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Google Abandons Their Google Hangouts API (techcrunch.com) 150

"Once again we're seeing the hazards of developing using a third party service API," writes Slashdot reader BarbaraHudson, reporting that Google "will be discontinuing support for the Google Hangouts API going forward... Google Hangouts is now so insignificant that the cancellation didn't even rate an official blog post. As reported by TechCrunch, "just an updated FAQ and email notification to developers active on the API, forwarded to us by one of these devs." TechCrunch writes: As Google pushes Duo as its consumer video chat app and relegates Hangouts to the enterprise, it's dropping the flexibility to build these kinds of experiences. The email explains... "We understand this will impact developers who have invested in our platform. We have carefully considered this change and believe that it allows us to give our users a more targeted Hangouts desktop video experience going forward."
TechCrunch calls the move "a casualty of Google's fragmented messaging app strategy and the neglect of Hangouts itself." While some apps will continue working -- for example, integration with Slack -- their API's FAQ now ends with a reminder that "Users of apps will see a notice in the call letting them know that the app they're using will no longer work after April 25th."
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Google Abandons Their Google Hangouts API

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  • Good Riddance (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Khyber ( 864651 ) <techkitsune@gmail.com> on Sunday January 08, 2017 @11:46PM (#53631463) Homepage Journal

    Hangouts should've been renamed to Hangups. Connection issues were so rampant, and was one of the primary reasons Google Helpouts failed so badly.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Maybe it should be called Giveup instead.

      That's what Google do to every other service except search.

    • I've used Hangouts every day for the past few years and never had a problem that wasn't IT related. Hangouts is fantastic if you use Google for email, photos, etc.. because all their products integrate with all their other products. It's really quite impressive from a software engineering standpoint.
    • Why? Does anyone actually bother with voice/video anymore? It's nice to know those features are there but basically hangouts was just the annoying replacement for google chat and it is a handy IM app that neither requires me to find someone on Facebook nor requires me to use my phone when I'm sitting at a real keyboard. Also it supports group messaging... my work peers and eye have kept a "hangout" open for a few years now for comments when we aren't officially available at work and things we'd rather not s
    • by Shatrat ( 855151 )

      Google uses Hangouts for their own internal communication, to the point of avoiding using actual phone calls or email which makes them a pain in the ass to deal with if you're not a googler. Maybe they're deprecating the API but not the product itself?

    • Re:Good Riddance (Score:4, Interesting)

      by drizuid ( 444751 ) <{moc.liamg} {ta} {diuzird}> on Monday January 09, 2017 @02:10PM (#53635689) Journal

      Hangouts should've been renamed to Hangups. Connection issues were so rampant, and was one of the primary reasons Google Helpouts failed so badly.

      I disagree. I used hangouts to call my wife and kids frequently from Afghanistan over a 2Mbps satellite connection and never experienced a hangup. in fact, the voice and video quality was FAR superior to any other voice/video offering on the market. It worked for me in 2007-8 and 2011-12 without a hitch. I have also leveraged it for years in my asterisk pbx without issues on hours long conference calls. that being said, hangouts itself is not being retired (thankfully), the API is.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday January 08, 2017 @11:48PM (#53631471)

    These are the hazards of relying on Google for anything. They throw stuff away constantly.

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Monday January 09, 2017 @04:09AM (#53632009)

      No for the most part they throw away unpopular things off little interest. Chances are if you're using this API you can manage the complaints you get from both of your customers.

      • And then there's google site search which only about 25% of the inter-web uses. That get decommissioned later this year but at least they gave us advanced warning and also they are replacing it. It's just that it's scheduled to be removed before the replacement comes online.
      • The negative attitude directed at tossing out something approximately nobody used is predictable, since it's super-bitch Barbara Hudson. Her Facebook is basically "EVERYONE IS ASSHOLES LOOK HOW FUCKING ASSHOLES EVERYONE IS" and "I FOUND PUPPIES I'M SO GOOD SOME ASSHOLES DIDN'T RESCUE THESE PUPPIES BEFORE ME SO I HAVE TO RESCUE THEM BECAUSE OTHER PEOPLE ARE ASSHOLES AND I'M AN ANGEL!!!!!!!111" Her M.O. is essentially "you're wrong and an asshole," no matter who you are.

