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ICQ stopped in 2000, started MSN in early 2001.
I don't remember my ICQ number, and that's annoying.
My ICQ no was 70461477 ... thats a long way away from you robert .
I do still use it. Or at least I'm still signed in to it - these days I use Adium, so I don't really pay too much attention to what network people I'm talking to are on.
In 1998 ICQ was purchased by AOL.
Now if only Pidgin had a Skype plugin...
Oh yeah - 112024!
Anyway, one of the leads there was this nice looking guy, probably about 25 years old. One day he signed me on using his own password, so I could do something or other for him. I started getting these notices like I had never seen before. Didn't even know instant messages were possible till they started popping up on my screen.
They were from a young woman working in the call center who drove an expensive convertible and came to work in very short skirts telling people she didn't wear panties.
So I'm seeing these messages from her -- she thinking that I'm this young man -- and it quickly becomes clear that they are having an affair. I happened to know he had a pregnant wife at home. Bastard.
She started getting upset that I wasn't responding to her messages. Ha! So I finally did.
My first experience with instant messaging. It would be years before I encountered it again.
MSN and AIM are worthless, because you can be spied upon your LAN or any network point along the way.
Worse than useless. Ask anyone in govt if they are allowed to use MSN, AOL AIM or any other unsecure network and they will all say no.
Gaim, now Pidgin, and Trillian make chat transparent so it doesn't matter what network you're on. The only difference is the security.
If you use MSN or AIM, you may as well use little cups with strings connecting them or shouting at your neighbour from across the street. Insecure, and the protocols are not professional.
I wrote an IM client like trillian 7 years ago, and they are still using the same legacy code today at MSN and AOL.
http://www.igniterealtime.org/downloads/index.jsp
You can install openfire on your server in 10 minutes and start using secure instant messaging. Run your own MSN or AOL and it's 100% compatible with Trillian and Gaim, now Pigdin
It has a handy web interface and uses MySQL. You just need to install the java rpm first from Sun.
If the govt and enterprise won't use MSN, ICQ and AOL AIM, why would you?
I have fond memories of ICQ though, without it, I would never have met my wife. However, that was long before it was started being advertised as a way to date people.
I thought I had a small ICQ number ( 1292359 ), you beat it by quite a bit.
I've stopped using the ICQ official client in 1999-2000 when it started to get bulky and bloated. But hey! There's a ton of good renegade software out there, of witch Audium is the best (I think).
But there's a shit. All my 25+ friends still running ICQ but if I have to talk with somone younger I have to use MSN, but there's no problem since Pidgin or Adium let me be on both networks with the same application!
Sure, the security is crap. But so is IRC as well. But there are good security plugins both for both Pidgin, Adium and various IRC clients that work without any hustle!
AOL cross promoted AIM with it's other services, Microsoft cross promoted MSN Messenger with it's other services, and Yahoo's IM was cross promoted with it's other offerings. This strategy effectively shut ICQ, which didn't have any other services to offer, out.
This is, btw, the same strategy Google has used to devastatingly effective ends. If you use one Google service they put another one right in front of you to streamline whatever you're doing.
Since ICQ is part of AIM, you can add ICQ contacts to your AIM buddy list. I've added the 2 or 3 people I want to talk to on ICQ to my AIM list so I never have to log in to ICQ any more.
From Messaging News:
"[Lee] Weiner [senior product manager with Symantec] says that IM continues to be the fastest growing communications medium, with an estimated 484 million enterprise and consumer users by the end of 2007. The Radicati Group estimates that IM is used in 85 percent of all enterprises in North America, and global services such as AOL Instant Messenger, MSN Messenger, and Yahoo! Messenger report a total of more than 15 billion messages sent per day.
I stopped using ICQ around the time that the number of messages I got from random people in Brazil ans SPAM started exceeding the number of messages from my actual friends (who were all moving to other IM clients, mostly AIM).
I always thought that it was funny I don't remember my own phone number sometimes, but if anyone ever asks me my ICQ number I can rattle it off right away.
It also helped that AIM allowed interoperability with AOL much sooner than ICQ did.
I switched to MSN because of this.
Such is life...
Can't believe I can still rattle that off. That's a chunk of my brain that'll never get reclaimed. :)
I think ICQ's decline coincided with AOL's acquisition of it, btw.
ICQ started storing contacts server side long ago (I think), and the one benefit it has over all the other major services I'm on is that it's the only one that caches messages on the server side if a contact is offline. For me, this is essential. Someone messages me while I'm out, and I can message them right back even if they're offline by the time I see the message.
I realize then I'm using the client more like email than a true 'instant' messaging service, but it's nice to be able to use the same service for both online and offline messaging without having to worry if that person is online or not and then switch services accordingly.
It looks like 165361 is someone else.
I still use ICQ occcasionally but most of my friends have moved to MSN Messenger, possibly because it was bundled with Windows XP, so I mostly use that now.
At least he's the guy who has your number. He's even online right now :)
For me its downfall was mostly about bloat. When I first started using ICQ it was a small simple client that did what it did, and did it extremely well. It allowed chat, it allowed file sharing, and that was about it.
But then it suffered the same fate that has befallen most IM clients: it decided to try to be all things to all people. The glut of advertising toolbars, etc, was the final straw.
I remember ICQ fondly, but unfortunately it, and its ilk, are just part of the history of the Internet.
Another thing I stopped using was Slashdot. My number there is less than 1600.
I recently signed up for that reason and got a number with dashes: 363-705-647
I don't use MSN. I never had more than one colleague who did, so it didn't seem worthwhile.
My wife and I use ICQ because nobody "out there" knows our numbers so we can talk to each other without having to let the family and mutual friends know we're online.
And I've come to like Google Chat as well, though it still needs a good bit of improvement. I don't Twitter or Pownce; I think my generation must have gotten passed by on that one. (Hell, I'm older than Winer!)
I too have a 6 digit number. But starting at 7. I had an older account but I forgot the number.
I stopped using it when 99% of my contacts used msn. And the contact i had on ICQ also had MSN.
When I signed up for AIM back in 97 or so, I picked a name reflecting my MVP status, because I didn't think any of the other MVPs would be so declasse as to actually use AOL. :-)
The regular client got too bloated though.
I do not use the client. I use Kopete under OpenSUSE..
Never chat on it anymore, just keep the connection/account alive, sentimental, I suppose..
So icq is dead ! read wikipedia
Dude, try to remember that your ICQ number is
ICQ#: 16 3 5 61
Nick Name: scobleizer
Name: Robert Scoble
Home Address: USA Santa Clara
Phone: +1 (408) 551-0481
Work Address: USA Millbrae
Phone: +1 (650) 697-5263
Fax: +1 (650) 292-2147
Company: UserLand Software
Gender: Male
Age: 43
Birth Date: 18/01/1965
About:
Feel free to say hi, but I like it a lot more when you start off by asking me a question.
Do not mistake your number with mine;)
16 5 3 61
Best regards,
Kai
Anyway, it being such a low number, Russian hackers got a hold of it in 2000 or so for a while before I was able to get the account back. I remember arguing with the guy on a different UIN for a while before they added the option to retrieve to the e-mail address you signed up with. Funny how I was so upset about a 6 digit number back then.
I thought about retrieving the password and logging in to see if anyone was still on there, but the ICQ website won't allow me to retrieve for some reason.
Its very strange how I too remember my ICQ numbers ( I have two, 27224550 and 56376571)
I will always be thankful to ICQ for helping me meet so many nice people and also for letting me chat to and find my first proper long term girlfriend!