Chat: A high-end Android device can cost over a thousand dollars. With this money, you can have a phone with amazing characteristics. A high-resolution display, a top-notch camera, massive amounts of RAM, large storage and an absolutely miserable writing experience messages.
This is of course a problem. In fact, it's always been a problem. Google has spent the last nearly decade trying and failing to solve the equation. During this time, many have been published applications which soon stopped supporting them. The users iPhones have had the simplicity of iMessage built in, but Android users have been left to fend for themselves by searching for an app from the Store.
Today the company announced something completely different. Instead of developing a new app with dubious luck and duration life, is trying to completely change the rules of the texting game on a global scale.
Google has contacted every major mobile operator in the world to adopt a technology that will replace SMS. It will be called "Chat" and will be based on a template called "Universal Profile for Rich Communication Services". SMS is the default application that everyone has, few use it, but everyone returns to it at some point.
This is Google's goal: Make the default text messaging experience on Android as good as it does not need SMS.
So Google once again states that it stops with the development of Allo (another one bites the dust). It is the kind of "pause" that involves transferring almost the entire team outside the project and placing all the resources in another Android messaging application.
Google will not build the iMessage clone, but it will likely force mobile providers to do it for them. In order for the company to win, it first had to admit defeat.
What will be the chat?
Chat will not be a new text messaging application. Think of it more like a new set of features within an app installed on most Android phones.
"Chat" is the friendly name of Rich Communication Services (RCS), the new template designed to replace SMS, and will be automatically activated in Android Messages, Google's default text messaging app.
When users start using the conversation, they will have many features that are already standard in any other text messaging application: reader testimonials, keystrokes, full resolution images and videos, and group conversations.
Best of all, chat is available from mobile providers rather than from Google. The company with the creation of a new standard ensures that the conference services from each operator will be interoperable. But like the SMS, conversations will not be encrypted end-to-end, in other words: it will not be as secure as iMessage or Signal.
New messaging services will be triggered by most Android users in the future, although the schedule will be dictated by each carrier. Google is optimistic that many mobile service providers will implement the new technology this year, but there could be some delays.
Messages will be sent via data instead of a program that measures SMS, so you will probably only be charged for the (minimum) data that costs sending a message. Though, again, it will depend on the mobile providers.