Can Google Talk connect with other messengers such as MSN, AIM, Yahoo, ICQ?
Google Talk doesn’t connect with other instant messaging networks, such as AOL Instant Messenger or Yahoo! Messenger; with Google Talk, you’re pretty much limited to IM’ing with other Google Talk users. Unless, that is, you know the trick. How the Hack Works Google Talk is built on the Jabber protocol, which allows for interoperability between compatible IM services. And if you hack Google Talk to connect to a Jabber server, you can then connect Google Talk to the AIM, ICQ, MSN Messenger, and Yahoo! Messenger networks. What you have to do is connect Google Talk to a Jabber server, and from there use a specialized transport to connect to your IM network of choice. Essentially, the connection goes from Google Talk, through the Jabber server, through a transport for the selected IM network, and then to that that IM network. When it works, it’s relatively seamless; you can talk to friends from virtually any IM network through the Google Talk client. Of course, to connect to another IM netw
Google Talk is the name of both Google’s instant messaging network and its IM client. As with competing IM systems, Google Talk lets you send and receive both text-based instant messages and voice-over-IP Internet phone calls. You can download the Google Talk client and learn more about the Google Talk network at talk.google.com. Unfortunately, Google Talk doesn’t connect with other instant messaging networks, such as AOL Instant Messenger or Yahoo! Messenger; with Google Talk, you’re pretty much limited to IM’ing with other Google Talk users. Unless, that is, you know the trick. Google Talk is built on the Jabber protocol, which allows for interoperability between compatible IM services. And if you hack Google Talk to connect to a Jabber server, you can then connect Google Talk to the AIM, ICQ, MSN Messenger, and Yahoo! Messenger networks. What you have to do is connect Google Talk to a Jabber server, and from there use a specialized transport to connect to your IM network of choice.
Google talk relies on servers to send communications back and forth. They are account-based and thus communications from other clients do not work. All is not lost, however. You can run a third-party program to solve this. Two good ones are Miranda and Gaim in that order. The links are: http://www.miranda-im.org/ http://gaim.sourceforge.net/downloads.php While I prefer Gaim, it can be frustrating. Miranda is more user friendly. You might ask why these programs don’t work together, so let me give you some info on that. A company creates their chat program in two parts, a server part and a client part. The part you’re running on your machine is the client. The server part of the program runs on the company’s server machines (the machines and the programs aren’t the same type of “server”…I know, confusing). There is a protocol that these programs use for communication, and the server and ports for connection tend to differ. There are a number of business issues that I could talk about,
Google Talk doesn’t connect with other instant messaging networks, such as AOL Instant Messenger or Yahoo! Messenger; with Google Talk, you’re pretty much limited to IM’ing with other Google Talk users. Unless, that is, you know the trick. How the Hack Works Google Talk is built on the Jabber protocol, which allows for interoperability between compatible IM services. And if you hack Google Talk to connect to a Jabber server, you can then connect Google Talk to the AIM, ICQ, MSN Messenger, and Yahoo! Messenger networks. What you have to do is connect Google Talk to a Jabber server, and from there use a specialized transport to connect to your IM network of choice. Essentially, the connection goes from Google Talk, through the Jabber server, through a transport for the selected IM network, and then to that that IM network. When it works, it’s relatively seamless; you can talk to friends from virtually any IM network through the Google Talk client. Of course, to connect to another IM netw