Skip to main content

No Internet? No problem. Cosmos for Android displays sites over SMS texting

smartphones could power a new earthquake early warning network smartphone use
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Especially in emerging markets, an Internet connection can be hard to find. As such, the Cosmos Browser for Android is nothing short of a miracle, as the app lets you essentially browse the Web using SMS.

The app, created in 36 hours by four students during the MHacks IV hackathon on September 6, presents you with a text-only, image-free version of the website you want to visit. The students created a backend system built with Twilio and Node.JS, which receives the URL of the page you requested. The system then strips the web page of its images, CSS, and JavaScript, compresses the page, and finally sends the web page back to you by SMS at a rate of three messages per second.

Cosmos
Image used with permission by copyright holder

As likely expected out of such a service, you’ll need an unlimited texting plan. In addition, just remember that receiving websites through SMS isn’t the fastest experience in town. Even so, Cosmos could be a boon for those in regions lacking LTE or 3G coverage. While the app is expected to launch before the end of September, the app’s developers are working on a way to include images in future versions of Cosmos.

You can take a look at the app’s codes at GitHub, where the developers will provide those interested with updates on the project’s progress.

[Image courtesy of Kostenko Maxim/Shutterstock]

Williams Pelegrin
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Williams is an avid New York Yankees fan, speaks Spanish, resides in Colorado, and has an affinity for Frosted Flakes. Send…
Samsung’s poor S21 sales are an Android flagship problem
Samsung s21+5g phone and box.

If someone were to ask what the most popular Android phone maker is, most people would undoubtedly say Samsung. And why not. The company's S Series and Note lines are the only Android phones to have achieved the near-ubiquity of the iPhone. The Galaxy brand has continued to strengthen, making its way into a new form factor with the foldable Galaxy Z lines, and throwing down a leader to help bring midrange phones up to par with upper-end phones via the A-Series line.

Yet, despite all this, there is trouble in paradise. While Samsung is carried to fame by its Galaxy S brand as a whole, the line has seen better days. Ever since the Galaxy S10, Samsung's S Series phone sales have been declining to the point where the company has reportedly been said to be considering an internal audit. For Samsung, the implications may be dire. For other Android manufacturers, there may be more lessons here than meet the eye.

Read more
From Android 1.0 to Android 10, here’s how Google’s OS evolved over a decade
Android

The smartphone has come a long way since the first iPhone launched in 2007. While Apple's iOS is arguably the world's first smartphone operating system, Google's Android is by far the most popular. Android has evolved significantly since first being released on an HTC-made T-Mobile device in 2008. Android was created in 2003 by Andy Rubin, who first started developing an OS for digital cameras. Soon, he realized that the market for digital camera operating systems perhaps wasn't all that big, and Android, Inc. diverted its attention toward smartphones.

It wasn't until 2005 that Google purchased Android, Inc., and while there wasn't much info about Android at the time, many took it as a signal that Google would use the platform to enter the phone business. Eventually, Google did enter the smartphone business -- but not as a hardware manufacturer. Instead, it marketed Android to other manufacturers, first catching the eye of HTC, which used the platform for the first Android phone, the HTC Dream, in 2008.

Read more
Motorola adds new features to Razr’s outer display with Android 10 update
motorola razr outer display gets a whole lot more useful  android 10

Motorola’s foldable Razr phone launched in 2020 with Android 9 Pie, leaving many customers scratching their heads as to why it didn’t go with the latest version of the mobile operating system, Android 10, which landed five months earlier.

Well, the head-scratching can now stop as Android’s latest operating system has finally arrived for the Razr in a long-awaited development that adds some subtle enhancements to the pricey device.

Read more