The IM Client Formerly Known As GAIM
- 5
- Add a Comment
Inveterate IM-ers know about GAIM, the cross-platform, Open Source IM client. Many years ago, when the project was begun, GAIM was known as GTK+AOL, the GTK referring to the library used to produce the graphical user interface (GUI).
Relax, we’re mostly done with the letters.
AOL, of course, took exception to the use of its name in someone else’s application, especially an Open Source app. The developers changed the name to GAIM (G-AIM, get it?) while their lawyers talked to AOL. In the meantime, everyone agreed it was best to keep the negotiations quiet.
After several years of threats and arguments with the Big Guy, all kept under wraps, the issue was settled. The Little Guys could continue building a client that communicated with the AIM platform, but they had to change the name so that it didn’t reflect anything about AOL’s trademark. (To give you an idea of what an egregious trademark violation it was, I used GAIM for two years without catching on to the “AIM” part. Of course, I’m sorta dense.)
Anyway, the application formerly known as GAIM is now Pidgin, and you can have your very own copy by following the preceding link. I’d suggest you wait a couple of days, however, until v. 2.0 is released (finally, due to the AOL settlement).
There are versions of Pidgin for Windows, Linux, BSD, and other Unixes. (It — or, rather, GAIM — is the default IM client for Ubuntu and several other distros.) You can talk to your friends using AIM, ICQ, Google Talk, Jabber/XMPP, MSN Messenger, Yahoo!, Bonjour, Gadu-Gadu, IRC, Novell GroupWise Messenger, QQ, Lotus Sametime, SILC, SIMPLE, and Zephyr.
You can log in to multiple accounts on multiple IM networks simultaneously. This means that you can be chatting with friends on AIM, talking to a friend on Yahoo! Messenger, and sitting in an IRC channel all at the same time.
Pidgin supports features of the various networks, such as file transfer, away messages, and typing notification. It also goes beyond that and provides many unique features, such as Buddy Pounces, which give the ability to notify you, send a message, play a sound, or run a program when a specific buddy goes away, signs online, or returns from idle.
There are also plugins, consisting of text replacement, a buddy ticker, extended message notification, iconify on away, spell checking, tabbed conversations, and lots of other stuff. Pidgin is skinnable, and there’s a HUGE community of users who are constantly producing new goodies for the basic platform.
There’s no getting around it: Pidgin is sort of geeky. If, however, your life revolves around instant messaging, chat rooms and IRC like some folks (you know who you are) then it just might be the tool you’re looking for. I have it on my dual-boot machine, so that when I go back and forth from Windows to Ubuntu I have the same client. I rarely IM, but my entire family and many friends use either AOL (What can I say?) or Gmail, and I like to know when they’re on line. Even though I’ve finished testing Ubuntu and am getting ready to uninstall, I’ll keep Pidgin on the Windows side. It does a good job.
And no ads.
[tags]IM,GAIM,Pidgin,cross platform,aol[/tags]

5 Comments
Robert Glen Fogarty
April 24th, 2007
at 1:36pm
I think Pidgin is a cooler name, anyway!
Bill Webb
April 24th, 2007
at 3:00pm
And amusing, given that it’s a good deal more sophisticated than most of the competition.
Bob Franklin
April 25th, 2007
at 5:30pm
You stated you have finished testing Ubuntu and are getting ready to uninstall. May I suggest you keep Ubuntu and DUMP Windows. That’s what I did and lov’n every minute of Ubuntu.
Dri-Anna Davis
April 26th, 2007
at 12:24pm
IM….
Let’s see, it has been near 4 years since I have had any IM Chat application loaded on my computer. IM, as far as I am concerned indicates a person does not have enough to do. Might be a good deal for a shut in, I reckon, but is not my cup of tea.
Most likely I am in the minority on things such as IM, My Space, etc. For me thay are a waste of time and when I was participatin’, what I read and/or heard and/or observed was 99% Bull.
Course’, I am a Contrary when it comes to most things.
Bill Webb
April 26th, 2007
at 3:17pm
Different strokes for different folks, Anna. I find it useful, if only occasionally. All things are problematic when taken to excess, even religion.
Bob: I discussed that issue here: http://www.lockergnome.com/nexus/windows/2007/04/23/linux-and-mac-alternative