That's a Unicode encoded MO message, probably from an argentinean girl, saying:

"pepsi,soy Yani Rivero de Gral Rodriguez)quiero el tema de Gloria Es"
(..."tefan" i guess)

Isn't it funny how many things could be inferred from a bunch of numbers ;)

Unicode uses 2 bytes for each character, so max lenght's usually about
70 chars instead of the 140-160 you'd expect on most networks.

Sometimes, you can even found some clever guys that send picture
messages and EMS's to short numbers...

Hope it helps,

On 11/17/05, Flavio Suguimoto Leite
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> Flávio Suguimoto
> Pragya Technologies - Brazil
> Development Team Manager
> +55-16-3904-9656
> I have a Kannel running perfectly with a lot of SMSC configured and
> working. Sometime I get some MO messages logged in the kannel log like
> this:
>
>
>
> 2005-11-17 15:14:56 Receive SMS [SMSC:XXXXXX] [SVC:] [ACT:] [BINF:]
> [from:XXXXXX] [to:XXXXX] [flags:-1:2:-1:0:-1]
> [msg:134:00700065007000730069002C0073006F0079002000590061006E00690020005
> 20069007600650072006F0020006400650020004700720061006C00200052006F0064007
> 20069006700750065007A002900710075006900650072006F00200065006C00200074006
> 5006D006100200064006500200047006C006F007200690061002000450073]
>
>
>
> Someone have a clue what is happen?
>
>
>
> Regards,
>
> Flávio Suguimoto
>
> Pragya Technologies - Brazil
>
> Development Team Manager
>
> +55-16-3904-9656
>
> --
> No virus found in this outgoing message.
> Checked by AVG Free Edition.
> Version: 7.1.362 / Virus Database: 267.13.3/173 - Release Date:
> 16/11/2005
>
>
>
>


--
Alejandro Guerrieri
Magicom
http://www.magicom-bcn.net/

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