Tangentially related: I find it really ironic how the IM landscape has changed over the decades.<p>At first we had proprietary protocols like ICQ, AIM and MSN. Then we got clients that reverse-engineered the protocols and supported logging onto multiple networks, which was nice, but the cat-and-mouse game between IM vendors and the people reverse-engineering the protocol was annoying for all parts (i.e clients stopping to work and wasted effort on the IM vendor side).<p>In all this mess, Jabber was born, trying to standardize IM with the XMPP protocol and the Jabber implementation.<p>It never flied.<p>And now we are at a point where all these additional IM services pop up. Ironically, all of them are using XMPP under the hood but all of them go great lengths in adding crypto to make absolutely sure that they are not interoperable.<p>This is one of the rare cases where a standard was created which everybody is actually following, but which didn't create any kind of interoperability between clients.<p>It pains me endlessly that I must know whether I can contact person X via iMessage or WhatsApp or now this. And this time it's not even about reverse-engineering protocols. It's just about checking whether your client is a "legitimate" one. There's no technical reason besides actually removing checks and making server names configurable why WhatsApp couldn't talk with iMessage or why GTalk can't talk with WhatsApp and so on.
MightyText is a "SMS remote control" for your Android phone. It gives you a browser-interface from which you can send/receive SMS.<p>It's critical to realize that you are interacting with the MightyText webapp over the internet, it runs on <i>their</i> servers. When your phone receives a SMS it will upload it to <i>their</i> servers so it shows up in the web-interface.<p>When you write a SMS in their web-interface then your phone will later pick it up (by polling <i>their</i> servers) and send it out via your phone's GSM.<p>Notice something?<p>Right, <i>all</i> your SMS conversations now run through their servers. Also, if their servers get compromised then the new owner will gain significant control over your phone; at the least they will be able to send SMS in your name. This is a disaster waiting to happen.<p>If you're looking for a better implementation of this concept (convenient web-interface to send/receive SMS) then look for "EasySMS" in the android market.<p>EasySMS runs a webserver directly on your phone, which you connect to with your browser. It's your own local MightyText. No middleman involved, no need to upload all your SMS to remote servers, no need to give a third party remote-control over your phone.
People seem confused as to what this is. MightyText lets you text from your computer as if you are texting from your phone.<p>I've been using this for around 2 months now. It is VERY buggy. Sometimes you'll experience delays in receiving and sometimes you don't even know if your text was sent out. You have to kind of get used to its 'quirks'.<p>Having said that, it has gotten a lot better and I expect it to continue. Anyone who texts a lot during the day should love setting up MightyText.
Why can't Google centralize its messaging apps already, including adding SMS into it? Sure, the carriers might not like it, but get with the program Google.
I don't see how it is different from DeskSMS. This is not like iMessage at all, it just syncs your SMS messages to your computer. It doesn't actually enable your computer to send or receive SMS messages. So if I am roaming or have my phone turned off, I don't get messages.
I've been using MightyText in beta for months. It doesn't resemble iMessage in any way, and it's not supposed to. I have no idea where the headline came from. It's not an IM service. It is, simply, an app for sending and receiving text messages <i>through your phone</i> from a PC. So if you're at a computer and you receive a text, or you want to text someone, instead of taking your phone out of your pocket and using the little screen and the little keyboard, you do it right on the computer. Simple, useful, end of story.
Okay, I'm still confused. Is it "iMessage for Androud users" in that it automatically recognizes other MightyText users and sends those messages over the data connection? That point isn't especially clear.<p>Also, why is there so much emphasis on browser sync? Is the browser install a dependency? Does this work if, say, my browser is closed or my PC is shut down? I would assume that it does, but with the browser sync instructions so heavily emphasized in the install instructions, I'm not sure.
I'm curious how this is significantly different from say, Google Voice's SMS implementation; Aside from the obvious "making and receiving" calls functionality, it looks just like Google Voice to me, which I use exclusively for its ability to send text messages without having to resort to using my phone.<p>Edit: Nevermind, after installing and playing with it, it even consumes my native SMS messages. A nice touch for sure.
For others like me that skimmed the article quickly trying to figure out how it was different than all the other iMessage competitors on Android right now, let me save you the trouble and show you the big difference:<p>> Uses your current Android phone number.<p>This is awesome. I hope it takes off quickly.
This is good but what I really want is SMS integrated with email. Think about it SMS is a text based conversation just like email- how much better would it be to have all the other functions of email (especially gmail) tagging, archiving, threads, filters, ability to mark as SPAM.<p>SMS as a separate product made sense when it was first introduced- email on phones didn't exist. But in 2012 it's time they were integrated.<p>As an aside I also wish that carriers would stop doing voicemail and the various (broken) text->voice services and just record the message as an MP3 (low quality is good) and message it to me- again having it turn up in my mailbox would be even better.
Doesn't work for me.<p><a href="https://mightytext.net/app" rel="nofollow">https://mightytext.net/app</a> ->
"<i></i> Error in GetUserInfo: timeout"
whether I'm logged into Google or not.<p>Too bad. I like DeskSMS and I'd prefer something like it only free.
I noticed yesterday that my android gtalk app was updating a thread when I switched to it. It seems like a recent change and it's entirely server side. Has anybody else noticed?
Wait, I thought WhatsApp or Google Voice were the replacements for iMessage. It needs to work everywhere like Google Voice, or save you international SMS like WhatsApp does.
the main reason i use android over iphone is the seamless integration of google voice, and gv already gives me access to my sms & vmail from the browser.<p>imho, the solution isn't to build yet another android app but to make google voice a natural/default choice for android users. if you have an android phone and haven't tried google voice yet, i highly recommend you give it a shot. having used it for the last few years, i can't imagine ever going back to carrier sms/vmail.
just started using it. Its simply amazing... users seems to love this app like crazy - <a href="https://twitter.com/#!/mightytext/favorites" rel="nofollow">https://twitter.com/#!/mightytext/favorites</a>
How is this different (besides visually) from porting my number to Google Voice? It seems to have the exact same set of functionality.<p>Also, koush's DeskSMS has been around much, much longer and <i>is</i> the <i>exact</i> same as this.