Settings

Theme

HuddleChat Has Been Taken Down

19 points by danielrhammond 18 years ago · 39 comments · 1 min read


A visit to http://www.huddlechat.com/ grants the following message:

Hi, a couple of our colleagues wrote Huddle Chat in their spare time as a sample application for other developers to demonstrate the power and flexibility of Google App Engine. We've heard some complaints from the developer community about it and because of that we've decided to take it down. If you'd like to see more sample applications written on Google App Engine please check out our documentation and our App Gallery.

Thanks, The Google App Engine Team

Seems they did not want to deal with the criticism over the similiarities between it and campfire (http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/huddlechat_campfire_rip.php)

jcbozonier 18 years ago

It's funny how I don't hear anyone saying, wow how cool, they listened and tried their best to respect 37signals. All this was was a few engineers trying to make something cool really quick just to show what you can do with AppEngine. Google, probably thought it was cool too and decided to showcase it.

This was really blown out of proportion. If anyone wants to perpetuate conspiracy theories you've got plenty of ammo with AppEngine. This HubbleChat thing is/was nothing. Cope.

  • axod 18 years ago

    IMHO Google lost a lot of credibility by taking it down. For me, it's like Janet Jackson apologizing on national TV for showing some boob.

    In any event Google has proved the point - it is ridiculously simple to clone webapps like campfire.

  • raganwald 18 years ago

    wow how cool, they listened

cheapRoc 18 years ago

37signals are such stuck up, elitist, preppy twats... They should eat their own words and compete.

http://tinyurl.com/65my4q

This was just a demo app for a framework in a completely different language. I don't think it was a huge threat, I mean come on, they didn't invent online chatrooms. They just invented a doll house, my Mom can play with, that looks like a watered down IRC (for $$$).

The main reason they sell Campfire is for the integration with their other apps... something I doubt the Google App Engine Team managed to add to their clone.

  • subwindow 18 years ago

    I don't recall the 37signals people ever complaining. There are oodles of Basecamp competitors out there, and I honestly don't think they mind the competition/copycats.

    They are really very humble about competition, in general.

    • jraines 18 years ago

      Here's the complaining and their basically solid rationalization for it.

      http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/575-but-theres-only-so-ma...

      Although I'd still come back and say there's only so many ways to do chat . . .

      • subwindow 18 years ago

        That's not complaining about competition, that's complaining about theft of design.

        I really don't think they care if someone copies the functionality of one of their products, but I think they care when someone copies their words and design (CSS and images, in this case). Two completely different things.

        • ajkirwin 18 years ago

          I looked at the differences between the two and.. it's a layout and styling that I see everywhere.

bootload 18 years ago

"... Seems they did not want to deal with the criticism over the similiarities between it and campfire ..."

Maybe.

If you look at the amount of press proclaiming you can "re-create" a 37sigs app using googles new toolkit. Then you might say it's a clever "social media hack" to make the dev community to take notice. There is an alternative to ROR and it scales. And we told you by example. We got our point across using code not blogs!

Husafan 18 years ago

"And we were always far ahead of them in features. Sometimes, in desperation, competitors would try to introduce features that we didn't have. But with Lisp our development cycle was so fast that we could sometimes duplicate a new feature within a day or two of a competitor announcing it in a press release. By the time journalists covering the press release got round to calling us, we would have the new feature too.

It must have seemed to our competitors that we had some kind of secret weapon--" -PG

It's up to 37Signals to find the new features; it is not up to competitors to stop competing.

m0nty 18 years ago

FFS, way to stifle competition, 37sig. I liked the look of HuddleChat way, way more than Campfire, and had started using it. So someone starts a brush-fire in teh blogosphere and we're all supposed to just give up and go away? I thought we'd gotten beyond all this "look and feel" BS years ago.

  • anewaccountname 18 years ago

    This whole thing reminds me of when FOX News started forcing everyone to wear American Flag pins. Way to go, 37signals

anewaccountname 18 years ago

I don't know if a company can be considered a baby, but, if so, 37Signals can safely add another notch their belt of "Biggest [something]" awards.

tfinniga 18 years ago

Bummer. I tried huddlechat today, and was impressed. I hadn't tried campfire before, for various reasons, but I think I might give it a shot now.

At this point it might be just as effective of a tech demo to release the source to huddlechat, although the chances of it happening are quite low.

petercooper 18 years ago

Can't blame them really. It's not worth risking the wrath of the Internet crazies for the sake of doing a single cool tech demo. They made their point already, and they're not going to win an argument against a bunch of zealots.

simplegeek 18 years ago

Well, it's nice of Google that they've taken this down. But I'm really annoyed by 37signals' reply. I mean I recently developed the similar app to learn a particular framework so if I go market this product do you guys really think I should be taking this down if I see DHH or JF complaining how I ripped their app off? I mean a 100% similar app will cetainly be a dissaopinting effort (for both them and I) but I can always improve on that(improved/diff UI, new features and etc). Moreover, I can point anyone to couple of BaseCamp and Campfire clones and HuddleChat was just an example for app_engine (not a stupidly easy thing to implement like Basecamp and not a technicaly very challenging project). Just the right balance for a good tutorial. I was looking forward to read how did they do it using app_engine ;(

wallflower 18 years ago

Such a small team (37signals) manages to generate lots of buzz, sometimes I'm not sure if it's signal or noise.

mynameishere 18 years ago

Are they going to take down google docs next?

