The bottom of the article links to the history (individual features) of other IM programs from that era as well like ICQ and Yahoo Messenger.

  • Uninvited Guest
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    387 months ago

    I’m surprised no one mentioned Facebook.

    I recall using MSN as far as in to 2009, but the friends I was connected with migrated to Facebook when their chat feature rolled out.

    • @Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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      117 months ago

      I recall using MSN as far as in to 2009, but the friends I was connected with migrated to Facebook when their chat feature rolled out.

      another reason to hate facebook

    • @kevindqc@lemmy.world
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      77 months ago

      The article touches on that

      The advent of social media and mobile devices couldn’t be ignored either. These technologies were enabling new ways for people to stay in touch with friends and family that didn’t involve a traditional computer.

    • @m4m4m4m4@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      From my ignorant point of view Microsoft had in its very own hands a solid competitor to Facebook but ended doing absolutely nothing with it.

      I still can recall the MSN/Hotmail profiles - it was kind of a news feed that recorded all your statuses from MSN (or you could add your own there). Your contacts could add comments on those. I seem to recall at some point you could add posts with pictures too.

      But all of that just disappeared when they ditched MSN.

      They could’ve beat Facebook in its own game easily, as they had the advantage of their huge userbase - but somehow they missed on that too.

  • ThePowerOfGeek
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    357 months ago

    Anyone remember the short-lived Great War of the Messenger Apps? For a few months back around… '98? '99? MSN tried really hard to shoehorn its way into working with AIM. About every day there would be an update from MSM Messenger to allow it to work with AIM. Then AOL would fuck with their own protocol to ice out MSN users again.

    I think these shenanigans also impacted the Trillium Messenger app too, which up until then had been flying under the radar of messenger interoperability.

    I might be getting some of these details wrong.

    • @tias@discuss.tchncs.de
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      7 months ago

      And then Jabber came to fix it by introducing an open protocol, and Google started supporting it, and all was well. But when everybody was using Google Chat they severed the Jabber compatibility, locking everyone in to their platform. Now we’re back wading around in enshittified shit and Jabber is dead.

      • @curbstickle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        47 months ago

        I wouldn’t say jabber is dead, xmpp is still pretty well used. Not enough IMO, but still in use and with readily available modern servers. Jitsi is xmpp+jingle (sip signalling) after all.

      • Kushan
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        27 months ago

        People blame Google for the death of jabber because of one blog post from a disgruntled contributor but the truth is jabber was never popular and Google chat died as well.

        Jabber was a mess, most of the clients were barely compatible with Each other and it was a wild west of feature support. Some clients were well featured with the ability to send richer messages, but typically only worked with a specific server and the same clients. Jabber did a crap job at making sure clients and servers interacted properly with each other and didn’t push the standards quickly enough, forcing clients to do their own thing.

        Which is all Google did, they went their own way because nobody used jabber and the interoperability was causing more harm than good. It didn’t work, Google talk died and many years later clients like WhatsApp took over instead.

        • @sibachian@lemmy.ml
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          47 months ago

          facebook, google talk, etc. all relied on the XMPP protocol. you could add your facebook messenger friends to google talk or any of the open source clients like pidgin. it was the holy era of instant messaging. federated. solution. no bullshit lockdown to a specific system like in the days of ICQ, Skype, etc.

          then both facebook and google talk locked down their XMPP server and i lost 80% of my friendlist on XMPP. and that was that. i had to get facebook. i had to get google mail. especially relevant when microsoft bought skype and it turned to shit.

          guess what. today we’re split on even more clients than we used to be. need signal, whatsapp, facebook messenger, telegram, discord, band, matrix, threema, session, irc, slack, and steam chat installed on my fucking device. and all because meta and google pulled the rug to isolate their systems and force user conversion.

          no, thanks. open source federation is the only solution to unshitification and that’s never going to happen as long as people do shit like leaving x for bluesky instead of mastodon etc. leaving facebook for band instead of literally any other fediverse platform (because facebook has devolved to ads and facebook groups - everything else is irrelevant or dead on there). etc etc.

    • @ShunkW@lemmy.world
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      147 months ago

      I used that until they pay walled it. Then I found Pidgen I believe it was called. It was open source and could connect to pretty much every messenger and IRC and stuff. Then my friend just switched to texting lol

      • JohnEdwa
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        127 months ago

        Pidgin. Before that it was called Gaim.
        It still works, as there are plugins to integrate it with almost everything.

        • @ShunkW@lemmy.world
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          17 months ago

          I knew it wasn’t spelled exactly like the bird lol. But yeah I used that shit for years. I don’t really have a use for it anymore or I’d probably still be using it

          • @toynbee@lemmy.world
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            17 months ago

            I used it all the way up until Google broke compatibility with it, then continued using it with a third party plug-in until that stopped being maintained.

            Now I prefer Signal over Chat.

