Group messaging is the next big thing

Download Squad suggests that group messaging is going to be the next big thing in mobile communications:

The next big thing in mobile communications seems to be group messaging, and that’s no real surprise. If we take a look at the currently entrenched communication platforms, not many of them do more than messaging one-to-one or one-to-a-few well. Sure you can have group chats using traditional IM protocols, but they are inherently transitory.

I have to agree with them somewhat.  I don’t know if that’s necessarily going to be the next big thing or if it will be big at all, but it is something that is needed. Today.  By many people.

Living in Cyprus, a rather small country with not many ties to technology, I am often much behind the needs of my friends from more populated areas.  There is usually a three to five year gap between the time when my American and English friends form a new communication need, and the time when I do so.  And more often than not, this gap is enough for a good solution to the problem exist before I even have the actual problem.

With group messaging it is different.  At least in the last part.  I need it now.  Yesterday even.  And there is nothing uniform, free, and convenient.  Email and Skype are the two tools I use for those purposes the most right now.  But neither of them, no together, they solve the problem.   They are good enough for when I am (as well as other group members) are online and at their computers.  But more and more often we really need a solution that bridges mobiles and desktops.

Features that I personally need are:

  • cross-platform client (Linux/Windows/Apple desktop, Android/iPhone/Blackberry mobiles, and also web)
  • server-side history with synchronization
  • offline messages (if the participant is offline, you should still be able to send the message and he should receive it when he comes online)
  • persistent groups (I don’t want to redefine same groups over and over by adding individual members to chat)
  • persistent chats (same chat can continue for days or weeks, while there can be more than one chat in progress with the same group, so archiving has to be smart)
  • UTF-8 and multilingual support
  • attachments and web friendliness (thumbnails for pictures and videos, highlighted URLs and email addresses, etc)
  • basic styling (mostly for quotes and code snippets)
  • ideally, integration with Google/Facebook/Twitter/Oauth or something else that would save me the trouble of yet another registration, pair of credentials, and all the hard work for contact/group building.

Day in brief

Boston Legal

I just finished watching all five seasons of “Boston Legal“.  As it often happens with me and good TV series, when I start watching I don’t stop until I’ve seen all of it.   Too bad there won’t be any further episodes.  However, now I am interested in “The Practice” which were TV series preceding “Boston Legal”.

While I got hooked from the first season, I’d have to say that the second and the third seasons are the best of all.  Fourth and fifth are pretty good too, but they vary from episode to episode.  Second and the third seasons don’t.

“Boston Legal” is about lawyers.  I do realize that law system in real life is probably very very different from what is shown here.  But the purpose of this TV series is entertainment, not precise documentation.  And as far as entertainment goes – “Boston Legal” does splendid.  There are many characters, picturing a variety of human quirks.   There is plenty of humor.  And what I consider even more important – there is plenty to think about.  The setup provides for a plethora of cases, which can be argued both ways, and in this TV series many many problems are explored from a number of different viewpoints.  Really, anything goes – abortion, capital punishment, corruption, politics, family values, religion, racism, disabilities, and more.

On top of that, there is something in here that is rarely seen in other TV series – examples to follow.  Not one, but several characters show what a decent human being is, what friendship, loyalty, and humanity are; how one should behave oneself in difficult situations, and how one could correct own mistakes.

With all of that, I can’t rate it anything less than 5 out of 5.  Highly recommended.