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  2. Skype for Business - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skype_for_Business

    Skype for Business supports federated presence and IM to other popular instant message services such as AOL, Yahoo, MSN, and any service using the XMPP protocol, although support for XMPP has been deprecated in Skype for Business 2019. [18] Text instant-messaging in a web browser is available via Skype for Business integration within Exchange ...

  3. Jabber.org - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jabber.org

    Jabber.org was started in 1999 [1] and has offered free instant messaging continuously since. It originally served as the development test bed for the jabberd project, the original Jabber/XMPP server. [2] After becoming more stable it also became more popular with end users.

  4. Jitsi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jitsi

    Jitsi (from Bulgarian: жици — "wires") is a collection of free and open-source multiplatform voice (VoIP), video conferencing and instant messaging applications for the Web platform, Windows, Linux, macOS, iOS and Android.

  5. Adium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adium

    Adium is a free and open-source instant messaging client for macOS that supports multiple IM networks, including XMPP (Jabber), IRC and more. In the past, it has also supported AIM, ICQ, Windows Live Messenger and Yahoo! Messenger.

  6. Element (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Element_(software)

    Element (formerly Riot and Vector [13]) is a free and open-source software instant messaging client implementing the Matrix protocol. [14]Element supports end-to-end encryption, [15] private and public groups, sharing of files between users, voice and video calls, and other collaborative features with help of bots and widgets.

  7. Instant messaging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instant_messaging

    Instant messaging has proven to be similar to personal computers, email, and the World Wide Web, in that its adoption for use as a business communications medium was driven primarily by individual employees using consumer software at work, rather than by formal mandate or provisioning by corporate information technology departments. Tens of ...