Prior to the launch of Hangouts, Google had maintained several similar, but technologically separate messaging services and platforms across its suite of products. These have included the enterprise-oriented
Google Talk (based on
XMPP),
Google+ Messenger, and the Hangouts feature of Google+, which provided chat, voice, and videoconferencing features. However, its increasingly fragmented and non-unified suite of messaging offerings was also facing growing competition from services such as
Facebook Messenger,
iMessage, and
WhatsApp. A decision was made to scrap the existing Google Talk system and code a new messaging product through a collaboration with multiple development teams. Following reports that the new service would be known as "Babel", the service officially launched as Hangouts during the
Google I/O conference on May 15, 2013. On February 16, 2015, Google announced it would be discontinuing Google Talk and instructed users to migrate to the Hangouts app on the Chrome browser instead. In January 2016, Google discouraged using Hangouts for SMS, recommending to instead use
Google's "Messenger" SMS app (later renamed to "Messages"). In May 2016, at
Google I/O 2016, Google announced two new apps:
Google Allo, a messaging app with AI capabilities (AI-powered bots and selfie features) and
Google Duo, a video calling app. Google's
Pixel and Pixel XL smartphones released later that year were the first Google devices shipped with Duo and Allo preinstalled instead of Hangouts. Google has since confirmed that the new apps will not replace Hangouts; Hangouts will remain a separate product. In December 2018 Google announced Allo would be discontinued in March 2019 with some of its features migrated into
Google Messages. On August 15, 2016, Google announced that Hangouts on Air would be folded into
YouTube Live on September 12, 2016. Some users during the date have switched to other livestream programs. Later, Hangouts on Air was discontinued on August 1, 2019. On January 6, 2017, Google announced that the Google Hangouts API would shut down on April 25, 2017. On March 9, 2017, Google announced that Hangouts would be targeted at business users with the Hangouts brand divided into two products:
Hangouts Meet (now Google Meet) and
Hangouts Chat (now Google Chat). Meet would focus on video conferences and Chat would be focused on instant messaging with additional features such as bot assistant and threaded messaging. The features would be targeted at
business customers while consumer versions would use a
freemium model. Google stated in December 2018 that "classic" Hangouts would be disabled by October 2019. In November 2018, the desktop Chrome app version of Hangouts started displaying these banner messages at the top of its window: "The Hangouts Chrome app will be replaced by the Hangouts Chrome extension soon." This has generated many negative user reviews on the
Chrome Web Store pages for both the Hangouts extension and the app. In August 2019, Google announced that the G Suite version of Hangouts would be replaced by "Meet" and "Chat," and push the shut down to June 2020. In April 2020, in response to
COVID-19,
Google Meet became free for all users. In October 2020, Google announced that
Chat would also be made free to everyone and replace "classic" Hangouts by 2021. On June 27, 2022, Google officially announced they would be shutting down Google Hangouts on November 1, 2022 and migrating all users to
Google Chat. == Features ==