AIM for Gmail users is bad news
Owners of and AOL Instant Messenger can now use the service from Gmail. You may be surprised to learn that I consider that this is bad news. All the hype about interoperability between the two networks is just that : hype. This is not interoperability, this is just using Google as a multi-protocol client. In short, it merely hides the problem under the rug and further legitimates the fragmentation of the instant messaging world. I expected something more ambitious from Google. I thought that by opening their network to the Jabber galaxy, Google had made a statement in support of interoperability and open networks. But apparently this was just a way to embrace their competitors. I hope that users will some day understand the value of openness and demand it from their suppliers. They once did it for email and for internetworking – let’s hope the miracle happens again for instant messaging. Meanwhile, make sure that friends don’t let friends use closed networks !
7 responses to “AIM for Gmail users is bad news”
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I’m sure Google would have liked to see that happen, but AIM has such a dominant position, they’re unlikely to do it on their end.
Google Caves in to AOL…
When Google launched GTalk, their instant messaging client, I was excited that they based it on an open protocol, XMPP (also known as Jabber). It seemed XMPP was finally gaining some traction and that perhaps having a heavy-weight behind it……
[…] Well what the GMail developers have made is not interoperability. They have simply released a web based multi-protocol chat. This really does not deserve hype, since Trillian, gaim or kopete have done that for years. One can even argue it is bad news. […]
Some news on that subject:
http://www.betanews.com/article/AOL_tests_open_source_Jabber_for_instant_messenging/1200682227
As a comment by an AOL employee at Florian Jensen’s original post mentions, this is only a test server : “Our XMPP gateway at xmpp.oscar.aol.com, which we’ve been working on for a while now, is just one approach we’re tinkering with”. So it is very encouraging to see that they are experimenting with an open technology, but there is still lots of work ahead.
The comment in question :
http://florianjensen.com/2008/01/17/aol-adopting-xmpp-aka-jabber/#comment-1088
I just removed AIM from my computer and none to soon. The people I used AIM to message with are now receiving pornographic text messages which they didn’t receive before. I’m not impressed. Disappointed that gmail is hooking up with AIM.
The program itself caused my computer to operate so slow it took 15 to 20 minutes from powering on my computer til it was connected to the internet. Since I removed AIM it operates faster. I also feel like AIM “hijacked” my computer forcing me to use their dashboard instead of my igoogle home page. I prefer igoogle because there is no advertisment on my home page unlike yahoo or AOL. AIM dashboard also has large moving ads.