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Google Challenges Facebook, Twitter
Wired reports: Users of Google's Gmail will soon have more ways to keep up with their friends via a widget that shows quick status updates like Facebook and Twitter do, the Wall Street Journal reports.
The move would further turn Gmail, which revolutionized online email, into a comprehensive communications hub. The intent is to keep people’s attention centered on Google by making Gmail, not Facebook, people’s first stop online—and their default place to send and receive messages. Gmail users can already chat via Jabber or AIM, make video calls, and send SMS messages from Gmail’s Web interface.
The Journal reports: "Google has been trying to fashion Gmail into more than an email service for years. The service currently lets users set an “away message,” which can be a link to a webpage that their friends see when they instant-message them. Now, it plans to launch a new interface that will aggregate updates from more friends in a stream."
"The new stream will also eventually include content that a user’s connections share through its YouTube video site and Picasa photo service, according to one person familiar with the matter. But whether those features will also be announced in the coming days remains unclear."
The full extent of the new features remain unclear, but Google is inviting reporters to a launch event Tuesday on its Mountain View, California, campus promising “some innovations in two of our most popular products,” according to an email sent to reporters.
Yahoo has included similar features in its email service, letting users see what photos their contacts have uploaded to Flickr, for example.
Google could integrate updates from a user’s Twitter account, since most of that is public. And it could likely make it easy for Gmail users to post to Twitter as well, due to Twitter’s liberal API policy.
Facebook, however, will not likely let its rival republish status updates or allow users to publish to their Facebook pages through Gmail. Facebook, much like AOL and Compuserve back in the early ’90s, is a controlled and sanitized version of the larger Internet, but it relies on closed protocols.
Ryan Singel writes for Wired's Epicenter blog.
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