A few people have been asking me about AIM Lite as it has been over a year since we last did a release. I wanted to take this opportunity to clear up some stuff with AIM Lite. The idea of a light-weight AIM client pre-dates my 9+ years at AOL, by a few months, but it really came to surface in the winter of 2006 during the AIM Triton project.
When we created AIM Lite it was done as an exercise to improve the architecture that was used to connect Open AIM to the user interface elements. Things like displaying IMs, rendering 1000 buddies in a Buddy List, and composing IMs were improved in AIM Lite. Now much of that knowledge resides in the AIM client, and has been available to everyone since last year’s AIM 6.5 release.
AIM Lite also gave birth to a feature everyone benefited from in June of 2008. AIM Lite featured a type of AIM Plugin called AIM Widgets (AWI). These AIM Widgets led us to developing AIM Modules, which are a super set of AWIs in functionality and features.
I can’t say we will never touch the AIM Lite code base again, and for those who still use AIM Lite, we have no plans to decommission it either. Hopefully this clears up any misconceptions behind AIM Lite, and if you are looking for a simple AIM experience, check out the AIM Express client. The best part is that there is no download for the client, as long as Flash 9 is installed.