        Not many people can claim to be th

      • Google sometimes lacks perspective on what constitutes "unpopular", there is a pretty wide margin between genuinely unpopular and unpopular relative to Google's most widely used applications. Some google solutions are applicable to a wide audience and some hit a niche but are still quite popular like google voice. Those smaller single niche purpose tools might not be nearly as popular but having them available those times you need them is a big part of Google's value.

        I think Google is missing the point here
        • Google sometimes lacks perspective on what constitutes "unpopular"

          Perspective is something for people who are making assumptions. Google doesn't need perspective, they have analytics.

          there is a pretty wide margin between genuinely unpopular

          The No True Scotsman fallacy is worse when you're actually Scottish as you have even more of a preconceived bias. Take a survey of Slashdot and you're likely to get widely different results compared to taking a survey somewhere else. Analytics is what breaks through those biases. e.g. Based on what goes on here Facebook is incredibly unpopular, no one uses it and it has zero influence on the

          • "Perspective is something for people who are making assumptions. Google doesn't need perspective, they have analytics."

            Analytics have to be interpreted... through a lens of perspective. I was looking at a cpu usage graph today... someone pointed out a huge spike and asked for an explanation... the graph scaled automatically so the massive spike was only a 5% usage increase on a system that was mostly idle and created the illusion of a massive spike because a measly 5% was massive relative to the variance ov
            • Analytics have to be interpreted... through a lens of perspective.

              If only we knew of a company that was good at dealing with large amounts of data and searching through it, an expert who specialises in bringing together large data sets and extracting meaningful data from them.

              I'm going to quote myself for prosperity:

              I'll side with what Google views as "genuinely" popular / unpopular.

    • by msauve ( 701917 )
      Google: "Oh, look - shiny!"
  • by Anrego ( 830717 ) * on Sunday January 08, 2017 @11:55PM (#53631499)

    These days it's hard to write anything non-trivial without relying on something that will be hard to replace if it goes away, that's just a reality of modern software design. You can minimize the risk with abstraction and try to rely on open standards with multiple implementations, but at some point you have to just accept the occasional puzzle piece change as part of the business and move on.

    That said, google pulls this shit all the time. Using a google API or service for anything critical would imo be a huge risk given their long history of suddenly killing things.

    • by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Monday January 09, 2017 @12:12AM (#53631557)

      While I don't expect Google to realistically support every failed project forever, every product or service they kill reinforces the notion that "the cloud" simply means "services you rent which can be arbitrarily shut down at any time by the company who actually owns them."

      There's nothing wrong with cloud-based services, as long as you go in with your eyes wide open to both the upsides AND the downsides. And be extra wary if you're not paying for a service and don't see an obvious revenue model.

      • by Anrego ( 830717 ) *

        There's nothing wrong with cloud-based services, as long as you go in with your eyes wide open to both the upsides AND the downsides.

        Agree entirely. It's a risk and business management decision as much as a technical one. Relying on 3rd party services is obviously (or hopefully obviously) a risk, but risk is a basic component of most business.

        • The important question to ask is how much will it harm the third party if you go out of business. For pretty much anyone using Google services, the answer is 'not at all'.
      • by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 09, 2017 @01:03AM (#53631715)

        The cloud is the deathknell of everything a personal computer used to stand for. We used to have our own files and programs, we were the masters. Now we're merely the tenants, paying rent every so often, our devices and apps beleaguered by ads and other bullshit.

        RMS had it correct, but idk if he predicted our trojan horses wouldn't exactly come from the Microsofts of the world initially... but from hardware makers concocting a new type of computer (smartphone) which in turn inflicted the rest of the market with this shit mentality.

        • by dnaumov ( 453672 ) on Monday January 09, 2017 @08:56AM (#53632925)

          Turns out most people out there DO NOT WANT a "personal computer" in the way you and I understand it. They consider it too much trouble and effort.

        • Marketing: "Computers" are scary, let's call this computer a "telephone" (a device that only handles voice) and deceive folks into trusting our treacherous spy machines and paying us handsomely each month for the privilege.

          Moron Consumers: "Ooh, shiny!"

      • And be extra wary if you're not paying for a service and don't see an obvious revenue model.

        I don't see many people developing, deploying and maintaining a video chat service for less than the occasional hassle of changing providers who use a sane API. Integration should be incredibly simple and inexpensive. You could have many dozen Google Hangout type services shutter and still save time and money over developing it and hosting it in-house.

