Microsoft moves on IM protocols in attempt to spread messaging technology.
Published:
6 September 1999 y., Monday
Microsoft Corp. is openly publishing the code to its instant messaging service in the hope that other developers will pick it up and run with it, the software company said Wednesday. Microsoft has been sparring with America Online over instant messaging, with the MSN Messenger Service vying with AOL Instant Messenger (AIM) for control over Net users_ keyboard communications. AOL is keeping the protocols for its popular service close to the vest and hopes to keep instant messagers within the AIM orbit, but Microsoft has been challenging it by allowing MSN Messenger users to contact both MSN and AIM users. Microsoft will publish the protocols with the Internet Engineering Task Force, an organization dealing with Internet architecture issues. Often, when a software firm publishes information such as its protocols, other developers will add to it or integrate it into their own software, making it more widely available. Eventually, it can lead to the establishment of that technology as an industry standard. While both AOL and Microsoft agree in principle with the idea of interoperability, meaning all instant messaging systems can communicate with each other, the two sides so far have been unable to sit down at the table to hash out the details. Most recently, each created a commission to study the issues but neither firm attended the other_s meetings. Both companies are attempting to enlist allies in the instant messaging battle. Earlier this month, AOL signed up Internet service providers Earthlink and Mindspring to offer its service, and Microsoft said Wednesday it has signed up ISPs Prodigy, Tribal Voice and PeopleLink.
Šaltinis:
CNNfn
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
IBM will bulk up its line of Opteron-based products later this year with the roll-out of a new workstation
more »
After years as working implementations, the Voice XML 2.0 (VXML) and Speech Recognition Grammar Specifications (SRGS) won the World Wide Web Consortium's (W3C) seal of approval Tuesday
more »
Nortel Networks Selected by Telekom Baltija to Deploy CDMA2000 1X 450 in Latvia; Network Planned to Offer Voice, High-Speed Data Services
more »
The European Parliament approved a controversial piracy law that would allow local police to raid the homes and offices of suspected intellectual-property pirates
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »
"Unicaster" – for advertising, announcements, presenting nightly life in Vilnius...
more »
Such editions as encyclopaedias, dictionaries, albums and geographical maps were issued on the CDs at first. Nowadays majority of the libraries, archives and museums is concerned of their funds’ security thus they are accumulating the copies of the books in the electronic libraries.
more »
The most-read webloggers aren't necessarily the ones with the most original ideas, say researchers at Hewlett-Packard Labs
more »
Removing the media player from Windows may help level the playing field for competitors
more »
Company also readies Flex framework
more »