  • axod 18 years ago

    Don't forget gmail. It has a list of messages on the right, list of folders/tags on the left!!! blatent copy of other email clients.

  • dcurtis 18 years ago

    No, it's evil to steal from companies smaller than you, but admirable to steal from companies bigger than you.

    • dcurtis 18 years ago

      Hmm, I'm surprised at the negative reaction to this comment. Anyone care to expand on why they voted it down?

wumi 18 years ago

i think this spells out how a lot of people have great disdain for 37 signals and their perceived growing arrogance, more so than it is about Google Apps.

wenbert 18 years ago

i was able to use HuddleChat for a few minutes -- a very cool application. so sad that Google took it down :(

edw519 18 years ago

I don't understand the particulars of this case, but in general:

There are 2 sets of hackers: those whose intellectual property has been stolen and those whose intellectual property will be stolen.

The former group thinks it's a big deal. The latter group doesn't (yet).

  • pmorici 18 years ago

    But in this case the "intellectual property" seems to be

    1.chat in a web browser

    2.web pages with a 2 column design.

    Neither of which are unique or patentable ideas. Seems like 37signals just exploited this for publicity. Unless there was some innovation here that I'm missing.

  • alex_c 18 years ago

    I would suggest there's a third set, who sits around on Slashdot and argues that "intellectual property" is a misnomer and therefore cannot be "stolen".

bhiggins 18 years ago

37signals ripped off IRC.

story at 11.

ajkirwin 18 years ago

I'm tempted to try and create something now, over this.

Infact, I even have my own, very special Campfire-inspired design, which is over at http://www.basementcoder.com/ravings/12

But then, maybe people might say mean things about ME too. :(

orsoihaveread 18 years ago

Knock, knock... Pansygram.

webology 18 years ago

If this came from Microsoft then everyone would bitch but no one would think twice about it. Google tries to be at a class above everyone else down to their company motto of "Do no Evil". Whether it was a few guys working off the clock or using their 20% time at work it was still Google that released it.

Don't get me wrong, I do think Google has a right to release competing products and they have done so with Gmail and many other apps. However, it's a very crappy message to send would-be developers to "trust" them to do the right thing. Let's not lose perspective just because you may or may not like the 37 Signals guys, it was a pretty crappy message to chance sending.

  • halo 18 years ago

    I think that's nonsense, and think the exact opposite - if someone else other than Google had come out with this no-one would have given a damn and it would have received little to no press. It's only because Google is a big company - in itself this isn't news at all.

    A browser-based chat client is a hardly spectacularly original idea, and 37signal's Campfire itself owes much to IRC, a protocol invented some 20 years ago and pretty much every IRC client has an extremely similar "look and feel" to Campfire anyway. I'm also very surprised no-one has created a free alternative to Campfire before - it seems like a painfully obvious thing to create and quite a small project.

    And if it came from MS, I doubt anyone would have cared either - certainly no more than Google. Did anyone bitch when Microsoft largely recreated Java with .NET? Did anyone really care when Microsoft brought out Live.com strongly inspired by Google? Did anyone care when they brought out MSN Messenger, inspired by AIM and ICQ? What about taking on Flash (a JavaScript-based in-browser environment) with Silverlight (a JavaScript-based in-browser environment)? All those things are much more shameless than a JavaScript chat client.

    • webology 18 years ago

      I never stated it was an original idea but copying features plus innovating which was the course Google took with Gmail and their product releases was innovation. However, when you clone someones app feature-for-feature down to the nearly the exact design then that is a rip-off.

      When Microsoft created .net both pro and anti-Microsoft supported complained rather largely to answer your question. This was during the aspx days that eventually was scrapped in order to support common languages across their platforms.

      You seemed to have missed my point though, this isn't Google or Microsoft creating a competitive product and going to market with it. It's Google asking developers and startups to trust them with both your code and data but they'll do the right thing with it. I wouldn't have trusted Microsoft back in the 90's before they were depicted as the borg on Slashdot and I don't trust Google now based on their decision to copy an application from the same market they are trying to encourage to use Google App Engine. This isn't Microsoft vs. Google or Adobe but it was in bad taste and they obvious agreed since they took down the app.

      • sanswork 18 years ago

        You seem to be missing the point though that campfire is very far from original. To say google ripped them off is to imply the developed the basic chat interface themselves which is wrong.

        Google developed a basic web chat, the likes of which have existed online for years before 37Signals was even a glint in DHHs eye. And almost all have shared a very similar look and feel because it makes sense.

        • webology 18 years ago

          I never said 37 Signal's idea was original or defended them on that point. I also stated that before. When you take the functionality and design from one specific site without adding innovation then that is a rip off. I think too many people are caught up on whether or not they like Ruby on Rails or 37 Signals vs. seeing what Google did and calling foul. Good for Google to own up and pull the site though.

          • sanswork 18 years ago

            Disclaimer: I use Rails daily, and have no hard feelings for DHH or 37Signals.

            That out of the way, you are still saying that Google took the functionality and design from Campfire. Where as what I am saying is that Google took the functionality and design from almost every web chat program that came before it and there was a large number before Campfire itself existed.

            To say they took it from campfire is to ignore all the existing implementations that existed before it. It is to rewrite history with the starting point for web chat on the launch date of Campfire.

            I doubt Google pulled it because they thought they ripped off Campfire, my money would be on them pulling it because it wasn't important enough to risk bad PR over.

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection