Chapter 10. Sending and Receiving Instant Messages
IN THIS CHAPTER
Instant messaging history
Getting an IM account
Using Empathy on Ubuntu
Using Pidgin on Ubuntu
Using IRC
Other IM clients
Troubleshooting
e-mail has revolutionized how people communicate today. e-mail is the carrier of most business communications, replacing paper memos, faxes, and most information-sharing meetings, and enabling geographically disparate offices and personnel to keep in touch and know what each is doing. e-mail has revolutionized personal communications, too. Thanks to e-mail, I've been able to maintain friendships that would otherwise have atrophied because I'm not the best letter writer or snail mail user. I can send e-mail at any time, from any computer, and know that it will be waiting for the recipient after a very short time.
"Waiting for the recipient," however, identifies a key shortcoming of e-mail and a key advantage of instant messaging—the "instant" part. e-mail was designed as an asynchronous communications mechanism and does a great job at that. I can send you e-mail and you can respond at your convenience. Unfortunately, "at your convenience" isn't always good enough. If I have an extra ticket to a baseball game that starts in a few hours, I need to know whether you want it now. If you send an instant message to someone who is running an instant messaging client, they are usually alerted that a new message has come in—you don't have to wait for them to get around to checking their mail.
A related ...
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