Switching to the Mac[c] The Missing Manual

11.3. iChat

If you're an instant-messaging junkie, good news: All three of the biggies, AIM (America Online Instant Messenger), MSN Messenger, and Yahoo Messenger are available for Mac OS Xand you use them exactly as you did in Windows . (Download them from www.aim.com, www.microsoft.com/mac, and http://messenger.yahoo.com, respectively.) Once you start using the Mac versions of these programs, you'll find that your old buddy lists are intact and ready to useno importing necessary.

AIM, Yahoo, and MSN Messenger are not, however, the only chat games in town. Apple has created its own take on instant messagingsomething called iChat.

Of course, Apple would be nuts to create a fourth, mutually incompatible network standard. Fortunately, it wasn't quite that crazy: iChat is AIM-compatible, so you can type back and forth with any of AIM's millions of members . But iChat's visual design is pure Apple, complete with comic stripstyle word balloons and a candycoated interface.

You'll find, too, that iChat supports three different types of communication:

11.3.1. Three Chat Networks

iChat lets you reach out to chat partners on three different networks:

These three kinds of chats operate in parallel. Each network (AIM, Jabber, and Bonjour) has its own separate Buddy List window and its own chat window. You log into each network separately.

Otherwise, however, chatting works identically on all three networks. Keep that in mind as you read the following pages.

11.3.2. Signing Up

When you open iChat for the first time, you see the "Welcome To iChat" window (Figure 11-8). This is the first of several screens in the iChat setup sequence, during which you're supposed to enter which kinds of chat accounts you have, and set up a camera (if you have one).

An account is a name and password. Fortunately, chatting accounts are free, and there are several ways to acquire one.


Tip: The easiest procedure is to get an account before you open iChat for the first time, because then you can just plug in your names and passwords in the setup screens.You can input your account information later, though. Choose iChat Preferences, click the Accounts button, click the + button, and choose the right account type (Jabber, .Mac, or AIM) from the Account Type pop-up menu.

Figure 11-8. The iChat setup assistant gives you the chance to input your account names and passwordsif you already have them. Only one of these screens ("Set up iChat instant messaging") offers you the chance to create a chat accountin this case, a free .Mac account. Otherwise, you're expected to have a name and password (for AIM or Jabber, for example) already. Finally, if you have an iSight camera or camcorder attached, you get the chance to test it out. The volume meter at the bottom bounces in response to your Mac's or camcorder's microphone.

Either way, you go to an Apple Web page where you can sign up for a free iChat account name. You'll also get 60 days of the more complete .Mac treatment (usually $100 a year). When your trial period ends, you'll lose all of the other stuff that .Mac provides, but you'll get to keep your iChat name.


Note: If your .Mac name is missingmanualguy , you'll actually appear to everyone else as missingmanualguy@mac.com. The software tacks on the "@mac.com" automatically.
11.3.2.2. How to get a free Jabber account

You can't create a Jabber account using iChat. Apple expects that, if you're that interested in Jabber, you already have an account that's been set up by the company you work for (Jabber is popular in corporations) or by you, using one of the free Jabber programs.

For example, at www.adiumx.com, you can download a great chat program for Mac OS X that presents you, the first time you open it, with a Preferences:Accounts screen. Click the + button, choose Jabber, type in any screen name and password you likeand when you're told that your account doesn't exist, mutter "I know, I know," and click Register. Your account is now created (your account name is Francis@jabber.com, for example), and you can plug that screen name and password into iChat.

11.3.2.3. How to get a free AIM account

You can't create an AIM account in iChat either. If you're an America Online member, your existing screen name and password work fine; if you've used AIM before, you can use your existing name and password from there.

If you've never had an AIM account, you can sign up at my.screennname.aol.com . Click "Create one FREE now" to make up an AIM screen name.

11.3.3. The Buddy List

Once you've entered your account information, you're technically ready to start chatting. All you need now is a chatting companion, or what's called a buddy in instant-messaging circles. iChat comes complete with a Buddy List window in which you can house the chat addresses for all your friends , relatives, and colleagues out there on the Internet.

Actually, to be precise, iChat comes with three buddy lists (Figure 11-9):

11.3.3.1. Making a list

When you start iChat, your buddy lists automatically appear (Figure 11-9). If you don't see them, choose the list you want from the Window menu: Buddy List, Bonjour, or Jabber. (Or press their keyboard shortcuts: -1, -2, or -3.)

Adding a buddy to this list entails knowing that person's account name, and whether it's on AIM, Mac.com, or Jabber. Once you know that, you can either choose Buddies Add a Buddy (Shift- -A) or click the + button at the bottom-left corner of the window.

Figure 11-9. The Buddy List is where you store the names of everyone you know who uses iChat, AOL Instant Messenger, or Jabber. Click the + button to add a new buddy, either by connecting your buddy to the name of someone in your address book or by adding a brand new buddy from scratch (by clicking New Person). If you've used AIM before, you may find that you've already got buddies in your list. AIM accounts store their buddy lists on AOL's computers, so that you can keep your buddies even if you switch computers.

Out slides a sheet attached to the Buddy List window, offering a window into the Mac OS X Address Book program (Chapter 10).

If your chat companion is already in Address Book, scroll through the list until you find the name you want (or enter the first few letters into the Search box), click the name, and then click Select Buddy.

If not, click New Person and enter the buddy's AIM address, .Mac address, or (if you're in the Jabber list) Jabber address. You're adding this person to both your Buddy List and Address Book.


Tip: Using the pop-up menu just below your name, you can broadcast your status to other people's buddy lists. You can announce that you're Available, Away, or (by choosing Custom or Edit Status Menu) Drunk.Cooler still, if you have music playing in iTunes, you can tell the world what you're listening to at the moment by choosing Current Track. (Your buddy can even click that song's name to open its screen on the iTunes Music Store.)

11.3.4. Let the Chat Begin

As with any conversation, somebody has to talk first. In chat circles, that's called inviting someone to a chat.

11.3.4.1. They invite you

To " turn on your pager" so that you'll be notified when someone wants to chat with you, run iChat. Hide its windows, if you like, by pressing -H.

When someone tries to"page" you for a chat, iChat comes forward automatically and shows you an invitation message like the one in Figure 11-10. If the person initiating a chat isn't already in your Buddy List, you'll simply see a note that says "Message from [name of the person] ."

Figure 11-10. Top: You're being invited to a chat! Your buddy wants to have a typed chat (top left) or a spoken one (top right). To begin chatting, click the invitation window, type a response in the bottom text box if you like (for text chats), and then click Accept (or press Enter). Or click Decline to lock out the person from sending you messagesa good trick if someone's harassing you.

11.3.4.2. You invite them

To invite somebody in your Buddy List to a chat:

To initiate a chat with someone who isn't in the Buddy List, choose File New Chat With Person. Type the account name of the person and click OK to send the invitation.

Either way, you can have more than one chat going at once. Real iChat nerds wind up with screens overflowing with individual chat windows. Juggling them all, and keeping them all current, is just part of the fun.

11.3.5. Text Chatting

A typed chat works like this: Each time you or your chat partner types something and then presses Enter, the text appears on both your screens (Figure 11-11). iChat displays each typed comment next to an icon. The icon may be one your chat partner added, a picture you added (in Address Book, for example), or a generic icon if neither of you has put any effort into it.

To use a graphic as your own icon, click the square picture to the right of your own name at the top of the Buddy, Jabber, or Bonjour list. From the pop-up palette of recently selected pictures, choose Edit Picture to open the pop-up image selection palette. Feel free to build an array of different graphics to represent yourselfand to change them in mid-chat using this pop-up palette, to the delight or confusion of your conversation partner.

Figure 11-11. As you chat, your comments always appear on the right. If you haven't yet created a custom icon, you'll look like a blue globe or an androgynous AOL cartoon. You can choose a picture for yourself either in your own Address Book card or right in iChat.


