Aug 25, 2004
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Use gaim, or any other jabber client to connect to talk.google.com using your gmail/google login info.

also, in web browsers, talk.google.com now redirects to www.google.com/talk

Text

Google has an active Jabber server, Google IM coming soon?
A recent New York Times story on the Google Sidebar had an interesting side note about an annoucement Wednesday of a new ?communication tool? -- could this be the much speculated Google IM?

While executives would not disclose what the tool was, it has long been speculated that Google would introduce an IM service to compete with AOL, Yahoo, and MSN, and last year the rumor mill said that Google would use the open source Jabber protocol to power its product.

Inquisitive Neowin member Tom Servo, taking a que from member CarlNewton tried to connect to talk.google.com using his Trillian client.

What he got was a secure XMPP (Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol, alternatively known as Jabber) server waiting for connections.

Could this be Google IM waiting to be unleashed? Since the server is using open source technology it'd be wonderful if anyone with a Jabber enabled chat client could use it (Trillian, GAIM, etc) and not just users of Google IM. While this hope is based on speculation, it does have some backing in the form of an active server.

Update: Users are reporting that they can login to the jabber server using their Google Account username and password. Details soon...
Update 2: Several un-named Google Executives have confirmed that Google will be announcing "Google Talk" tomorrow.
 
Aug 25, 2004
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the jabber server's goin up and down. i think they've modified it to work only with their client. well, Gmail and Google maps have had excellent user interfaces, I hope Google Talk isn't far behind
 

EvilYoda

Lifer
Apr 1, 2001
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Anybody know if it's possible to enable Yahoo! or Jabber on Trillian after you've installed it?
 
Aug 25, 2004
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more at latimes.com

Google to Deliver Instant Messages
SAN FRANCISCO ? Watchers of Google Inc. soon will have something new to chat about ? and with.

Continuing its rapid expansion into new product categories, the Internet search giant plans to launch an instant messaging program called Google Talk as early as Wednesday, according to people familiar with the service.

The new service follows by just a few days the introduction of Google Sidebar, which pulls news stories, photographs, weather updates, stock quotes and other features onto a user's computer without opening a Web browser.

With all the new services, Google now competes with Internet portals such as Yahoo Inc., Microsoft Corp. and Time Warner Inc.'s America Online squarely on their turf, even as those companies encroach onto Google's with updated search engines.

Google has been playing catch-up with many products, such as e-mail, a personalized home page at Google.com and online maps. The goal is to get consumers to stay longer, rather than simply search for websites and then click away.

Compiling a list of buddies to chat with through instant messaging provides the kind of "stickiness" these companies covet.

"Like any big company, they've got a brand name, and they've got to keep extending it," said John Tinker, an analyst at Think Equity Partners who had not seen Google Talk.

"Because the reality is, there's not a whole lot of difference between their search [engine] and anyone else's."

According to a person who has seen the service, Google plans to let users chat using more than just their keyboards. Like similar programs from competitors, Google Talk also will let computer users with a headset have voice conversations with other computer users with headsets, this person said.

One source said Google intended to release the product Wednesday. Another source did not know when Google planned to release Google Talk, but said the company had been testing the service for at least a month.

A spokeswoman for Mountain View, Calif.-based Google said early Monday that the company planned to release a new product this week. She declined later in the day to say whether that product was Google Talk.

Google faces an uphill battle in persuading people to change instant messaging programs. These services are useful only if friends and family members also use it, and competing services from AOL, Yahoo and Microsoft have been available for years.

AOL plans in September to introduce a new version of its popular AOL Instant Messenger, or AIM, program that lets users send e-mail and text messages to mobile phones. In addition, customers of AOL's voice over Internet protocol service will be able use their AIM buddy lists to initiate calls to phones, not just computers. AIM leads the instant messaging pack, with 41.6 million U.S. users in July, according to research firm ComScore Media Metrix. Yahoo Messenger had 19.1 million users, and Microsoft's MSN Messenger had 14.1 million.

But Google has not shied away from introducing products to compete with already entrenched competitors. When it launched its search engine in 1998, the field was crowded with companies that Google and the Internet crash have since put out of business.

Even if Google Talk doesn't turn out to be revolutionary, Tinker said, "I don't think that matters."
 

NakaNaka

Diamond Member
Aug 29, 2000
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Anyone wanna guess on what kind of benefits Google Talk will have? I'll fool around with it on my PC and maybe install it in Adium on my Mac, but it needs some major market penetration before people switch to it.
 

LeiZaK

Diamond Member
May 25, 2005
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Originally posted by: EvilYoda
Anybody know if it's possible to enable Yahoo! or Jabber on Trillian after you've installed it?

yes, it is possible
 

neutralizer

Lifer
Oct 4, 2001
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Originally posted by: LeiZaK
Originally posted by: EvilYoda
Anybody know if it's possible to enable Yahoo! or Jabber on Trillian after you've installed it?

yes, it is possible

Get the plugins. They should have come with the Trilly installation though.