Instant Messaging is evolving. Microsoft announced that it will integrate its IM service, used by 300 million people, more closely with its Windows Live e-mail and social networking sites. That means users will no longer have to go to a separate window downloaded to a desktop. Instead, users will be able to strike up a conversation with someone right from an application they are already using such as Hotmail.
Like e-mail, games and other categories that have gradually migrated away from downloaded and off-the-shelf software, instant messaging is shifting toward the Web. And that means it can be accessed from any computer while taking up no space on a hard drive.
It's all part of a growing trend. Facebook, the world's fastest-growing social network, recently installed a toolbar that lets friends chat one-on-one while they browse the site.
"We had messaging, we had wall-to-wall [posting], and we thought having that private conversation was necessary," Facebook's product manager Peter Deng says. "It enables a channel of constant communication between you and your friends."
For more on the next generation of IM:
- check out this BusinessWeek.com article [1]
Related Articles:
Protect your IM security [2]
Social networking news from FierceCIO [3]
Links:
[1] http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/nov2008/tc20081116_918455.htm?chan=technology_technology+index+page_internet
[2] http://www.fiercecio.com/story/protect-your-im-security/2008-08-27
[3] http://www.fiercecio.com/tags/social-networking-sites