Well, an alternative is to give a dropdown control to select the network
(protocol), but the main idea is to present directly a login window.

Pidgin is technically betther than aMSN, but aMSN is better to be
presented to casual people in public computers.

Thanks.



En/na Dave Warren ha escrit:
On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 21:33:31 +0200, Actiu informatica
<[email protected]> was claimed to have wrote:

I'm installing Instant Messengers in cibercafes, and there is a lot of
problems around this kind of software with the common users: the
different usability as propietary software for MSWindows.

Could have Pidgin an option/plugin/skin to show as first and single
window, a simple login form for the [Email] and [Password], and detect
by the domain name (@hotmail, @yahoo, etc.) the protocol to be used?

I'm not sure this would be as useful as you're hoping, MSN, AIM, XMPP
(including Google Talk) all have no particular requirement to use one
domain.

Worse, Yahoo and AIM don't require a domain at all.

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