Tip: When you minimize the iChat message window, its Dock icon displays the icon of the person you're chatting witha handy reminder of who it actually is.
11.3.5.1. In-chat fun

Typing back and forth isn't the only thing you can do during a chat. You can also perform any of these stunts:

11.3.5.2. Popping the balloons

The words you might have for iChat's word-balloon design might be "cute" and " distinctive ." But it's equally likely that your choice of words includes "juvenile" and "annoying."

Fortunately, behind iChat's candy coating are enough options that you'll certainly find one that works for you (Figure 11-12).

You can even change iChat's white background to any image using View Set Chat Background. Better yet, find a picture you like and drag it into your chat window; iChat immediately makes it the background of your chat. To get rid of the background and revert to soothing white, choose View Clear Chat Background.

11.3.6. Audio Chats

iChat becomes much more exciting when you exploit the audiovisual features. Even over a dial-up modem connection, you can conduct audio chats, where you speak into your microphone and listen to the responses from your speaker.

If you have a broadband connection, though, you get a much more satisfying experienceand, if you have a pretty recent Mac, up to 10 of you can join in one massive, free conference call from across the Internet.

A telephone icon next to a name in your Buddy List tells you that the buddy has a microphone, and is ready for a free Internet "phone call." If you see what appear to be stacked phone icons, then your pal's Mac has enough horsepower to handle a multiple-person conference call. (You can see these icons back in Figure 11-9).

To begin an audio chat, click the telephone icon next to the buddy's name, or highlight someone in the Buddy List and then click the telephone icon at the bottom of the list, or (if you're already in a text chat) choose Buddies Invite to Audio Chat.

Once your invitation is accepted, you can begin speaking to each other. The bars of the sound-level meter let you know that the microphonewhich you've specified in the iChat Preferences Video tabis working.


Note: Although the audio is full-duplex (you can hear and speak simultaneously, like a phone but unlike a walkie-talkie), there may be a delay, like you're calling overseas on a bad connection.

Figure 11-12. iChat can look like almost anything. Here, for example, is what a chat looks like with the balloon effect turned off (giving you colored rectangles instead), and with balloons and pictures turned off. You can even hide the names, if you like. You make these changes for a chat in progress using the View menu. You can also change the color and typeface settings in the iChat Preferences Messages panel.

11.3.7. Video Chats

If you and your partner both have broadband Internet connections, even more impressive feats await. You can conduct a free video chat with up to four people, who show up on three vertical panes, gorgeously reflected on a shiny black table surface. This isn't the jerky, out-of-audio-sync, Triscuit- sized video of Windows videoconferencing. If you've got the Mac muscle and bandwidth, your partners are as crisp, clear, bright, and smooth as televisionand as big as your screen, if you like.

People can come and go; as they enter and leave the "videosphere," iChat slides their glistening screens aside, enlarging or shrinking them as necessary to fit on your screen.

Apple offers this luxurious experience, however, only if you have both a video camera with a FireWire connector and Mac with a 600- megahertz G3 processor (for one-on-one video chats) or a G4- or G5-based Mac made in the past few years (for multi-person video chats).


Tip: You don't both need the same gear. If only you have a camera, for example, you can choose Buddies Invite to One-Way Video Chat (or Audio Chat). Your less-equipped buddy can see (or hear) you, but has to speak or type in response.
Invite to Video Chat.

A window opens, showing you . This preview mode is intended to show you what your buddy will see. (You'll probably discover that you need some kind of light in front of you to avoid being too shadowy.)

Figure 11-13. That's you in the smaller window. To move your own mini-window, click a different corner, or drag yourself to a different corner. If you need to blow your nose or do something unseemly, Option-click the microphone button to freeze the video and mute the audio. Click again to resume.

And now, some video-chat notes:

11.3.8. iChat Tweaks

If you've done nothing but chat in iChat, you haven't even scratched the surface. The iChat Preferences window gives you plenty of additional control. For example:

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