I've had problems with a bunch of places, so it's at least YMMV then. And I'd be wary of transferring an existing number in (as opposed to getting a new voip number and then setting it up).
I'm sure specific services are hit or miss - there really shouldn't be a problem sending SMS to whatever number a user enters, but paternalistic snake oil salesmen gonna be paternalistic.
I've had the least difficulty with Google Voice (I believe it's impossible to tell "Google Voice" usage from bona fide Fi usage where it's really the users' only phone number). Voip.ms has worked very little for me, to the point of that I don't even try it. Heck I even used a voip.ms number for some online classifieds, and another person using Comcast/Xfinity mobile couldn't text me. I'm not saying this as a slight against Voip.ms itself, from what I've gathered most voip providers will be treated similarly.
One of these days when I get around to it I plan on setting up a wireless modem on a $3/mo paygo plan for my SMS nag needs. With a script that automatically brings the number as close to my paste buffer as possible.
What single use SMS service do you use? I haven't really investigated those.
> I believe it's impossible to tell "Google Voice" usage from bona fide Fi usage where it's really the users' only phone number
These are definitely distinguishable, and some auth service treat them differently. Google Voice numbers come from a different carrier (the one named Bandwidth) than most Fi numbers.
"One of these days when I get around to it I plan on setting up a wireless modem on a $3/mo paygo plan for my SMS nag needs. With a script that automatically brings the number as close to my paste buffer as possible."
I use something similar. A dedicated app makes a POST request to my Google Apps Script as soon as any sms arrives at my second phone. That script sends it in a Telegram Bot Chat to all of my devices.
I use a RedPocket (GSMA Flavor) $60/year for my resume and 2FA number as an eSIM.
I turn it on when needed, which is almost never. When not job searching, the voicemail plays the classic "this line has been disconnected" tones and message on repeat for two minutes. WiFi calling means I can use it anywhere I have WiFi.
I get incredibly few spam calls using this strategy.
I'm sure specific services are hit or miss - there really shouldn't be a problem sending SMS to whatever number a user enters, but paternalistic snake oil salesmen gonna be paternalistic.
I've had the least difficulty with Google Voice (I believe it's impossible to tell "Google Voice" usage from bona fide Fi usage where it's really the users' only phone number). Voip.ms has worked very little for me, to the point of that I don't even try it. Heck I even used a voip.ms number for some online classifieds, and another person using Comcast/Xfinity mobile couldn't text me. I'm not saying this as a slight against Voip.ms itself, from what I've gathered most voip providers will be treated similarly.
One of these days when I get around to it I plan on setting up a wireless modem on a $3/mo paygo plan for my SMS nag needs. With a script that automatically brings the number as close to my paste buffer as possible.
What single use SMS service do you use? I haven't really investigated those.