AIM Beta Gets Rich with Features
By David Worthington | Published August 11, 2004, 2:50 PM
In response to last month's discovery of a buffer overflow vulnerability in its instant messaging client, America Online is steering users to a new beta version of AOL Instant Messenger (AIM) to address the problem.
The AIM 5.9 beta release offers up a number of enhancements; however, there is one catch: if users want to experience AIM at its fullest they must pay up.
Keeping with the tradition set by version 5.5, AOL is continuing to advance the evolution of AIM by adding premium options. Some of the newest features in AIM include expanded options to personalize the client, new ways to manage and share digital images, streamlined access to popular features and the AIM toolbar.
Mobile phones are a prime example of how personalization services can become a steady stream of revenue. AOL's plan to draw revenue from AIM is comparative to the strategy that is already in play by wireless service providers where customers purchase ring tones, pictures and other add-ons to personalize their cell phones.
According to the Yankee Group, wireless services providers earned a gross income of $80 million in 2003 from the sale of ring tones alone.
In order to cash in on the personalization of AIM, AOL has introduced year-long and monthly subscription options for access to their collection of more than 7,000 buddy wallpapers, buddy sounds, smileys and 2-D buddy icons for $9.95 USD and $1.95 USD. AOL'S animated "SuperBuddy" icons may be purchased at a cost of cost $1.95 each, or $4.95 for a lot of three.
While many wireless providers must share revenue and content with partners -- often serving as a billing mechanism rather than a content provider -- AOL owns all expressions except those that use licensed marks and retains most of its profits while keeping distribution costs low.
"If AOL does this right, with over 100 million unique users, they could probably generate revenue from this. Which is more than they did before when everything was for free," Radicati Group analyst Genelle Hung told BetaNews. "Naturally it is way too late in the game to charge for IM and basic features (file transfer etc.) as users have had all that for free for so long that there would be some kind of "revolution," but it is probably about the right time to finally try to make some money from IM."
AOL is not alone in its decision to begin charge for IM services. Microsoft and Yahoo! offer games with their IM clients at a cost and Microsoft sells Avatars in the South Korean market.
Another area that AOL has cycled its development resources toward is digital imagery. With AIM 5.9 "You've Got Pictures" (YGP) allows users to organize, search for, print, edit, and access photos. AOL has included its Universal Picture Finder so that users can locate pictures wherever they are stored whether that be on their hard drive, on the TGP Web service or on a digital camera.
Microsoft's upcoming Longhorn revision of Windows is expected to have rich search capabilities baked into the operating system that will make it easier to find photos.
Photos uploaded to the YGP service can be shared on the Web or viewed as a photo album with customized backgrounds, layouts and captions. Users also have the ability to display images with screensavers and slideshows.
Other key features include simple photo editing to reduce imperfections such as "red eye" and print options for home computers with the additional option to purchase prints from the Web.
AOL has also worked to simplify the client. A new addition to the buddy list called AIM Fun Tools reduces the amount of clicks that are necessary to reach the client's features and makes them more transparent. Some of the features found in Fun Tools include: You’ve Got Pictures, Greeting, Mobile IM, Video IM, as well as ScreenName linking.
Lastly, AOL has developed the AIM Toolbar. The AIM Toolbar is an optional feature that can be selected during the client's installation. The toolbar places an emphasis on Internet search with one click access to AOL Search and also includes a built-in pop-up blocker. AOL has also built in one click access to AIM.com through the AIM.com mini-browser, games, personals, weather and instant messaging with a new feature called "AIM Running Man."
AIM Running Man launches the AIM service when the client is not yet loaded and opens a pull-down menu so that users can send instant messages or change personal options.
The beta release of AIM 5.9 is available for download now, with the final version expected to be released some time this fall.
After publication, America Online released a version of AIM 5.5 that patches the buffer overrun issue reported in an advisory by iDEFENSE Inc.
I think that AIM takes up a bit too much memory for an IM client. It annoys me that they don't let you remove all the other trash from memory, and the ad's.
So I use GAIM :) File sending is nice, but that is what a web site is for.
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ever since somewhere in the 4.x's AIM has been worse and worse.. this is just going over the top! Use something like Gaim ... nice, simple, opensource, and best of all, FREE!
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This is absolutely ridiculous. Most of this rubbage they've packed into this program people won't even use. I know I use AIM solely for messaging and a few other features, and that's it. I don't need games, weather reports, stock reports, or any other useless things they've cooked up.
I agree with another user: bloatware!
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I've never used AOL before, or it's AIM client. I'm glad I've never started, now that I've learned of it's spyware, bloatware, stupidity. I thought programs were supposed to get better with time? This one seems to be getting fatter and lazier, like the people it thinks it's catering to. "Less clicks!" pffft.... do you think clicks bother me? I'm not lazy enough to complain about the number of clicks to something!
If I want stock quotes, weather, and all that jazz, I'll get programs that do that, and only that. I don't want them weighing down, complicating, bloating, and incurring a fee on my instant messaging software. I pity the AIM users. It's like being a user of Realplayer, software that nobody loves anymore (for good reason).
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Every release they do put out of Aim, it get's worse and worse especially with the spyware.
Get Aim Ad hack if you want to use it to your full potential without spyware clunking up your system.
ICQ is is also crapware now, but AOL bought that, so you know why.
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First Aol want to start including spyware /adware. That is just bull. Now they want to charge you for using buddy icons? I guess I'm going back to GAIM cause Aim Ad hack hasn't been updated. The Aim program is not any good. I want to switch to MSN but all my friends use AOL. What do I do!
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AIM can now classify itself as bloatware, according to my standards. This is ridiculous. Nothing that AOL has done to AIM in the past year or two has been anything but the addition of non-productive bloatware.
There have been no performance enhancements, no support for alternate clients, they obviously haven't been listening to their users because if they had, they would know that the majority of AIM users don't need to do their taxes through AIM, heh.
Come on, we just want a concise and straightforward app to communicate with friends and family and AIM is doing everything they can to divert that with sloppily added bloatware inducing features.
If you don't appreciate the practices of AOL, I would suggest the alternate client, Trillian which is available in a fully functional free version and a Pro version with enhanced support and functionality. It's incredibly simple and functional, www.trillian.cc
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Have they removed the "optional" spyware yet i switched to trillian for good when they started bundling other applications.
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