      • by drolli ( 522659 )

        Or if you are actually the customer. (lik google docs, office 356 etc.)

      • ...and in fairness to them, they launched the API in 2011 (https://techcrunch.com/2011/09/20/google-launches-hangouts-api-for-developers/) - so they've given it about 6 years. There aren't many assets you can rely on for 6 years without having to do some sort of rewrite/patchup or whatever.

        I think the real issue here is for people who've only just decided to integrate with it. They've just spent however much time/money engineering it in, and now they've only got until April (a proper bummer if you just impl

    • by Anonymous Coward

      That's not really true for software and services companies pay serious money for, such as Oracle (for database), Microsoft (for Office) or Atlassian (for web collaboration software).

      One of the problems with open source and Web 2.0 is that providers take the attitude, hey, you got it for free. You should thank us for the use you were able to get out of it. And anyway, check out our new stuff... you might like it even better.

      And that's why the aforesaid vendors of proprietary software continue to do well.

      • by Anrego ( 830717 ) * on Monday January 09, 2017 @12:58AM (#53631699)

        I've been involved in refactoring lots of software to replace dependencies on dead or obsolete tools and libraries, some of which were very expensive. Open source projects stagnate and die, but businesses go bankrupt, shift directions and discontinue products if they become unprofitable.

        Determining the stability of a product and the impact to your business if it goes away is (or should be) part of the business decision process.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          I've been involved in refactoring lots of software to replace dependencies on dead or obsolete tools and libraries, some of which were very expensive. Open source projects stagnate and die, but businesses go bankrupt, shift directions and discontinue products if they become unprofitable.

          Determining the stability of a product and the impact to your business if it goes away is (or should be) part of the business decision process.

          Completely agreed.

          However there is a difference between using a open source project and using a third party API.

          If the open source project is abandoned, you have the option of sponsoring it or picking it up and continuing it for yourself if you feel it's that useful. But even if not, the worst case scenario generally still leaves you with working code, so you can manage the transition to a new product at whatever pace you need to.

          If you're relying on an API that gets abandoned, you are generally given a fix

      • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

        If you're willing to pay big money for something, then you should be able to afford to continue maintaining an open source stack even if the original author has lost interest...
        Just because something is expensive doesn't mean the vendor will keep maintaining it.. Many big vendors have dropped products over the years, or moved their customers to new versions with various disadvantages etc. If the code runs on your own hardware then you can keep running old versions, but it will become increasingly problemati

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      These days it's hard to write anything non-trivial without relying on something that will be hard to replace if it goes away, that's just a reality of modern software design.

      Umm, no, it isn't.

      Learn how to write a web page without using api from other sources. Don't use javascipt links.

      WRITE YOUR OWN CODE!

      It's pure lazy to use 3rd party links. If you can't code without the crutches, then at least admit you're handicapped.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Assuming in the realm of "non-trivial", and presuming e-commerce you're probably going to be using some kind of payment processor and possibly payment service provider, not to mention some kind of database.

        • by Anne Thwacks ( 531696 ) on Monday January 09, 2017 @04:55AM (#53632151)
          You design your code so you can switch between payment providers at a moment's notice (to avoid risk of rates becoming uncompetitive, or other unreasonable conditions).

          And you use an OSS database to avoid Oracle^H^H^H^H^H being shafted/crushed/hung-drawn-and-quartered. If they get borked, at least they can always be forked - and others will be in the same boat.

        • by NotAPK ( 4529127 )

          Databases are piss-easy these days. Any competent programmer can code up a custom web site with DB support, forms, basic customer-service tools, as well as helpful information for the visitors, in about 5 days (max). That's with no 3rd party libraries.

      • by Anrego ( 830717 ) *

        write a web page

        I said non-trivial. Most web pages are pretty trivial.

    • by hughbar ( 579555 )
      I agree, but (as someone who is pretty radical) one can (should?) make it a design objective to minimise this kind of danger. That's a good reason for choosing open source projects that have good community, high and recent levels of activity for example, even if not technically the best thing. Standing on the shoulders of healthy giants and/or helping them become healthy.

      The rest is more difficult, that is persuading non-technical or less-technical folks that open API is not open source. Especially when
    • Most of the stuff Google kill are at the point of obscurity anyway. If you were building you business on such an API you've failed already even if it doesn't get killed.

    • by Junta ( 36770 )

      Well, it really depends on *what* you are doing.

