Cellular forums Home > Archive > Cellular GSM Technology > March 2008 > Sending Urdu(language) text message on mobile phone









You are viewing an archived Text-only version of the thread. To view this thread in it's original format and/or if you want to reply to this thread please [click here]

 

Author Sending Urdu(language) text message on mobile phone
shal

2008-03-24, 3:34 pm


Hi,

I want to know why some cell fone have not the capability of recieving
urdu text messages...Although every mobile supports Unicode
charecter...does it has any thing to do with Operating System of cell
phone?????? Is that operating system which is being hurdle and not
displaying and missing some of unicode charecters ????


can u suugest how can i send urdu text messages to any mobile set so
that is it will work on older nokia phones simbian os windows ce and
etc.




--
shal
John Henderson

2008-03-24, 3:34 pm

shal wrote:

> I want to know why some cell fone have not the capability of
> recieving urdu text messages...Although every mobile supports
> Unicode charecter...does it has any thing to do with Operating
> System of cell phone?????? Is that operating system which is
> being hurdle and not displaying and missing some of unicode
> charecters ????


Strictly speaking, any phone which can receive text messages can
receive Unicode messages. It's the ability to display them
correctly which will be lacking. GSM standards require that
received messsages be stored internally exactly as received.

> can u suugest how can i send urdu text messages to any mobile
> set so that is it will work on older nokia phones simbian os
> windows ce and etc.


Support for the display of any particular Unicode character set
is optional for phone manufacturers. People who wish to
receive and read Urdu language texts will need to buy phones
with that support built-in. The same goes for Tibetan, Latin
and Hebrew character sets, for example.

Unfortunately, only the 7-bit GSM default alphabet defined in
GSM 03.38 is guaranteed universal support.

John
shal

2008-03-25, 7:33 am


John wrote:
-
Support for the display of any particular Unicode character set is
optional for phone manufacturers-

From that u mean operating system of the old mobile phone are not
supportive enough to display that particular(urdu) kind of text???

Would u like to give me suggestion that making or designing some PDU
format that can travel and can be viewable on any device (old and new)
not depending on the operating system would solve that problem to some
extend??????

thanks for ur replies

Shal




--
shal
John Henderson

2008-03-25, 3:33 pm

shal wrote:

> John wrote:
> -
> Support for the display of any particular Unicode character
> set is optional for phone manufacturers-
>
> From that u mean operating system of the old mobile phone are
> not supportive enough to display that particular(urdu) kind of
> text???


Yes, the firmware in the phone will lack the required
sophistication. For most phones, calling the firmware an
"operating system" is a gross exaggeration.

> Would u like to give me suggestion that making or designing
> some PDU format that can travel and can be viewable on any
> device (old and new) not depending on the operating system
> would solve that problem to some extend??????


The only way to guarantee that a message will be displayed
correctly on the maximum number of receiving devices is to
restrict yourself to the 7-bit default alphabet, and it's also
best to avoid using a UDH. A UDH (user data header) is
required by concatenated messages (those more than 160 7-bit
characters), and by EMS (enhanced messages containing graphics,
sounds, etc).

The 7-bit alphabet is the original European character set.
Unicode support came later, after GSM escaped from Europe
(beginning with Australia). And cheap phones (by their nature)
are not feature-rich anyway.

John
LinkBot





Other Archives: Real Estate forum archive | Web Design archive | Software support archive | PC Hardware reviews archive | Medical topics archive

Copyright 2004 - 2008 cellphonetopics.com