Ira,
Yes, I would be interested, although I think there might be some confusion
between specifying a pager or short message service as an IPP notification
mechanism and actualy implementing it. Implementations are likely to differ
between countries. The original IPP notification spec had a provision for
pager notification, and that was all we needed.
I think that the special requirements of SMS may be similar to the Japanese
i-mode. Even if it is possible to request an i-mode notification as an
email, it might be better to treat it as a pager/short message notification
for IPP purposes.
Perhaps Yuji Sasaki is interested in joining in.
> -----Original Message-----
> From: McDonald, Ira [mailto:imcdonald at sharplabs.com]
> Sent: Friday, June 30, 2000 0:23
> To: 'Anthony.Porter at xeikon.com'; cmanros at cp10.es.xerox.com;
>ipp at pwg.org> Subject: RE: IPP> ADM - Pick your favorite notification
> delivery method
> by July 7
>>> Hi Anthony,
>> I've been mentioning SMS in IPP Telecons for months
> since the talk of Instant Messaging notifications
> first came up. But I don't think many of the IPP
> WG list members are very familiar with SMS - I think
> it's a good delivery method and should benefit by
> the 'human-readable' format work being done for the
> email (SMTP) mapping.
>> Are you interested in writing or collaborating (with me)
> on an I-D on the use of SMS for IPP Notifications?
>> Cheers,
> - Ira McDonald, consulting architect at Xerox and Sharp
> High North Inc
>>> -----Original Message-----
> From: Anthony.Porter at xeikon.com [mailto:Anthony.Porter at xeikon.com]
> Sent: Thursday, June 29, 2000 5:04 AM
> To: cmanros at cp10.es.xerox.com; ipp at pwg.org> Subject: RE: IPP> ADM - Pick your favorite notification
> delivery method
> by July 7
>>> Has the possibility for supporting SMS/Pager notifications
> been dropped? I
> dont find anything about in the Notification spec.
>> In Europe now almost every man woman and child has an SMS
> phone, so SMS
> would be the notification method of choice where a human is
> the recipient.
> I think it is even more important than email notification.
> Our printers are
> usually located remotely from the customer submitting the
> job, so IPP is
> useful for that. On the other hand the person who is going
> to pick up the
> printed output will usually be travelling around. Many are freelance
> graphic designers. For them, an SMS notification is perfect.
> Another point
> is that the machine operator is usually wandering around
> doing all sorts of
> jobs, so SMS is the ideal way to notify the operator of any
> abnormal machine
> conditions.
>> For our customers I think SMS is by far the most important
> notification
> mechanism, so we would implement that first and then think
> about maybe doing
> some of the others. Old style pagers seem to have gone the
> way of 8-track
> stereo.
>> Xeikon NV
> Anthony Porter
> Project Consultant
> Tel: +32 34 43 17 54 Fax: +32 34 43 14 48
> Mobile (and SMS): +32 75 73 66 39
> Mailto:anthony.porter at xeikon.com> Vredenbaan 72
> B-2640 Mortsel, Belgium
> Tel: +32 34 43 13 11
> Fax: +32 34 43 13 09
>http://www.xeikon.com Mailto:info at xeikon.com>