      The reality is that pulling in dependencies has gotten perhaps *too* easy to the point of depending on external service or software in such a way that the rug could be yanked out from under you in a way that could have been easily avoided.

      It's not really *that* new, but people are quick to look for depedencies that really aren't needed. They hear some protocol or some RFC and immediately jump to searching for a library, when if they read the protocol or RFC t

  • I used to love hangouts. We used 'em at work (instead of whatever MS was pushing or webex or whatever that other 3rd party remote chat program was).

    Work eventually got zoom, which works pretty well, and we finally bailed on hangouts. But it always seemed like a solid cross platform solution to me...

    • Agreed. Been using it nearly everyday since 2011 on my work computer, home computer, tablet, home laptop, and phone. I usually have no issues with it.
  • Google shithole (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 09, 2017 @12:01AM (#53631523)

    As a former Google employee, I can only laugh at this.

    Throw one more on the pile. There's literally thousands more where it came from.

    That company is absolutely infested with self-important assholes who all think they're the next big SV hot shit. Nobody wants to maintain anything and no documentation is kept up, because the brilliant geniuses hired out of college to make it all moved up or out three months later after shitting their half-assed garbage out in a flurry of sick buzzwords so impressive that nobody wanted to admit they didn't know what the fuck was being said.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 09, 2017 @01:13AM (#53631743)

      So true. We've tried to work with google on 2 separate projects. Each time every engineer that has had to work with them has said how full of themselves every single one of them has been. There is no compromise, and god forbid you ever bring up an issue or something could be an issue in the future. Everything from them is the way something should be done, and you are doing it wrong and must conform. Even though they will be scrapping what you just tried to interface with because it was so horribly designed and unmaintainable by some 'rockstar' google coder that the project couldn't continue and will just be scrapped for another haphazard api later

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      After working with many of their APIs, I have to agree. I call them an 80% company. The people there get excited about doing something, do the 80% easy part, then bail out on handling the edge cases and making it robust and actually a functioning product. So on the surface, what you are looking sounds like just what you want, and even getting the happy path might be fine, but it isn't too far down the road before you find functions missing definitions, or even giant use cases completely neglected.

      • What, do the treat their work projects like personal projects?
      • by Junta ( 36770 )

        Well, it's not just google. That attitude is infecting a lot of the industry. Business leaders have figured out that short term prospects can be very good based on the '80%', and by the time the jig is up, they've moved on to another fly by night project exploiting that short term benefit.

        This is not the first time, the dot com bubble was also built largely on this sort of behavior. Companies that prioritize ability to provide long term support take a backseat to the new blood that has nothing to lose an

  • Google lets engineers devote 20% of time to side projects.... but makes sure it allocates no more than 10% of time to its own.

  • Once again (Score:5, Insightful)

    by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Monday January 09, 2017 @12:12AM (#53631561) Journal

    Once again Google fucks people over, people who've spent a lot of time and energy building shit to work with their system.

    The motto of this story is, "Work with Google and you'll get abandoned whenever they feel like it."

    • Considering how "insignificant" Hangouts has become, it appears that most developers already abandoned the service.

      • Considering how "insignificant" Hangouts has become, it appears that most developers already abandoned the service.

        If you think this is just about Hangouts, you haven't been paying attention.

    • Re:Once again (Score:5, Insightful)

      by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Monday January 09, 2017 @04:11AM (#53632019)

      Or maybe Google is closing something that is used so little that most developers who have put time and effort into it have written it off as a failure long ago.

      • Or maybe Google is closing something that is used so little that most developers who have put time and effort into it have written it off as a failure long ago.

        Or maybe you're missing the point, which is that Google will drop you like a used condom as soon as they decide your unpaid work on their latest shiny bag of hipster hype isn't making them enough money.

        • your unpaid work

          Who's unpaid work? Surely not the developers who are creating platforms using the APIs. Which ultimately die due to lack of users. But hey let's keep it open. I'm sure the developers will be just as happy with an abandoned API in a wasteland of no users as they would with a closed one, but let's all jump on the crap on Google bandwagon because we can right?!

          • Who's unpaid work? Surely not the developers who are creating platforms using the APIs.

            No, I'm referring to all the people who don't work for the Almighty Google, who code stuff up using Google's APIs, trying to build something interesting. Which is why they released the fucking API in the first place- so people could build stuff that uses it and (hopefully) make it popular.

