![]() We wrote about it in March when T-Mobile said they were ready to deploy RCS Universal Profile on their network. To be clear, the Universal Profile and its partners is not actually new info. Just know that it’s advanced messaging and is waaaaaay better than your typical SMS and much like Apple’s iMessage. Not sure what RCS is? You can read about it’s features here. At some point within the past couple of years, everyone in wireless you care about signed up to be a part of Universal Profile, including Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, Sprint, LG, Samsung, HTC, Lenovo, Huawei, ASUS, etc. Universal Profile, for those not familiar, is a standard set of features and technical specs for the adoption and deployment of RCS from carriers and phone makers. “Chat”Īccording to tonight’s report, Google has everyone that matters outside of Apple ready to adopt RCS and its Universal Profile. ![]() OK, we all clear on the two big pieces of info? I hope so, because we are going to try and break this all down. Google is pulling the team behind it and moving them over to make sure RCS and “Chat” are adopted as quickly as possible. That’s fine because no one uses Allo, even if it has some sweet features and potential. Holy f*ck, that is the most ridiculous sentence ever written…hang with me, though. All of these partners have apparently signed on to a branding of RCS as “Chat,” which isn’t an app, but a name for RCS as a group of services.
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