AOL opens doors to AIM developer program, includes Mac OS X and Linux tools
Macworld is reporting that AOL (our parent company, by the way) has announced AIM developer tool support for Mac OS X and Linux, opening the doors for more interoperability to come from an even larger playing field. AOL launched this 'web 2.0-esque' Open AIM program last March, allowing 3rd party developers to create add-ons and tie-ins to the AIM network, with a healthy dose of around 45,000 developers already hopping on board.It'll be interesting to see how much comes out of this for the Mac OS X platform, as I'm willing to bet most Mac users who chat on AIM use iChat, and I'm not sure how open that app is from Apple's standpoint. This is pure speculation, but I'm wondering if we could see some kind of a plugin push from Apple with iChat in Leopard. Especially since, as Macworld points out, the whole VoIP thing has everyone with an audio chat app firing on all cylinders, vying for market share.
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Macworld is reporting that AOL (our parent company, by the way) has announced AIM developer tool support for Mac OS X and Linux, opening...
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I wonder if this will help improve Adium...
June 14 2006 at 3:21 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyActually Adium is far superior to both ichat and aol;s aim
June 14 2006 at 12:41 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply45,000 developers!??! That sounds like an AWEFULLY high number... are you sure that's right?
June 14 2006 at 7:13 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply"...AOL (our parent company, by the way) ..."
Please let Jason Calcannis know he sounded like a total ass on This Week In Tech the other day.
Taking a piece out of Andrew Baron (aka the other half of Rocketboom) for having the hide to be young and enthusiastic, independent and ambitious, made Jason sound like a "here's how it is, sonny boy" jerk.
Considering the way Jason has exploited the informal news nature of the blogosphere for his own personal profit, he should not be dissing young entrepreneurs having a go at making it in a less sell-out way.
But back on topic, good to see AOL playing fair with their technology.
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