MacMusic  |  PcMusic  |  440 Software  |  440 Forums  |  440TV  |  Zicos
google
Search

Google’s confusing jumble of messaging apps is getting another shake-up

Wednesday June 1, 2022. 09:15 PM , from PC World
Google’s exhausting messaging saga continued Wednesday, with the company pledging — for now — to unify its Android messaging apps around Google Meet.

Google told 9to5Google that the company will update its Google Duo chat app on iOS and Android with “all of the Google Meet features,” including customized backgrounds, meeting scheduling, shareable content, closed captions and more. Later in the year, Google will simply rename Google Duo to Google Meet, and deprecate the older version, which will be renamed “Meet Original.”

“The great thing about bringing the teams together is that we’ve brought some of the best of both products to each other, strengthened the foundation and … it’s now fairly straightforward because of the work we’ve done over the last few years to take that final step and actually bring them fully together,” Dave Citron, Google’s director of product management, explained to TechCrunch.

If this sounds confusing, well, you’re not alone. For a company founded on simplifying search across the Web, email, and more, simply recounting Google’s history in messaging apps requires some digging. Even today, Google still has a page for Google Hangouts, which is being replaced by Google Chat, whose functionality is duplicated in Google Meet, which is being integrated into Gmail. And lets not even talk about the swift death of Allo, Duo’s one-time companion. Google seems to be promising that the bad old days are over, and we can all go back to a simplified one-app-that-does-it-all approach.

Of course, if you believe that, you haven’t been following Google. History tells us that at some point, Google will likely decide that we need yet another chat app, with yet another interface, with functionality that goes beyond what Meet delivers. The two will coincide for some time, pulling users back and forth. Then one will win out, and there will be a lengthy period of integration while one is absorbed into another. Some features (ones you’ll care about, most likely) will be killed off, while others won’t. And once you’ve finally figured out a way to make it all work, some ambitious Google engineer will begin the process all over again.

If you’d like, you can read TechCrunch’s account for more explanations of why all this occurred. While you do, maybe the rest of us should all buy iPhones and start FaceTiming.
Android, Messaging Apps
https://www.pcworld.com/article/707997/google-pledges-to-make-messaging-simple-yet-again.html
News copyright owned by their original publishers | Copyright © 2004 - 2024 Zicos / 440Network
Current Date
Apr, Thu 25 - 14:11 CEST