            • So as i was implying:

              a) this isn't unpaid work.
              b) closing the API is completely irrelevant when there are no users using it. The "unpaid developers" don't care at this point.

              • So as i was implying:

                a) this isn't unpaid work.
                b) closing the API is completely irrelevant when there are no users using it. The "unpaid developers" don't care at this point.

                a) No, it's unpaid work. I'm sorry if you're having difficulty understanding that idea. Google doesn't pay them, no one pays them, it's unpaid work.

                b) There are people using it, just not in the numbers that Google would like to see. Or are you claiming that there is literally not a single person, not one, using Google Hangouts?

                c) Furthermore, my original comment was about Google's services in general, not just Hangouts.

                • a) No, it's unpaid work. I'm sorry if you're having difficulty understanding that idea. Google doesn't pay them, no one pays them, it's unpaid work.

                  a) Because google doesn't pay them doesn't mean it's unpaid. Do you expect Microsoft to cut you a check everytime you write a Win32 App?

                  b) There are few people using it. The entire service is a wasteland, a failed product. Thanks for claiming everything needs to be absolute. I guess the one person still running a PDP-11 in a museum should be grounds for DEC to keep supporting it for ever right?

                  c) Your original comment applies to most of the bitching that goes on about Google closing services. There's only a

                  • Because google doesn't pay them doesn't mean it's unpaid.

                    No, what makes it "unpaid" is that nobody pays them. That's kind of the definition.

                    -

                    Do you expect Microsoft to cut you a check everytime you write a Win32 App?

                    No, and if no one paid me to write that app, that would mean the work I did was "unpaid".

                    -

                    There are few people using it. The entire service is a wasteland, a failed product. Thanks for claiming everything needs to be absolute.

                    Oh please, I never claimed any such thing- you were the one that said, and I quote, "...when there are no users using it". But it's nice to see that you admit there were people who were using it (even though you have no idea how many).

  • Roll 20 (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Grimpen ( 1320577 ) on Monday January 09, 2017 @12:20AM (#53631599)
    How will this effect Roll20? That's what I used Hangouts for mostly, much better than the Roll20 native chat. Hangouts was always a decent cross platform video chat.
    • I had to use Hangouts one year for a group chat with people on a team in different countries. Hangouts was so terrible by the end we had all switched to audio only... so we were really doing a conference call. Where the audio quality sucked. It was free though, I'll give it props for that.

  • by bistromath007 ( 1253428 ) on Monday January 09, 2017 @01:07AM (#53631727)
    Google's development strategy:

    10 Get everybody using a new thing
    20 Get it working well enough that they're finally used to it
    30 GOTO 10

    Just fix the shit you already made. You do not need two or three parallel solutions for every service you want to attempt to provide.
    • by slyborg ( 524607 ) on Monday January 09, 2017 @02:51AM (#53631873)

      Why is this still complex for people after 15+ years? Google's business is selling ads to an audience made captive by "free" email and search (I include Maps here) paid for by the privacy of that audience. The rest of what they do is wanking because they have more money than they know what to do with, the incremental info they get from most of these projects is nil. Google "strategy" these days is to make an inferior copy of other people's ideas, try to leverage their captive audience by strong-arming them and then failing anyway. People have been ripping on Apple lately, but Google is in exactly the same "no-innovation" spiral. They are ripe for disruption, it is only a matter of time.

      • Wish I had some mod points right now. Your comment deserves a wide audience.

      • by swb ( 14022 )

        It's so funny how companies like Google or Microsoft or even Apple never seem to get really good at anything beyond what they're good at.

        Apple managed to reinvent itself from computer company to mostly a smartphone maker, Google managed to do search/advertising and Android, and Microsoft managed Windows/Office/SQL but at the end of the day they just can't overcome the internal inertia of these products and become more than that.

        Microsoft at least has the path to Azure, but it's really the same products sold

    • Most of these programs segfault at 10.

