Google yesterday announced that it had bought Jaiku, a popular updating service similar to Twitter that lets users send and receive short text, photo, and web link updates either from their computer or through a mobile device like a smartphone. The deal has been closed for a secret amount but is said to bring the Finnish startup into Google’s lineup because the latter considers live streams of user activity and mobile presence “important,” according to the Jaiku team. New registrations for the still beta-stage service have been temporarily shut down to control the flow of new members while Jaiku integrates, though Jaiku notes its service will still accept additional members through invitations.
No mention was made of exact plans, though both Google and Jaiku said they would “expand” the service over the next few months as part of the transaction, prompting speculation about future projects. The search engine giant is generally accepted to be developing a mobile phone OS that would integrate many of Google’s web applications into a Linux-based interface and which could use Jaiku’s own technology, which currently supports mobile phones through a Java widget as well as a native program for Symbian phones like Nokia’s Nseries devices.
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