I don't understand why people on this board keep forgetting that central Europe and the US is the minority of the world population.
Everyone keeps bringing up WhatsApp. But it seems that everyone has all but forgotten that WhatsApp became so popular not because they only focused on the US market, but because they went around the globe and specifically targeted feature phones as well. I.e. they understood that their own home turf isn't enough to make a dominant chat application.
"It doesn't matter for the use cases I don't care about" - what a selfish look at the world.
Besides paying for parking by SMS and other services in Europe there's also M-Pesa and similar services[1]
Read before replying. I literally said "for person-to-person communication".
> The death of SMS is hardly specific to central Europe and the US.
I hate to be a grammar Nazi, but since you're specifically attacking my wording I have to correct you. This statement would only be correct if it was: "The death of SMS for person-to-person communication is hardly specific to central Europe and the US."
So yes, your statement is incorrect. It's not dead, far from. It might get there eventually, but definitely not yet.
Did you mean to reply to a different comment? Mine was a reply to the GP, to answer the very narrow questions he asked about the US.