Appendix G: MM1 Interface–Retrieve Status Codes (X-Mms-Retrieve-Status).

Appendix H: MM1 Interface–MMBox Store Status Codes (X-Mms-Store-Status).

Appendix I: MM4 Interface–Request Status Codes (X-Mms-Request-Status-Code).

Appendix J: MM7 Interface–Status Code and Status Text.

Acronyms and Abbreviations.

Index.

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