"A mere three days after Mark Zuckerberg announced Facebook's acquisition of Whatsapp, the popular smartphone messaging app suffered a major service outage that lasted three and a half hours. Left to their own devices, Whatsapp users worldwide went rushing to its rival apps, including secure chat provider Telegram. The surge in new users quickly turned into a tidal wave that brought Telegram's service to its knees:
The SMS gateways we use to send registration codes are overloaded and slow 100 SMS per second is too much. Trying to find a solution.
In its official twitter, Telegram announced that more than 1.8 million new users had joined on Saturday, Feb 22. Four hours later, it reported an additional 800 thousand.
Telegram's messaging service, which uses 256-bit symmetric AES encryption, RSA 2048 encryption and Diffie-Hellman secure key exchange, began enjoying a spike in popularity after Whatsapp's acquisition. Although it has released the source code for its java libraries and all its official clients, its server software is still closed source."
(Score: 2) by frojack on Friday March 07 2014, @04:44PM
The problem is that multi-person chats in general end up being a huge waste of everyone's time. The tendency to do so increases proportional to the number in the chat. Group chat, of any variety, invariably leads to an average maturity level of a 13 year old. One need only look in on #soylent to watch the endless stream of bacon banalities that go on literally for days on end without a single intelligent thing being said for hours.
People don't want that anymore. The novelty wore off somewhere around 1996.
People use messaging apps mostly for quick short conversations, questions, etc.
Discussion should abhor vacuity, as space does a vacuum.