hangouts

One of the most promising aspects of Google’s Hangouts chat service is its ubiquity. A client for Hangouts is available on Android and iOS, inside your Gmail in a desktop browser and even as a Chrome extension to break it out of the Gmail window.

It’s that last one in particular on which that today’s rumour centres, and it’s a welcome one. Google’s Chrome extension for Hangouts isn’t generally well-regarded – anecdotally, it often brings with it excessive resource utilisation, to say nothing of some questionable UI decisions.

Florian Kiersch reports (in German) that Google is testing a new Chrome extension that will bring a new Hangouts “experience”. As with every good project, it’s got a cool codename too – Ultra Violet.

The biggest change that Ultra Violet looks to bring to Hangouts on the desktop is a UI based on Google’s new Material Design guidelines (Florian refers to it as Quantum Paper). Most interestingly, this comes with a “chat heads” experience, a la Facebook Messenger.

There’s a few screenshots provided:

Welcome screen
Welcome screen
"Chat heads" style UI
“Chat heads” style UI
Chrome Extension information
Chrome Extension information

For now, it seems this new Hangouts experience is in testing and won’t make it out to the public any time soon. It requires APIs only available in the latest developer version of Chrome, which by virtue of its name is not ready for use as a daily driver.

At the moment, all information on Ultra Violet points to it being a Chrome extension. What we don’t know is whether Google intends to update Hangouts on Android. It’s obviously a candidate for a Material Design makeover, and the “chat heads” interface would be a welcome addition (and we’re sure Facebook will be impressed).

It’d also be nice to see Google address other concerns about Hangouts – it’s not possible to remove users from a Hangout, and the 99 user limit makes it impractical for some larger Google+ communities to use it for communication. Hangouts is a year old now, and Google needs to move its chat platform forward.

We’ll be keeping an eye on Chrome’s release schedule – as the new APIs make it into the stable release of Chrome, we’re more likely to see Google’s Ultra Violet Hangouts experience hit our desktops.

Do you use the Hangouts extension for Chrome? Are you looking forward to Ultra Violet? Let us know in the comments!

Source: Florian Kiersch (original in German).
Via: Android Police.
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    Before discovering the Nexus One, Jason thought he didn't need a smartphone. Now he can't bear to be without his Android phone. Jason hails from Sydney, Melbourne or Brisbane depending on his mood and how detailed a history you'd like. A web developer by day with an interest in consumer gadgets and electronics, he also enjoys reading comics and has a worryingly large collection of Transformers figures. He'd like to think he's a gamer, but his Wii has been in a box since he moved to Sydney, and his PlayStation Vita collection is quite lacking. Most mornings you'll find him tilting at various windmills on Twitter - follow @JM77 and say hi!
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    geoff fieldew

    I recently uninstalled the extension. I’d prefer the service to open in it’s own tab. I hope Google can make it awesome enough that it can be worthy of a full page. Not sure about the Ultra Violet name but it makes sense to give it a different name to differentiate it from the Hangouts video chat service.

    hi

    I use hangouts on chrome everyday and I love it despite being resource heavy. This is good news.

    Dave

    Agree, apart from it being resource heavy, I find it very good! Even the UI =]