  • Duo [wikipedia.org] is just a video chat, isn't it? How to do a text chat with as with XMPP (=Hangouts)? Google has Allo [wikipedia.org] for a text chat (based on QUIC [wikipedia.org] protocol) but is there a documentation for the Allo protocol itself? Or even a Free client for it - such as for desktop Linux?
    • by Luthair ( 847766 )
      XMPP was GChat which they killed for Hangouts. I don't know anyone bothering with Duo or Allo, I presume the only reason they made them was because the cool kids at WhatsApp used a phone number based system instead of email and were successful.
      • by short ( 66530 )
        Hangouts is still XMPP. I use it daily against Pidgin XMPP. Allo and all other proprietary IMs use UDP-based communication. XMPP uses TCP. I have been using XMPP-TCP for years fine but then I used it once abroad on a 3G/LTE network with all its temporary drops and Hangouts/XMPP became unusable, it even got stuck for whole night. Maybe Google has some bug in Hangouts as even TCP with keepalives should timeout in at most several minutes - although that would still be unusable in practice - this is why UDP
  • by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Monday January 09, 2017 @04:55AM (#53632149) Journal
    "Going forward"? What's wrong with "from now on", or "soon", or simply leaving that little bit off completely since it conveys zero information? I know business people like the term "going forward" because it sounds both positive and purposeful, but it's such an ugly turn of phrase when tacked on to the end of a statement like that.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      It's a more sophisticated "er" or "um". That said, it should be destroyed. [theguardian.com]
    • by RyoShin ( 610051 )

      "Going/moving forward" is not the same as "soon", it means "starting immediately* and continuing until informed otherwise".

      I normally try to avoid jargon that spawns from Management, but I find "going forward" to be softer/indirect language than "from now on" which I take to be more authoritative/direct. If I managed people I would use "from now on" in conversations with them when I want to firmly set/change something, but when communicating with other people (particularly external contacts) and I want the

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The rise of the PC had a lot to do with gaining independence from mainframe operators. That's why it's called Personal Computer. At the end of the PC age, what do we get (again)? Companies keeping programs on their systems, for us to use only at their whim. Companies deciding which apps can be distributed through their app stores, based on their sole discretion. But it's all soooo convenient, isn't it?

  • Because everyone knows that any Google side project is subject to being suddenly abandoned with minimal notice.

  • by wardrich86 ( 4092007 ) on Monday January 09, 2017 @09:23AM (#53633085)
    Why the hell are they pushing a feature-limited One-on-one app over Hangouts? Why couldn't they have just implemented the features of Duo into Hangouts to allow for higher-quality video chats during one-on-one calls?
    • What feature of Duo are you missing in Hangouts? Hangouts seems superior in every way.

      • I've never actually used Duo, but I've heard the video quality is apparently better. But it may also be the fact that there is less packets being spammed around considering conversation is only between two participants, and there is less going on with Duo.
        • I wouldn't be surprised if Duo and Hangouts used the exact same encoder and had the same quality.

          • So why the fuck did they decide to fragment it?! Fuck off, Google! They replace 1 solid app with a good userbase for 2 "okay" applications that do the same (but less) as the current popular app and 0 userbase.
    • How about: wtf, a mobile only application? I really like the idea of typing text messages in my browser of choice. Anyhow, it looks like Hangouts will still be there, it is just the APIs that third parties use that will be gone.
  • It'd be one thing if Hangouts had been replaced by something that had feature parity, but Duo is something else entirely and is not a replacement. For example, in my circles of family and friends, Hangouts is used almost exclusively and we split our use about 50/50 between desktop (browser) and mobile. We depend on seamless migration of chats synchronized between devices. Last I knew, Duo was tied to your phone # and so didn't allow multiple device access and had no desktop component. Has that changed?

    • This.
      This is what people don't understand with all these "messaging" solutions. Being able to reply from a PC is important. Why would I reply on a shitty smartphone when I sit in front of a PC with a real keyboard for hours every day?

  • Google's real good at churn and burn.

    But they absolutely SUCK at refining products unless they're an immediate hit.

    Look at GMail and all the work that's been lavished on that.

    Now look at something like Hangouts. It never really caught on, mostly because other community options were VASTLY more mature and dependable.
    So, did Google work on it, to grow it and make it a better product?
    Nope.
    They basically tossed it out like a puppy that'd peed the rug.

    • by TWX ( 665546 )
      I think this is why Cisco Systems has taken a different approach. They invest in startups that look like they have promise and in the terms of their investment they retain right of first refusal to buy said startup. The upside is that new technology is forced to thrive under someone else's name before Cisco swings in and scoops it up, so if the project doesn't succeed there's no existing Cisco customer base to get upset. The downside is that when Cisco obtains said company, integrating the tech in with t
  • The only things you can use from Google right now* are search, maps, ads.

    * subject to change without notice.

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