          • @WildPalmTree@lemmy.world
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            17 months ago

            “A pidgin /ˈpɪdʒɪn/, or pidgin language, is a grammatically simplified means of communication that develops between two or more groups of people that do not have a language in common: typically, its vocabulary and grammar are limited and often drawn from several languages.”

    • @kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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      37 months ago

      I think the article mentions it. AOL tried to block it and this to and fro went 21 times before finally coming to a stop. MSN and Yahoo later signed a deal, I think, so that the former will work with latter’s contacts properly.

  • Captain Aggravated
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    317 months ago

    I might have been 10 minutes too young for ICQ. I think that’s what the college kids were playing with when I was in high school. For my cohort it was the big three: MSN, Yahoo! and AIM. You probably had all three installed on your computer and probably all running at once. They’re probably why my entire generation can touch type. Vital tool for teenage social life at the turn of the century.

    This was Microsoft’s era, too. The main reason Apple survived the 90’s was because Microsoft invested in them to counter anti-trust allegations. They paid Apple to keep existing so they couldn’t be called a monopoly. Internet Explorer was the web browser, any others in use were a rounding error. No one had a Mac, a few people were still clinging to their Amigas. THE platform for personal/home computing and internet access was a Pentium PC with Windows ME or XP, which came with MSN Messenger out of the box.

    Two things happened nearly simultaneously: Facebook Messenger and the iPhone. Graduating high school in 2005, your freshman year of college you probably started hearing about the cool new site that’s kinda like MySpace except it’s only for college kids. By your junior year all your new college friends were on Facebook and all your old high school friends that never logged on let alone talk to you were on MSN. And if you graduated in 2005, your junior year was in 2007, the year the iPhone was launched. MSN Messenger had been present as baked in “functions” of certain media phones at the time, but I don’t think they ever made it to the App Store or even the Play Store on Android. Facebook was fast to adopt mobile apps, and for awhile there it was the one messenger service that interoperated between desktop on a web browser and smart phones across platforms. SMS didn’t run on the desktop, iMessage is Apple-only, AIM, MSN and Yahoo were nowhere to be found and Telegram, Signal, Discord etc. weren’t around yet. So everyone standardized on Facebook Messenger.

    Meanwhile, Microsoft bought and ruined Skype.

    • @radicalautonomy@lemmy.world
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      167 months ago

      I think that’s what the college kids were playing with when I was in high school.

      Started college in 1995, and I indeed did have ICQ before too long. Still remember my number (6725571).

      You probably had all three installed on your computer and probably all running at once.

      I remember using a program called Trillian (which is still around!) in the late 90s/early 00s. It allowed you to connect multiple IM accounts in one app. It was sorta finicky, but it got the job done.

    • @Soapbox1858@lemm.ee
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      37 months ago

      You nailed my experience. Though AIM was preferred. I begrudgingly used MSN too for a couple people who weren’t allowed to install AIM.

  • @moonbunny@lemmy.world
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    177 months ago

    Microsoft Teams is sorta like the all grown up version of MSN, with the colour drained from it and “fun” features out of the box feeling dead on the inside

  • CaptainBasculin
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    177 months ago

    It was very popular within my friends up until the skype merger. At that point they went “i aint usin skype lmao”

  • @CrunkBy@lemmy.world
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    177 months ago

    well, the same as the others really: Time.

    I think once SMS and phone apps became the norm over having Messenger apps on our Desktops all the time, that was pretty much it for these applications over all. It was a long, slow death. But MSN was one of the firsts to call it quits if I recall right. Oddly the IM app I liked the most. It’s just not many of my friends used it. They were all AIM/AOL users.

    • @wise_pancake@lemmy.ca
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      147 months ago

      I miss Adium, I used it for a bunch of protocols, and I customized the CSS/html to make it look really awesome.

      I had an app called snakeskin or something to skin my Mac OS X to be dark themed.

          • EleventhHour
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            37 months ago

            With Linux and other FOSS projects surging in popularity, I dare say we’re in for another.

            But, sadly, companies don’t seem too interested in making good software for that sake of it being good anymore. Now it’s all about getting you hooked on an eternal subscription.

            • @wise_pancake@lemmy.ca
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              47 months ago

              I certainly hope so. It’s been great seeing PopOS and Linux Mint pushing the bar on what a good linux desktop experience can be.

              I’d love to see Linux become a stronger competitor to macos (which is what I’ve used for almost 20 years).

              • EleventhHour
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                7 months ago

                Absolutely adore PopOS. I can’t wait for cosmic to be finished!

  • @amenotef@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I remember I started using more Skype after it MSN Messenger.

    But I’d say it got killed by WhatsApp on mobile phones.

  • @MY_ANUS_IS_BLEEDING@lemm.ee
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    17 months ago

    WhatsApp (& mobile internet in general) replaced it for me. It’s no longer a requirement for both my friends and myself to be at our computers at the same time to talk shit to each other.