Linux Today: Linux News On Internet Time.
Search Linux Today
Linux News Sections:  Blog -  Developer -  High Performance -  Infrastructure -  IT Management -  Security -  Storage -
Linux Today Navigation
LT Home
Preferences
Contribute
Link to Us
Search
Linux Jobs

Linux Today
Enterprise Linux Today
Apache Today
JustLinux.com
Linux Planet
PHPBuilder
All Linux Devices
Technology Jobs

JustTechJobs.com

LinuxToday Newsletters
Server Daily
IT Management Daily
Subscribe News
Subscribe PR
Subscribe Security

internet.com
Internet News
Small Business

Advertise
Newsletters
Tech Jobs
E-mail Offers

 






Current Newswire:

Webopedia Term of the Day: What is Macbuntu

Virtualization With Xen On CentOS 6.2 (x86_64)

4 Best Free Linux Script Writing Tools

Linux File System Fsck Testing -- The Results Are In

Firefox 11 Gets SPDY

Piracy and the value of freedom

TLWIR 32: Open Sparks Fly, FOSS Players Give Open Advice, and FOSS Petition Gets Key Endorsement

Beware the power of Google?

Google Summer of Code 2012 Kicks Off

How to get started using awk



Applications Management Engineer Sr (NYC)
Next Step Systems
US-NY-New York

Justtechjobs.com Post A Job | Post A Resume
:ISP-Planet: Jabber: The Linux of Instant Messaging?
ISP-Planet: Jabber: The Linux of Instant Messaging?
Jun 23, 2000, 19 :25 UTC (0 Talkback[s]) (4681 reads)

(Other stories by Patricia Fusco)

By Patricia Fusco, ISP-Planet

An open-source alternative enters the IM fray, trumpeting a challenge to AIM's dominance of the market.

What's been dubbed the "Instant Messaging War" has centered on skirmishes between outside firms gaining unauthorized access to America Online, Inc.'s instant messaging systems.

Many regard America Online's claim of security interests as a ruse to protect its commercial profits from the service. As an alternative, there are groups that do more than give lip service to developing an open instant messaging standard.

Open book
Jabber.org is an open-source platform for instant messaging applications backed by the open-source project and by commercial developer Jabber.com.

Open-source means that the difference between Jabber and other instant messaging systems is that hundreds of developers worldwide work on Jabber's project development. The open system permits nearly anyone to operate their own instant messaging systems which can talk to all other Jabber systems.

Jabber works much like e-mail and it uses XML technology at its core.

IETF leads the way
In March the Internet Engineering Task Force requested proposals from leading instant messaging firms to develop a standard that would quell the instant messaging protocol wars. Last week marked the deadline for submission of proposals. Each company's proposal focused on varying mechanisms by which instant messaging could be unified to foster full interoperability.

Because Jabber is an open-source project, it has no political interest in seeing one solution win over another. It operates backward through systems so it is capable of bridging both new and old protocols.

The commercial arm of the project could reap the reward of software distribution of the program, if it is used as the core of the IETF's recommendations due out in July.

While the world awaits an IETF-approved standard, Jabber provides companies with in open platform for instant messaging today.

Miller & Co.
Jabber was founded by Jeremie Miller in 1998, and while the instant messaging project is the work several hundred individuals, it's coordinated by a core group of about a dozen developers. Miller continues to lead the project, with assistance and support from Jabber.com and Webb Interactive Services, Inc.

Miller said support from developers and employees alike landed on the Jabber solution to instant messaging interoperability.

"We believe our developers provide Jabber.com access to the best expertise available for commercialization of instant messaging services that ensures an open source standard," Miller said.

He added that should the Jabber platform be adopted by the IETF, instant messaging would truly achieve its potential to become one of the most important and successful open source projects in the industry.

It's here; it's real
The Jabber open-source project released v1.0 of the Jabber Server in May. According to the working group, several thousand copies of the application were downloaded within weeks of its release. Technicians and system administrators fired up hundreds of Jabber-based instant messaging servers after installing and configuring the application through their networks.

Instant messaging is more than a way to ping a pal to see if they're online. It's recognized as one of the strategic gateways to consumer adoption of Voice over IP, as well as wireless communication services.

Fighting the big blue triangle
While several instant messaging firms complain that AOL is blocking access to its instant messaging services, FreeIM.org announced it was creating a coalition of instant messaging companies to petition government agencies for a shared access standard.

FreeIM.org filed petitions with the Federal Communication Commission and the Federal Trade Commission last week as a point of contention to AOL's proposed merger with Time Warner, Inc. .

Unlike most activities that take place on the Internet, instant messaging currently has no standard. Much like the e-mail industry in the 1980's, consistent standards are a precondition to widespread adoption.

Interoperability is important not only as a convenience for consumers, but also as a foundation for unified messaging to fit into the scheme of things in business-to-consumer and business-to-business communication.

The technology offers the industry an opportunity to redefine instant messaging services to transform IM into a far more strategic and fundamental component of the Internet infrastructure.

Jabber is capable of the pulling the politicking out of instant messaging issues today.

But will it be able to survive competition with AOL's profitable propriety system, tomorrow?

Related Stories:
PRNewswire: Collab.Net Teams with Jabber.com to Integrate Instant Messaging Into sourceXchange...(Jun 12, 2000)
sendmail.net: Instant Messaging: What You Should Know(Jun 02, 2000)
NetworkWorld: Instant messaging protocol hits speed bump(May 29, 2000)
Kuro5hin: Jabber and the Open Source Community(May 21, 2000)
LinuxPR: JabberCentral Launches News and Information Site Dedicated to Jabber (May 15, 2000)
Internet Product Watch: Jabber Server 1.0: Open Source Server Enables XML Based Instant Messaging(May 11, 2000)
Linux Journal: Talking Jabber(May 10, 2000)
PRNewswire: Webb Interactive Services Launches Jabber, Inc.-XML Based Instant Messaging(Mar 01, 2000)
Jabber.org: Year-End Status Report(Dec 30, 1999)
Internet News: Jabber: An Open Source IM System(Aug 27, 1999)



No talkbacks posted.
  Home | Search Talkbacks | Customize View    Top of Page  



Enter your comments below:

* Your Name:

* Your Email Address:

* Subject:

CC: [will also send this talkback to an E-Mail address]

* Comments:

Tags allowed:<I>,<B> and <U>. See our talkback-policy for more about talkback content.

Fields marked with * are required!

..............................




All times are recorded in UTC.
Linux is a trademark of Linus Torvalds.
Powered by Linux, Apache and PHP