Just in the spirit of sharing hopefully useful info... apparently
<10digitnumber>@mms.att.net will result in an SMTP -> MMS translation.  II'm
not sure what MMS is - some quick googling indicated it's a Microsoft
protocol?   I also found this:

You can also go to http://mymessages.wireless.att.com, register and request
a name alias so you can have youralias at txt.att.net show up instead of
yournumber at txt.att.net. Just in case you didn't want your phone number being
given out so readily.

-Rob

On Mon, Dec 14, 2009 at 1:54 PM, Ryan Coleman <ryan.coleman at cwis.biz> wrote:

> MMS: vzpix.com
> SMS: vztext.com
>
>
> Eric F Crist wrote:
>
>> On Dec 14, 2009, at 13:29:25, Robert Nesius wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>> On Mon, Dec 14, 2009 at 12:50 PM, Carl Wilhelm Soderstrom <
>>> chrome at real-time.com> wrote:
>>> On 12/14 11:28 , Donovan wrote:
>>>
>>> Basically, take your message, pipe it to mail, and use that to send it to
>>> the e-mail address which will then send the page.
>>>
>>>
>>> This prompted me to do a little digging.  For attwireless folks the first
>>> 160 characters of emails sent to the following address will be sent as an
>>> SMS text...
>>> <10-digit-number>@txt.att.net.
>>>
>>>
>>
>> Most providers have an email to SMS gateway.  There are lists all over.
>>  T-Mobile does <phone#>@tmomail.net and I know both verizon and sprint
>> have similar gateways.
>>
>>
>
>
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