AOL Opening Up AIM Community to Third Parties 241
DaffyD writes "Refocusing its vision for AOL Instant Messenger, America Online is endeavoring to revitalize the service by opening up its community and presence to third parties. In addition to partners such as CareerBuilder, AOL is seeking to enlist independent developers to build extended AIM services and hopes to offer a plug-in architecture by the end of the year. ICQ recently added such functionality through its open XML-based Xtras feature. Maybe AOL is feeling the heat from alternatives such as Gaim and Adium."
<AOL>Me, too!</AOL> (Score:5, Insightful)
Whatever you do, just make sure you change your screen name once you got the job, your new boss may be checking out your running man while you're supposed to be working.
Re:Me, too! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Me, too! (Score:2)
Let's get this straight: lock your damn computer when you leave it. This is the single easiest thing to do to protect yourself from co-workers or managers with misguided intentions, whether clueless or malicious. Locking is trivial to do in most environments; Windows users have the single default keybinding of <Windows Key>-l (lowercase L). No need to even bother with Ctrl-Al
Re:Me, too! (Score:3, Funny)
Nothing happened.
Now I'm sad. Why did you make me sad?
great (Score:3, Funny)
Cleary a response (Score:4, Interesting)
Opening these formats for development will cause more innovation, which can't be bad for the bottom line.
Re:Cleary a response (Score:2, Insightful)
Now they have to figure out some way to get the coding done. Now let's see...
1. Outsource overseas.
2. Contractor in US.
3. Open source.
4. Profit!
Finally we see that Step #3 is.
Re:Cleary a response (Score:2)
Re:Cleary a response (Score:5, Informative)
They did, however, drop "AOL" from their name and changed their stock ticker symbol from "AOL" to "TWX" when they realized that a major media corporation being bought up by an internet provider that spent more money sending CDs to every person on the planet than it will ever make selling internet services was really, really, stupid.
Re:Cleary a response (Score:4, Insightful)
More like the merger completed right at the time the bubble burst, and Time Warner was really pissed off that the 'money' they'd been bought with was suddenly worthless. Couple that with AOL's haughty attitude in trying to unify the technology of the company, and you get a blind hatred of the AOL unit by the rest of TW. That hatred, more than anything else, is what's sabotaged AOL from becoming anything better in the past five years.
I mean, c'mon. AOL can't even get the rest of TWX to put any syndicated content other than People and a snippet or two of CNN in it's bowels, when the whole point of merging was to do just that. Time Warner hasn't given it any of the cable access promised, no real content except movie trailers, no access to it's music holdings, and no respect in it's press. I think they WANT it to die rather than realize they were as gullible as everyone else back in 1999.
Hopefully this'll help turn them around. I mean, yeah, it's AOL. Not very exciting of a tech company. But they've done a lot of open source work (yes, seriously. Mozilla, TCL Aim, AOLServer) and they're one of the most powerful litigants against spam and for online privacy. They've also been a good stepping stone for millions of people before heading out to the 'real' internet. Having them around has probably done more good than harm to the geek community.
Please god let them do it right (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Please god let them do it right (Score:3, Interesting)
I believe some programs such as naim (not to be confused with gaim) take advantage of this fact. I belive their system is open, but not all features (such as seeing an away message before IMing a person) are available...but i could be wrong
Re:Please god let them do it right (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Please god let them do it right (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Please god let them do it right (Score:3, Insightful)
They want to know if you want to install WeatherBug.
Cute.
Re:Please god let them do it right (Score:2)
Flash based "API" (Score:2)
This one has been known for awhile, and is only avaible to licensees of Macromedia Central. I believe that this requires a downloadable from flash installation of the new API. ( see the new AIM client in flash here: http://www.macromedia.com/software/central/product info/gettingstarted/ [macromedia.com], not that it works on my linux box... I don't allow flash to write to the disk.)
The ot
Re:Please god let them do it right (Score:5, Informative)
But we're going to have a nice platform, with web services, SIP gateways, client plug-ins, and a client SDK; there's different levels of intergration depending on what you're trying to do. I just hope that the clever developers out there look at this as an opportunity to build something that millions of people could be using, and aren't put off by prejudice against AIM/AOL.
Anyway - if you want us to "do it right", I'd appreciate it if you would let us know what you would like to see! Email me at juberti [aol.com], or post to my [new] blog on this topic. http://journals.aol.com/juberti/runningman [aol.com]
Re:Please god let them do it right (Score:2)
Your Mac client right now is really good, which is strange since Apple covers the same territory with iChat. Your Windows client sucks ass. Even *without* considering the spyware and ad-ware, it's still bloated with features nobody uses, IM windows are unnecessarily HUGE, it lacks IM logging, etc etc.
