February 2, 2007 11:38 AM PST

Jamming with 3jam: 'reply-all' for phones

The presenters at the AlwaysOn conference earlier this week might have primarily consisted of companies that are marketing toward the advertising and media communities, but there were still plenty of consumer-oriented start-ups. So many, in fact, that we still aren't finished writing about them. Here's another one you all might find interesting--3jam, which allows you to send reply-all text messages to a group of your friends.

There are a bunch of different ways to use 3jam. On a basic level, you can start reply-all groups by simply texting 3jam's number, or you can use a downloadable app or the company's mobile Web site. You invite friends, they join in, and poof! You've got a text-message party.

3jam's motto is "In the loop, on the fly," and indeed, it's much more "on the fly" than other group text-messaging services like Yahoo's Mixd. If you're trying to get in touch with a group of friends to plan an impromptu night out or afternoon Frisbee match, this could be a good idea. But it's always good to keep in mind that there are still plenty of folks out there who are paying ten cents per text message and might not appreciate spending several extra bucks by getting roped into a reply-all texting spree. You know, courtesy.

What I wanted to know: how does a company like this make money? According to CEO Andy Jagoe, there are a few ways. "Multi-party text messaging drives significant additional revenue for carriers, and 3jam will get a piece of that pie," he explained, adding that the company is also looking into using the technology as an advertising model as well.

Originally posted at Crave
Recent posts from Webware
Comcast to cap monthly consumer broadband
The mob is my broker: Cake launching crowdsourced stock fund
Digg town hall: Local news options, forums on the way?
Google Calendar gets more business savvy
YouTube gets closed captioning support
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement

About Webware

Say No to boxed software! The future of applications is online delivery and access. Software is passé. Webware is the new way to get things done.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Webware topics

advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right