The shouts of indignation from defenders of the two big multiprotocol IM apps, Pidgin or Trillian, are a bit more hushed these days. The newest chat client in town Digsby makes them both look passe. Digsby
is a free beta release of a supercharged communications client that
gathers up major IM networks like Yahoo, AOL, MSN, Google Talk, Jabber,
and ICQ with Web mail and social networks. From a single skinnable
interface, people can chat, check e-mail, update Twitter, and view
MySpace and Facebook activity feeds. Instant messaging, e-mailing,
texting, file transfers, and voice and audio chat can all be launched
from within the conversation window.
As an aside, Digsby's got some good-looking emoticons that resemble
bubblier versions of Yahoo IM favorites. Although they're mapped to a
range of character sets meant to be compatible with a variety of
networks, some things are still lost in translation. (An emoticon for a
kiss on the cheek I sent from Digsby transformed into a sloppy wet one
right on the smacker when it materialized on a co-worker's screen.
Oops.)
The wealth of preferences lets users rein in the number of activity
notifications that pop up and customize privacy settings and most
aspects of the display. I highly recommend ripping out the system-tray
icons, which only add clutter, and shutting out strangers in the
privacy settings. I accidentally let the latter lapse the first time I
evaluated Digsby and was pestered by spim (spam IM) that I couldn't
immediately quash.
When you've got your preferences just so, including some splendid
skins, you, too, may begin to see Digsby as a perfect example of where
integrated services are going. Based on my imagination, I predict a
basic mobile version and integration with image editing and video
playback next.