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AOL Preps Live Video Instant Messager
InternetNews.com ^ | December 12, 2003 | Christopher Saunders

Posted on 12/12/2003 8:14:12 AM PST by HAL9000

AOL Preps Live Video IM

America Online is poised to unveil the next version of its client software, and which includes an enhancement to its built-in instant messaging that offers streaming videoconferencing.

The Dulles, Va.-based Internet giant, a unit of New York media conglomerate Time Warner, plans to launch the next version of its flagship client software, codenamed Tahiti, early into 2004. With that release, the AOL software should include capabilities enabling AOL subscribers to initiate streaming video sessions from within an IM conversation.

"We're currently testing it within the beta of the AOL service," said AOL spokesman Derick Mains. "We expect to have it as a live service at some point early next year."

The service, dubbed Live Video IM, is only available to users of Windows XP with the Microsoft RTC 1.2 Libraries. When subscribers click on a video icon during a chat, a small video window appears alongside the text IM conversation. Users can view the output of their camera in one tab, view their Buddy in another, and view them both simultaneously using a picture-in-picture feature. Video is delivered relatively crisply, although it naturally becomes choppy when viewed by dialup users.

Users of the free, AOL Instant Messenger (AIM) IM client should receive the service at about the same time as do their peers on the flagship AOL service, Mains said. A beta version of AIM including Live Video IM is expected to be released before the end of the year, and will be released officially "early next year," he said.

Until August, America Online had not been allowed to offer such a feature, having been prohibited by the Federal Communications Commission from developing advanced, broadband-based IM services -- including videoconferencing. That month, however, the FCC lifted its two-year-old restriction on AOL's development of advanced high-speed IM services, clearing the way for the company to launch services like Live Video IM across its broadband network.

Accordingly, Live Video IM is similar to those offered by rivals like Yahoo! and Microsoft, which have grown in scale and prominence while AOL had been lobbying for a removal of the FCC restriction.

In May, Microsoft inked a deal with Webcam manufacturer Logitech to provide a co-branded interface add-on to MSN Messenger and more subtly integratedvideo in MSN Messenger 6. A year earlier, Sunnyvale, Calif.-based Yahoo! launched its "Super Webcam" feature, a broadband-capable, higher-quality implementation of the real-time streaming video IM found in the company's Yahoo! Instant Messenger since mid-2001.

For AOL, the launch of Live Video IM not only aims to make its public IM network comparable with those of competitors, it also serves as the culmination of earlier efforts by the company to link multimedia and its extremely popular IM network.

While AOL had been petitioning for lifting of the FCC restriction, it began development of a less-flashy, non-streamed video IM feature that offers "push-to-talk"-like functionality -- users record clips of themselves via a Web cam, and then send that clip to the Buddy with whom they're chatting. Meanwhile, recipients have to click to open each individual clip they receive. That feature, now available in AOL 9.0 Optimized, has not made its way into AIM.

AOL has also pursued multimedia initiatives with partners, such as Apple Computer, in the form of Apple iChat AV. iChat AV enables Mac owners to communicate using AIM-based IM, while also affording them the opportunity to launch Session Initiation Protocol-based audio- and videoconferencing.

Mains declined to comment on whether AOL Live Video IM would eventually interoperate with the videoconferencing service currently offered to Apple iChat AV users. At present, the system is incompatible with Live Video IM.



TOPICS: News/Current Events; Technical
KEYWORDS: aim; aol; im; videochat

1 posted on 12/12/2003 8:14:12 AM PST by HAL9000
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To: HAL9000
Yes, I misspelled Messenger.
2 posted on 12/12/2003 8:15:45 AM PST by HAL9000
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To: HAL9000
Yeah, for a second there I thought it said "AOL Preps Live Video Instant Massager"...was wondering how much that service was going to cost...
3 posted on 12/12/2003 8:18:12 AM PST by danneskjold
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To: HAL9000
Phone sex leaps into the 21st Century!
4 posted on 12/12/2003 8:20:47 AM PST by waverna (I shall do neither. I have killed my captain...and my friend.)
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To: HAL9000
And internet porn just gets even easier... :)
5 posted on 12/12/2003 8:22:21 AM PST by July 4th (George W. Bush, Avenger of the Bones)
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To: danneskjold
This could cause a series problem for bandwidth at my house. May need to either get rid of the kids or install a T-1 line if it turns into a bandwidth hog.
6 posted on 12/12/2003 8:22:32 AM PST by leadpencil1 (Kill your television)
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To: HAL9000
The massage is the message.
7 posted on 12/12/2003 8:22:48 AM PST by js1138
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To: HAL9000
Its called Apple iChat. Apple users with an AIM ID have been able to do video chat for months. Windows plays catchup again...
8 posted on 12/12/2003 8:35:10 AM PST by Astronaut
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To: HAL9000
So I guess this means I'll have to put on a robe when I check my email in the morning...

;-)

9 posted on 12/12/2003 8:38:26 AM PST by white trash redneck
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To: diotima
It looks like PalTalk will have to drop their subcription rate as free competitors eat into their user market.
10 posted on 12/12/2003 10:34:01 AM PST by anymouse
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To: Astronaut
yeah, since AOL develops all of Windows features...
11 posted on 12/12/2003 10:39:07 AM PST by danneskjold
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To: Astronaut
Its called Apple iChat. Apple users with an AIM ID have been able to do video chat for months. Windows plays catchup again...

Talk about clueless Apple users. MS Messenger has had these features for a couple years, since the release of Windows XP.
12 posted on 12/12/2003 1:39:06 PM PST by Bush2000 (r>)
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