This plug-in crap is just going to make things worse. After trying the new Windows AIM version, I quickly went back to
Competition (Score:4, Funny)
Oh, wait
YES! (Score:4, Interesting)
Smart move, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
Too little too late, IMHO.
They bring servers (Score:5, Insightful)
AOL is brining that to the table.. Without those servers, clients will be all dressed up with nowhere to go..
Re:They bring servers (Score:2, Informative)
Bzzzztt....
Sorry, thank you for playing.
You only need huge great servers if you think like AOL and wish to control everything. If you use protocols like XMPP [xmpp.org] (e.g. like Jabber [jabber.org]) then you can have decentralised small servers very similar to how email works. That way you have much greater scalability and openess.
Re:They bring servers (Score:2)
When I log on to an XMPP server I have access to exactly what is on that specific server, not any of the others.
Re:They bring servers (Score:3, Informative)
I don't believe that Jabber has ever not had that feature.
decentralised small servers (Score:2)
No server, no authenication.. no IM..
"Scale" is a different topic for a differen day.
What an about-face! (Score:4, Informative)
Example 1 [theregister.co.uk]
Example 2 [strom.com]
AOL has been fighting for years to keep other IM cilent makers off their network. Amazing what a shrinking user base will do for a company.
Re:What an about-face! (Score:2, Interesting)
Everyone I know seems to use AIM now and the number seems to keep growing. I keep trying to get them to quit and switch to something else, but none of them will since AIM is the one everyone else they know uses.
Re:What an about-face! (Score:2)
Most people use MSN Messenger as it comes with their machine (in fact it's difficult to switch off unless you know how to find the option... a newbie has no chance).
Re: (Score:2)
Re:What an about-face! (Score:2)
In fact, here in Canada, most everyone I know only uses MSN, and a few use YIM. I know a few who still uses ICQ.
I don't know a single AIM user.
Re:What an about-face! (Score:2)
1) Celine Dion
2) Bryan Adams
The fact that we unleashed those cancers on the world is bad enough lol!
(Yes there was a time Bryan Adams didn suck. That was before the Robin Hood Soundtrack.)
Re:What an about-face! (Score:2)
Re:What an about-face! (Score:2)
Re:What an about-face! (Score:2)
I use Gaim on my desk and Agile on my phone, and can talk to users of multiple IM systems, 10 on gaim & 4 on Agile - MSN, AIM/ICQ and Yahoo wherever I am
I never see MSN/Yahoo ads, in fact, if it wasn't for the fact that it said MSN on login that I would even know.
Re:What an about-face! (Score:5, Interesting)
- Cary
--Fairfax Underground [fairfaxunderground.com]: Where Fairfax County comes out to play
Not at all (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't Forget Trillian (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Don't Forget Trillian (Score:2, Interesting)
The history feature of Trillian 3.0 is amazingly cool.
Re:Don't Forget Trillian (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Don't Forget Trillian (Score:5, Informative)
since upgrading to trillian 3 the problem has vanished
have you tried trillian _3_?
Re:Don't Forget Trillian (Score:2)
ha (Score:2)
Why No Standard? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Why No Standard? (Score:5, Interesting)
The problem is, other than Jabber, nobody (AFAIK) has implemented it. Ever so slowly, but ever so surely, it is sinking in that there is no longer any point to having your own "gated community" when everybody just has an account on all of the services and uses a multi-network IM client that still doesn't show your commercials.
If AOL chooses to release something other than XMPP that tries to solve the same problems, only in AOL's way, developers should shun the new protocol and insist that AOL implement the standard instead of creating their own. Things that can connect to XMPP exist today. Nothing today exists that can use Tomorrow's Yet Another Proprietary AOL Protocol.
Until this occurs, it still won't have fully sunk in. IM is commoditizing. Actually, it's already a commodity, and only by artificially locking up the market have the large networks made it even this far, and that is an unnatural, unstable accomplishment that will inevitably break down, not something to build a business on.
XMPP? Yes please! (Score:3, Interesting)
Imagining for a second that AIM does decide to implement XMPP such that Server-to-Server connections work properly from the hundreds of existing Jabber servers directly to AIM.
That would bump the number of users on XMPP from an estimated 10 million (old figure from a year ago) to an estimated 45 million (AIM's fiugre from the same time period.) If their other services AOLIM and ICQ switched over at the same time, the total would be more like 80 million.
These sort of numbers would be about enough interope
Re:Why No Standard? (Score:2)
That's because it's a very complicated protocol -- at least when you compare it to protocols like SMTP, POP3, and HTTP.
Protocols that are overly complex tend not to have as many implementations -- and the implementations that do get done (aside from whoever did the reference implementation) tend to be buggy.
