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NINA: Rebuilding the original AIM, AOL Desktop, Yahoo and ICQ platforms

84 points| ecliptik | 7 months ago |nina.chat

52 comments

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[+] lukaslalinsky|7 months ago|reply
What I truly miss is the short era, when it looked like Jabber is going to win the chat world. At least here in Europe, ICQ was on its way out. Both Google and Facebook had interoperable XMPP servers. It ended very shortly after that, but it was good for the year or two while it lasted.
[+] tracker1|7 months ago|reply
I was just talking about this the other day... it was nearly a panacea of interconnected, interoperable messengers. My memory shortened it to a few months, but I remember it pretty well. The protocol sucked, but it did work.

I really miss the group chats on Yahoo that included voice. X spaces is close-ish, and I know that discord and others have similar features... just feels a lot less connected.

[+] WorldMaker|7 months ago|reply
Since Champions Online, Cryptic Studio's game chat server used to be Jabber compatible, too. I don't know if it still is, I haven't had a Jabber client running in a while. It might still be.

There was something really cool about getting MMO Guild chat (or Fleet chat in my case as a big Star Trek Online player at the time) in your normal IM client.

That was also about when we discovered the server would let you create channels that would be global across all the games (and any IM clients). I still tend to refer to Champions Online and (Cryptic's) NeverWinter Online as "Holodeck Adventures" for that reason, because I'd commonly play those in the days of my very active STO Fleet until people started chatting about STO in the global fleet chat.

[+] singpolyma3|7 months ago|reply
Facebook never had an interoperable server. They operated a limited functionality gateway to allow using your own client, but it never worked well and never federated.
[+] tomschwiha|7 months ago|reply
For me it was xfire/icq => msn/skype => teamspeak 2/3 (short mumble) => discord
[+] fishgoesblub|7 months ago|reply
Unfortunately, the dev refuses to opensource this and the Escargot rewrite. There's a FOSS AIM server[1], and apparently it supports ICQ, which is new from the last I saw it.

[1] https://github.com/mk6i/retro-aim-server

[+] xcrunner529|7 months ago|reply
Yeah very annoying. They ask for donations constantly but are enjoying keeping everything for themselves.
[+] anthk|7 months ago|reply
I saw that referenced from an OCC challenger:

https://occ.deadnet.se

Here you would try to reuse your old computer (usually 15-20 years old) for common tasks done in 2025. The web it's a no-no minus a few services but you would surprised. Hint: yt-dlp+mpv set to 480p and below, Retrozilla+ a TLS hack in about:config, fake User Agents (PSP, Opera Mini...), https://legacyupdate.net with a Gemini client and gemini://gemi.dev with the News Waffle proxy, RSS news delivered from Usenet with GMANE... there are tons of hacks.

Patching the old clients it's often usually easy, even more in case of AMSN (TCL). It's a matter of changing the URL of the service and maybe some slight API change.

Escargot covers the MSN services, which is similar to NINA:

https://escargot.chat/

[+] sdoering|7 months ago|reply
From the NINA site:

> Yahoo! Messenger support is publicly available and interoperates with our Escargot network.

[+] benguild|7 months ago|reply
the sad thing about this is what made it magical before was the people that were on there, and it’s impossible to get that back now!
[+] thedanbob|7 months ago|reply
Yup, they can probably rebuild ICQ the way it was when I was 16 but they can't make me 16 again.
[+] btucker|7 months ago|reply
Also, it was a time when being “online” was an active state. Now we’re “online” passively 24/7.
[+] 5-|7 months ago|reply
what made it magical was us being younger. likewise, it's very likely impossible to get that back.
[+] ocdtrekkie|7 months ago|reply
The invitation to join the project's Discord is magical. That's... where all your friends are now anyways.
[+] endre|7 months ago|reply
same with IRC except IRC never went down.
[+] iforgotpassword|7 months ago|reply
Cool project, kudos to the devs, even though (as other comments say) it seems rather pointless. Some things better stay in the past while you enjoy the nostalgia once in a honeymoon.
[+] icedchai|7 months ago|reply
I loved the original AIM. I remember using it from roughly 1999 to when it was finally deprecated in 2017. Almost 20 years!
[+] xcrunner529|7 months ago|reply
I’m so bummed I didn’t think to log in before it shut down and grab my buddy list and stuff.
[+] acheron|7 months ago|reply
Ah nostalgia. My text message alert (when my phone is not on silent) is the "incoming IM" sound from AIM.
[+] GuinansEyebrows|7 months ago|reply
at maximum gain, of course, to startle you into a heart attack.
[+] marcodiego|7 months ago|reply
> We're working to primarily rebuild the original AIM (AOL Instant Messenger), AOL Desktop, Yahoo and ICQ platforms as close to the originals as possible, and document the entire thing.

Why not contribute to one of many FLOSS implementations that were once maintained?

[+] whalesalad|7 months ago|reply
[+] anthk|7 months ago|reply
Or Bitlbee, but no. Here there are reimplementing the server side of the protocol.

AIM, MSN and ICQ are reimplemented in a form that even legacy patched clients should work as they came minus the server URL patch.

[+] musicale|7 months ago|reply
What is the story for security/encryption to exist in a modern threat landscape? I expect with server-based systems you could have an encrypted tunnel to the server and just connect to a local proxy, or ??
[+] lvturner|7 months ago|reply
Arugably, ICQ is still going....

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tencent_QQ

[+] giantrobot|7 months ago|reply
ICQ was not QQ. The ICQ service finally shut down last year IIRC. I don't think QQ bought out the ICQ service or anything.
[+] tracker1|7 months ago|reply
Dunno, last I tried it was very different and I couldn't login to my original 5-digit icq number.
[+] bastardoperator|7 months ago|reply
Unless they bring back personal filing cabinet, AOL will remain dead. I attribute the entire death of AOL to the death of cerver and mp3z
[+] pjmlp|7 months ago|reply
What a way to make me feel old. Nice project. :)
[+] deadbabe|7 months ago|reply
Someday someone will do a project like this but for Discord.
[+] ljlolel|7 months ago|reply
Hangout.fm is like AOL chat rooms with music
[+] ck2|7 months ago|reply
so basically Trillian?
[+] wolrah|7 months ago|reply
Other side of the equation. Trillian was an unofficial client, this seems to be a group running a series of unofficial servers that can be used with the original clients, and presumably also contemporary unofficial clients.

I'm also aware of the P3OL project which supports AOL 2.x and 3.x clients.