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Cell Phones, Computers, Google

Text Messaging Launches on Gmail and Google Chat, Finally

Text Messages Coming to GmailWe love Google's Gmail service, with its gigabytes (GB) of free storage and clean interface, and we also love keeping up with friends using the Google Talk chat service. The two have long been integrated, enabling you to chat in real-time from within the Gmail page, but now Google is adding another dimension: the ability to send SMS text messages to phones as you would to another person on Google Chat.

You can now send a chat message to a mobile phone number and Google will send that message as an SMS to the recipient's phone, all without charging you a dime. The only catch is that the text will appear to come from some random number in the 406 area code, but Google is indicating it will associate that number with you uniquely, so that your friends can reply to that number and you'll get the text as a chat response. Google is currently rolling out the feature to Gmail users, and by the end of the day you should be able to enable it by clicking on "Settings" and then on "Labs" if you're so inclined. Of course, this is nothing new to AIM, Windows Live Messenger, and Yahoo! Messenger users, who have been able to send text messages to cell phones for several years now. [From: Webmonkey]

Cell Phones, Google, iPhone, Summer Fun

Google Talk Comes to the iPhone

Google Talk Comes to the iPhone
Sure, the iPhone has had various ways of letting you chat with friends via just about any instant messaging network you want. And hey, there are even a number of solutions out there that will let you manage all your chats from one application, like eBuddy, Meebo, and Fring.

But what if you want to limit yourself to one instant messaging network. And one with as few people on it as possible? In that case, the official Google Talk gadget for the iPhone is here to answer your prayers.

Okay, maybe we're being a bit harsh. We actually really like Google Talk and its integration with Gmail, etc, but the iPhone version lacks AIM integration, so it looks like we'll still have to use more than one program to access all of our chat contgacts. Plus, to use the GoogleTalk for iPhone app, you have to have it constantly open in Safari and have Safari active. This means if you switch apps to check your calendar or contacts to share information with someone via Google Talk, you'll have to make yourself inactive on the service and you won't recieve instant messages until you bring the GoogleTalk page back up.

The whole thing seems only moderately useful to us. [Source: Official Google Blog]

Computers, MySpace, Google

Facebook to Add Instant Messaging

Facebook Hopping on the Instant Messaging Bandwagon
It was bound to happen eventually (if for no other reason than MySpace did it first) -- Facebook is finally offering up an instant-messaging service. Ironically, Facebook's new IM service may have the effect of killing off a couple of chat applications already available on the social-networking site.

Initial rumors claimed that the new Facebook IM service, which is to be embedded into people's profiles, would be based on Jabber, the same standard underlying Google Talk. This would have meant that other IM programs, such as Pidgin, Meebo, or even Google Talk, could connect to the Facebook service easily and bring it to the desktop. These rumors, of course, turned out to be false, and Facebook IM, at least initially, will only be available on Facebook pages.

With MSN Messenger, Yahoo!, AIM, Skype, Gizmo, and Google Talk already clogging the Internet, we're pretty confident we don't need any more new IM services. Especially not ones that can only be accessed on the Web by logging into a separate place from all your other IM services. But if Facebook ever manages to get all the other IM programs to work with its IM service, then it might become an attractive online chat place indeed.

From TechCrunch

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Computers, Google

Gmail Gets Major Upgrade

Gmail Gets Upgraded Integrates AIM
In case you haven't been paying very close attention to your Gmail, or for some bizarre reason don't use the Google Mail service, you may have missed that while staying almost exactly the same cosmetically, Gmail has undergone a complete overhaul during the last few months.

Since late October Gmail has gained new features on an almost weekly basis. First they added IMAP, an E-Mail delivery protocol that allows you to sync several devices to your Gmail account. Then Gmail got a completely new code base that added some new keyboard shortcuts, faster load times, and an overhauled contacts manager. Then, earlier in the week, labels got color, and now the built-in chat client includes AIM support.

As any user of of Gmail knows, Google Talk is integrated with your inbox, allowing you to chat with other Gmail and Google Talk users. Now, in the same contacts side bar under options, you should find a new entry that reads 'Sign in to AIM.' This has been a long time coming, but sadly the integration is not as tight as one would have hoped. The side bar simply allows you to sign in to your AIM account, and when you IM some one it still appears to them that you are using your AIM screen name. But Gmail will still keep logs of your AIM conversations if they're held within the Gmail client, just like it does with Google Talk.

Currently,AIM is not available in the Google Chat desktop program or the gadget, but hopefully that will change soon.

From BetaNews

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