Here's a hint: if a bunch of vendors have to get together for an interoperability testing festival, your protocol is too complex.
Re:Why No Standard? (Score:5, Informative)
The next version of iChat AV, Apple's IM/Video Conferencing Application will feature XMPP/Jabber Interoperability. They have been using it for iChat to iChat communications for a while and now have fully implemented the standard and are opening up to 3rd party implementations.
http://www.apple.com/macosx/tiger/ichat.html [apple.com]
The upcoming iChat AV server also supports 3rd party XMPP/Jabber clients:
http://www.apple.com/server/macosx/tiger/ [apple.com]
Re:Why No Standard? (Score:4, Informative)
I've been trying to get to their development stuff for the last several weeks. Many of their source projects are currently shut off due to a break-in. I'm especially interested in documentation for libjabberoo.
Re:Why No Standard? (Score:2)
Because people will use the free/open version instead of the adware version. I stopped using IM clients when it became too difficult to strip out the adware, then started using it again when Apple integrated AIM into iChat. I would like to see a shift to P2P IM clients where there is no server.
Re:Why No Standard? (Score:4, Insightful)
* SIMPLE (RFC3428, based on SIP)
* XMPP (RFC3920, based on jabber work)
* WirelessVillage (from the OpenMobileAlliance)
Fun, eh, there are as many open standards as proprietary networks.
Here's a Clue (Score:5, Insightful)
"America Online is endeavoring to revitalize the service by opening up its community and presence to third parties."
You want to revitalize the service? Don't install a bunch of extra crap (like "get AOL Broadband NOW!" icons) on my computer when I grab your messenger. Ad-generated revenue is acceptable in a "free" service, but keep it in the buddy list window, please, instead of popping up a bunch of other windows. Don't make me go buy DeadAIM or whatever just to use your messenger without the kind of problems that make me think of spyware and adware.
That would go a long way to "revitalizing."
Free Sony PSPs [tinyurl.com] from Gratis
Re:Here's a Clue (Score:2)
Re:Here's a Clue (Score:2)
Yahoo! and MSN? (Score:2)
That and fr1st ps0t??
here's an idea for 'revitalization' (Score:5, Insightful)
Weirdly enough, when people install an instant messenger client on their computers, their first thought doesn't tend to be "Oh boy, I hope this thing gives me a stock ticker and a dozen popup advertisement windows!"
Re:here's an idea for 'revitalization' (Score:3, Funny)
Hmm... (Score:5, Interesting)
But hey...what do I know?
Smart Move, AOL (Score:4, Interesting)
We used to use our cellphones for this, but the annoying rings and need to mute the main conference phone to talk with colleagues to establish strategies or get our stories consistent was a hassle.
Whoever has the easiest to use and most features in messenger clients is going to have an opportunity to make some money out of it in the neear future, especially as such clients get integrated into other devices (PDAs, cellphones, MP3 players? Network appliances? Toaster?
The interesting parts include the gist:
Re:Smart Move, AOL (Score:2)
So you use AIM to talk about how much of an ass the client is behind their back too? :-)
Re:Smart Move, AOL (Score:3, Funny)
But now it seems I'm using it more and more to shut up some colleague who is mis- or un-informed and running off at the mouth.
It's also really handy for passing off a less-experienced person as lead for a picky project manager. I type what to say, he reads the text, he seems capable, we put him "in charge" of the project-that-requires-less-capability-than-the-ma n ager-thinks (under my supervision, of course) and everyone is happy.
So yeah, I'm sory
Re:Smart Move, AOL (Score:2)
(Yes, I know who Cyrano De Bergerac is.)
A Sign of good things to come (Score:2)
Offline Messaging (Score:2, Insightful)
I hope their statements of supporting additions to the service will truly be open and not restricted to those the company already does business with. By making it open, the afford the opportunity of the broad support enjoyed by open source projects, where users feel they have
Re:Offline Messaging (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Offline Messaging (Score:2)
If i message a user who is not online, it puts my message into a queue, and delivers it the next time that user comes online while I am signed on.
pretty useful feature, I must say.
Re:Offline Messaging (Score:2)
Re:Offline Messaging (Score:2, Informative)
"AIM web API's" (Score:2)
The AmericaOLn Way (Score:3, Interesting)
Nice Dilbert tagline (Score:4, Funny)
Refocusing its vision for AOL Instant Messenger, America Online is endeavoring to revitalize the service by opening up its community and presence to third parties.
Refocusing its vision? Endeavoring to revitalize??
I could feel my hair starting to get pointy just reading that much.
