Linked by Adam S on Tue 26th Aug 2008 17:43 UTC, submitted by stonyandcher
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I don't care about IE market share, It was just an analogy. Lots of people use IE just because it's installed by default. Similar effect had the MS push of MSN messenger, which in XP was annoyance and hard to even switch off without hacks.
No doubt, lots of people would do IM if gtalk app icon was an icon sitting on their mobile phone screen. No doubt telcos are afraid of that happening.







Member since:
2006-01-17
For Bluetooth they disabled access to third party apps until it's audited and hardened enough. It's targeting mainstream public, security should be taken seriously.
For gtalk...I believe operators became nervous about free instant messaging, though this limitation could be very easily worked around with any kind of browser, but then it makes it not-installed-by-default (check IE share in the browser market:)) and much harder to integrate with phone functions like ringing, easy typing, popping up when active etc.
I hope both becomes in some form available in next version however (OTOH, it could become "forgotten").