top | item 27848663 (no title) s_m | 4 years ago Twilio is famously good at SMS/MMS(disclosure: I work there) discuss order hn newest spicybright|4 years ago I can attest to this.You pay money into an account, use a library (most languages are supported), and are charged per text (I think one cent for normal SMS?)Messages are received by specifying a URL end point to twilio it will send the data to.I liked the good documentation, and the free demo period. You get access to everything, just with an "ad" at the end of everything you send.(I've built a few apps with this and had no issues) totony|4 years ago Also note that twillio has shown[0] it will cut off your service if it disagrees with you.[0] https://www.protocol.com/enterprise/twilio-jeff-lawson-parle... cpach|4 years ago Seems very reasonable to me. load replies (1) shanecleveland|4 years ago Twilio handles SMS and MMS for my https://textpost.me side project. Great platform and reliability. cableshaft|4 years ago We just integrated SMS support into our software platform, and went with Twilio. It's working great so far!
spicybright|4 years ago I can attest to this.You pay money into an account, use a library (most languages are supported), and are charged per text (I think one cent for normal SMS?)Messages are received by specifying a URL end point to twilio it will send the data to.I liked the good documentation, and the free demo period. You get access to everything, just with an "ad" at the end of everything you send.(I've built a few apps with this and had no issues)
totony|4 years ago Also note that twillio has shown[0] it will cut off your service if it disagrees with you.[0] https://www.protocol.com/enterprise/twilio-jeff-lawson-parle... cpach|4 years ago Seems very reasonable to me. load replies (1)
shanecleveland|4 years ago Twilio handles SMS and MMS for my https://textpost.me side project. Great platform and reliability.
cableshaft|4 years ago We just integrated SMS support into our software platform, and went with Twilio. It's working great so far!
spicybright|4 years ago
You pay money into an account, use a library (most languages are supported), and are charged per text (I think one cent for normal SMS?)
Messages are received by specifying a URL end point to twilio it will send the data to.
I liked the good documentation, and the free demo period. You get access to everything, just with an "ad" at the end of everything you send.
(I've built a few apps with this and had no issues)
totony|4 years ago
[0] https://www.protocol.com/enterprise/twilio-jeff-lawson-parle...
cpach|4 years ago
shanecleveland|4 years ago
cableshaft|4 years ago