This is NOT going to go over well (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:This is NOT going to go over well (Score:2)
In that case, your campus sucks. Really. Jabber is every bit as nice as AIM, but you can pick between quite a few nice (Free!) clients. Get someone to set up jabber.yourschool.edu and be done with the reliance on a closed, hostile network once and for all.
not open protocols (Score:5, Informative)
What would have been great is if AOL released the specs for OSCAR, AND provided hooks to the protocol to allow various feature extensions. This will never happen, as once OSCAR is opened, there will be a barrage of third party AIM clients that do not show ads.
Even now, is very easy to develope an application to track the online status of AIM/iChat users, using, for example Net::AIM, NET::TOC and other modules.
Big deal.
Re:not open protocols (Score:2)
Cheers for Adium! (Score:2)
All the windows clients using Exodus, but of the many jabber clients for OS X Adium is my favorite for being such a strong project with nice aesthetics.
Exodus is slightly buggy, but it has a useful interface and works well for my environment. I tried out gaim briefly, but the roster items were too big and I didn't find a quick way to fix that. What else are people using for jabber clients?
Trillian Rocks! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Trillian Rocks! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Trillian Rocks! (Score:2)
Not that the current AIM version is much better, which is why I'm using AIM 4.7. Best balance of features vs. not looking like whale barf.
Look to skype, not GAIM or MSN (Score:4, Interesting)
You can do this now with 3rd party systyems like iChat and Macromedia Flash's lattest derivative Breeze [macromedia.com].
Think MS Passport, only useful.
Maybe.. (Score:2)
If Gaim could fix it's reconnecting problems then I'd switch to it permantly.. untill then it's AIM in bed, Gaim when awake.
Presence (Score:2)
This is meaningless. (Score:2, Interesting)
I see posts here that say this will be good for projects like gaim... No, I don't see it that way at all. AOL is trying to lure people away from open implimentations like gaim, and towards AOL-sanctioned code, which they control.
You want to know how nice AOL is to third-party clients? Well, I wrote my own client. [sourceforge.net] Recently, AOL took away my screen name, for "violation
Feeling the heat? (Score:4, Informative)
You must be kidding! I mean Gaim is great and all, but AOL and AIM have at least 4 orders of magnitude more users than Gaim and Adium combined. I doubt they're feeling a great deal of heat.
Re:Feeling the heat? (Score:2)
Re:Feeling the heat? (Score:2)
You mean people still use the stock clients?!? I say that only half in jest; while I know someone must, I don't know a single person that still uses AOL's client.
I Wonder What Apple Thinks (Score:2)
iChat + Jabber = ? (Score:2)
What I think is interesting is that apparently the next version of iChat, which will ship with Tiger, will have Jabber capability [appleinsider.com]. What does this mean for the direction of iChat in the future?
Key to interoperability: server to server protocol (Score:3, Insightful)
The key to an IM system being open I believe is a completely documented fully functional server to server interface which allows any foreign IM system with its own user namespace, run by anyone to interface with it and to communicate with its users. It works like this, lets you have seperate systems at servicea.com, and serviceb.com, each service has its own user namespace, meaning each manages its own database of usernames and username registration, so each server can have a user named, for instance, joeuser. joeuser@servicea.com would send an IM to joeuser@serviceb.com, and servicea.com would open a server to server connection to serviceb.com and the message would be sent between the services. Unlike IRC, the connection is made without prior arrangement, any server can connect to any other server when the user tries to send a message between the two.
chat bots (Score:2, Insightful)
They should develop a gateway that would allow an ordinary web server to send IMs, that way a web server could run chat bot scripts in a common language, such as PHP. This could be the catalyst for a diverse population of chat bots, which could be entertaining and/or useful.
deleting accounts (Score:3, Insightful)
AIM has been plagued with accidental account deletions over the past several months. The official line is that while cleaning up old, unused accounts, they have deleted some good ones. But this issue has been ongoing for several months now.
Personally, i had AIM reset my password daily for two weeks, then suddenly cancel my account..for no reason whatsoever. More infuriating, is that there is no support contact information on aim.com, at all.
Do some googling and you'll find this is a widespread problem. There was even a /. story at one point.
If AOL doesn't get their act together, they are going to really lose some ground in an area they have traditonally dominated.
Re:Now all they have to do... (Score:2)
Re:Now all they have to do... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Now all they have to do... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Now all they have to do... (Score:2)
Adium, you say? Looks like a real nice app. If I ever get myself a powerbook, I'll have to give it a whirl.
Re:Now all they have to do... (Score:2)
OK, I admit, when I was 16 the MIT hottub was interesting for a couple visits but it quickly wore thin.
Re:Now all they have to do... (Score:2)
Re:Too late. (Score:2)
Eh, you seem to have missed the name of the protocol he was advocating...
Re:Gaim and AIM (Score:2)