September 11, 2007 on 1:08 pm | In News | 77 Comments
One of the more interesting parts of working at a tech company is discussions that arise around future directions for a product.
At Hack Days, Yahoos from different areas of the company come together to display their ideas for product innovations. Sometimes they are completely new product ideas, other times they are extensions of an existing product.
At a recent Hack Day, a team of four Yahoos built and presented “Discovr”, a hack that would enable users to find new friends on Yahoo! Messenger by seeing who their IM contacts have on their list. A “friends of friends” concept. Discovr was created by Yahoos Ashwinder Ahluwalia, Vinay Kakade, Pras Sarkar and Ramana Yerneni.
They showed me a web-based prototype of this “friend-finder”. Here’s how it worked: After typing in my Yahoo! ID, I saw a list of other Yahoo! IDs that appear on my IM friends’ friends list. Sort of like peeking into my friend’s contact lists, except that I don’t know which friend belongs to whom; it’s just an aggregate look at the universe of my friends’ contacts. There was also relevancy rankings so I could get a feel for which of these new potential friends is the most connected in my IM community. If a Yahoo! ID appears on the contact lists of 12 of my friends, it ranks highly; if it only appears on a few, the score is lower.
This is not a new concept – just visit any social networking service like MySpace or Facebook to see it in action. However unlike those social networks, the relevancy is higher in Discovr because they are direct contacts of your hand-picked IM friends; you have some context and basis for a relationship with them.
The Discovr hack makes for interesting discussion because it breaks the paradigm of a closed, private network that Yahoo! Messenger users utilize. Rather than your IM world being limited to just the people on your list, you would now be able to expand out effortlessly to connect with friends of friends.
For some users, this would be a critical feature. Think of a brand new user that doesn’t have many friends at the start. With a feature like this, a new user could look at their friends’ friends, many of whom they would probably know, and then easily add those friends to fill out their own contact list. This would be valuable in the workplace too, significantly reducing the time to find extended team members for collaboration.
For other users, this could sound nightmarish and raise concerns about privacy. Discovr could put you at risk for unwanted conversations since you could potentially pop up on someone’s Discovr list and be asked to chat. We know Yahoo! Messenger users are fanatical about their stealth settings.
But with a system like this that is limited to just a few degrees of separation, your likelihood of knowing that new contact is much higher.
Clearly any social networking feature like this requires user controls, but it’s interesting to consider the possibilities this new direction could open up for Yahoo! Messenger users. Remember, this is just a concept from Hack Day and though team Discovr built a compelling prototype, it’s not something you’ll see in Yahoo! Messenger in the near future.
But if you did come across it, what would you think of it? Is it friend, or foe?
Sarah Bacon
Product Manager
September 6, 2007 on 10:46 am | In Mac version | 164 Comments
It’s heeeeeeeere!
We know our Mac users have been waiting patiently for a new version of Yahoo! Messenger for Mac. The wait is finally over. Please give a warm welcome to the new Yahoo! Messenger for Mac 3.0 Beta 2. Download it now.
This new version includes:
Tabbed IM windows: When you have two or more conversations going on, they appear as separate tabs in a single window. Less clutter for your desktop! Plus, you can drag a tab out and make it into its own window (or drag it back in to consolidate). Tabbed conversations are a preference, so if you prefer having one window per IM conversation, you still can.
Chat rooms: Yup, the same Yahoo! chat rooms that Windows users have been using are now open to Mac users.
Message archiving: All of your IM and chat room conversations can now be archived on your computer.
Improved stability for webcam and file transfer: There were issues with these in the past version so the team did a lot of bug fixes and under-the-hood work to improve them.
More emoticons: We added in the additional emoticons that are in our other versions of Messenger, so Mac users now have them all!
Download Yahoo! Messenger for Mac 3.0 Beta 2
Although this latest Beta doesn’t yet offer voice calling, we’re still working on it and hope to offer it soon.
Note that this new Beta 2 version only works on Mac OSX 10.4 or later. In order to get this out sooner, we had to make a choice about which version of OSX to support. And thanks to your votes here on the blog, we had a better idea of which direction to take.
We hope you enjoy this new version!
Sarah Bacon
Product Manager
September 4, 2007 on 12:48 pm | In Features, Web version | 18 Comments
Last week, the new Yahoo! Mail officially dropped its Beta moniker. Accompanying the general audience release was a new feature: the ability to send text messages (SMS) to friend’s cell phones, right from your Yahoo! Mail account.
SMS is the latest improvement to the integrated Yahoo! Messenger that’s available in the new Yahoo! Mail. We first told you about it in a February post when it was added to the Mail Beta. But now anyone who has a Yahoo! Mail account can get this new version that includes instant messaging and SMS.
If you’re on the old version of Mail and want to try the new version with these enhanced messaging features, just go to the “Options / Mail Options” menu in your account and look for the link “The new Yahoo! Mail has arrived! Try it now!” Note that the rollout of the new Yahoo! Mail to all users will take a few weeks, so if you don’t have access to it yet, keep checking.
To use the instant messaging and SMS features in Yahoo! Mail, you’ll need to be signed into Messenger within Yahoo! Mail (doing this will sign you out of the full version of Yahoo! Messenger if you’re already using it). To get started, be sure that your status next to your name in Mail says “Available”. If it says “Offline”, just click the status menu arrow to change it.
Once you’re signed in, click a contact you want to message from your “Contacts” list on the left side, then click the email, chat or SMS icon in the upper right corner of the message window:
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For a list of countries and carriers that you can SMS from Yahoo! Mail, go to:
http://help.yahoo.com/l/us/yahoo/mail/yahoomail/context/context-13.html
Sarah Bacon
Product Manager
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