textaboð
Textaboð is the Icelandic term for text messages, referring to the Short Message Service (SMS) used to exchange short text between mobile devices over cellular networks. Typical SMS messages are capped at 160 characters in the original GSM 7-bit encoding; when Unicode is used, the limit is 70 characters. Longer messages can be sent as concatenated SMS, split into multiple linked segments (usually 153 characters per segment for GSM-7, 67 for UCS-2). Textaboð emerged in the 1990s as mobile networks standardized the SMS protocol, with ongoing evolution through GSM and later 3GPP standards.
The first SMS was sent in 1992 by Neil Papworth in the United Kingdom, and the service
Textaboð is widely used for person-to-person communication, time-sensitive alerts, and service verification codes. It coexists with
security and privacy: SMS messages are not end-to-end encrypted; they traverse operator networks and may be