X-Git-Url: https://git.ao2.it/SaveMySugar/savemysugar-website.git/blobdiff_plain/4c902502a2566900b6ab8bd49848740b88e14960..c1414ba598f765ae3bb935a1add7b90d792ec66e:/index.html diff --git a/index.html b/index.html index 65dc02a..6b166e4 100644 --- a/index.html +++ b/index.html @@ -41,9 +41,9 @@
Someone else also proposed it on Half Bakery.
-However there seems to be no implementation of the technique for exchanging text messaging, and that's what SaveMySugar is about.
+However there seems to be no implementation of the technique for exchanging text messages, and that's what SaveMySugar is about.
-The name SaveMySugar was born as a take on the price of the old conventional Texting service which is quite high, see The True Price of SMS Messages, and it is also a reference to the distress signal Save Our Soul (SOS) used in Morse communications.
+The name SaveMySugar was born as a take on the price of Short Message Service which is quite high, see The True Price of SMS Messages, and it is also a reference to the distress signal Save Our Soul (SOS) used in Morse communications.
You can find a prototype implementation written in python called python3-savemysugar.
-There is also a prototype Android app SaveMySugar-0.1-debug.apk, its souce code is in the android-savemysugar repository.
+There is also a prototype Android app SaveMySugar-0.1-debug.apk, its source code is in the android-savemysugar repository.
Contact Antonio Ospite if you want to discuss about porting SaveMySugar to other platforms.
On the receiving side the symmetric operations are performed when phone rings are detected.
-This is basically a Pulse-Distance Modulation (PDM), this scheme has been chosen because it's easy to detect when a phone starts ringing, but it's not always easy to detect for how log it rings, or how many rings there are in a single call.
+This is basically a Pulse-Distance Modulation (PDM), this scheme has been chosen because it's easy to detect when a phone starts ringing, but it's not always easy to detect for how long it rings, or how many rings there are in a single call.