Persistent Chat

Persistent Chat is a messaging concept for group chat software that consist of standing, topic-based chatrooms with an emphasis on real-time messaging,[1] that preserve conversation history over time which is visible to both current and future participants.[2] This form of messaging was adopted by many organisations in regulated industries, to ensure compliance[3] and was popular with the major financial centres around the world.[4]

History

The Persistent Chat feature was first introduced in Microsoft Lync 2013[5] as a group chat offering that allows teams to create topic focused discussions. However, in the past it has been labelled as Group Chat, MindAlign Group Chat by Parlano created in 2000[6] which was later acquired by Microsoft in 2007.[7] MindAlign provides an IRC like chatroom experience where topical chatrooms can be looked back through.[8] Since then the Group Chat feature has surfaced in Microsoft’s Office Communications Server 2007 R2 which later became Lync 2010 before the term Persistent Chat was finally introduced in Microsoft Lync 2013 (now known as Skype for Business).

Use cases

According to Microsoft, persistent chat rooms should be considered for the following use cases: “Coordinate events, create ask-the-expert and Q&A forums, Brainstorm, create a bulletin-board environment for evolving topics, collect feedback from colleagues and test new features, and share information among employees across different working hours and locations”.[9] Prior to the introduction of the Persistent Chat feature in Microsoft’s Unified Communications products, it was used by the financial services sector to “keep client banks up-to-the-minute on changes” in the foreign exchange market.[10]

Persistent Chat today

Most chat application’s conversation history persists today and is usually not referred to as ‘Persistent Chat’ but rather as ‘Chat History’[11] from consumer applications, like WhatsApp, to enterprise applications, like Slack or Microsoft Teams, each of these applications features chat history. As such persisting chat history has become somewhat of a norm in messaging applications.

Chat that persists versus Persistent Chat

Although the use of the term ‘Persistent Chat’ is not commonly used in most applications, Persistent Chat differs from applications that support conversation or chat history regarding the original use case the technology was built for. Along with conversation history that persists over time, historically MindAlign (Persistent Chat) was, and is still used[12] as an always-on communication channel[4] "for conducting ongoing business-critical conversations"[13] that are often transactional in nature, specifically in the financial services sector.

References

  1. "Microsoft to acquire group chat provider Parlano". www.smh.com.au. Sydney Morning Herald. 30 August 2007.
  2. "What is Persistent Chat?". support.office.com. Microsoft.
  3. "Parlano Releases MindAlign 2007 Enterprise Group Chat Solution". customerthink.com. Customer Think.
  4. "Persistent Chat Gets Hot". www.informationweek.com. Information Week. 6 September 2007.
  5. Microsft Lync Server 2013 Unleashed. 2nd ed. Indianapolis: Sam's Publishing. 2013. ISBN 9780672336157.
  6. "Microsoft to Acquire Parlano". news.microsoft.com. Microsoft. 2007-08-29.
  7. "Microsoft to buy corporate group-chat provider". www.reuters.com. Reuters. 2007-08-29.
  8. "Microsoft To Buy Corporate Group Chat Provider". www.informationweek.com. Information Week. 30 August 2007.
  9. "What is persistent chat in Skype for Business". support.office.com. Microsoft.
  10. "Bank spins off in-house IM Software". www.computerworld.com. Computer World. 2000-12-04.
  11. "Saving your chat history". faq.whatsapp.com. WhatsApp.
  12. "Improving your chat". www.thetradenews.com. The Trade News.
  13. "Microsoft talks up Parlano acquisition plans". www.itpro.co.uk. IT Pro. 30 August 2007.
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