If You Use Yahoo! Messenger...
Chat is very similar to instant messaging through Yahoo! Messenger in
that you and your contact can communicate
instantly through text messages. With Yahoo! Mail chat, you don't
need to install the Yahoo! Messenger application on your computer—you
can use chat anywhere you can sign in to your Mail account. This
comes in handy when you’re sitting in an Internet cafe in Paris
enjoying the lovely scenery and want to share your thoughts in real
time with your friends.
While chatting in Yahoo! Mail is limited to text-only messaging, Yahoo! Messenger provides
a more flexible environment in a number of ways:
- More communication options, such as PC-to-PC calling, Phone In, and Phone Out
- Photo and file sharing
- Archiving your IM conversations
- Using images other than avatars as
your personal display image
- More control over privacy, for example, making yourself invisible
to just some of your contacts
- Interactive plug-ins, such as Yahoo! Games, and Yahoo! Maps
- Personal plug-ins, such as the local news.
Messenger gives you many features and a variety of ways to communicate
with your friends. To take advantage of these features, go to messenger.yahoo.com and
download Yahoo! Messenger.
If you already use Messenger, here are a few things to know when
using chat in Yahoo! Mail:
- You can’t use Yahoo! Mail chat feature and
Messenger at the same time with the same Yahoo! ID. If you're using
Messenger and you then sign into Mail, your chat status will be
"Offline" even if you signed out of chat with an "Available" or
"Busy" status. This prevents your Messenger session from closing.
If you make yourself available to chat, your Messenger session will
close. If you sign into Messenger while chatting in Mail, your chat
session automatically closes.
- In Messenger, you build your Messenger List by adding the names
of the people with whom you want to communicate. You have to get
permissions from contacts to add them to your list, and they must
ask your OK to be on their lists.
Yahoo! Mail chat is different;
there's no separate list of people you want to chat with. If the
person is online and in your Yahoo! Contacts, his or her name appears
on the Contacts List in the chat area; you don’t need to ask permission
to add them to your list. Also, anyone with a Yahoo! ID can chat
with you whenever you're both online unless you block his messages.
Note: The exception is your Windows Live™ contacts. You must
always ask permission to add them to your list in Messenger and
in Mail.
What’s Next
To chat or not to chat? There is no question. Yahoo! Mail and Yahoo! Messenger make
it all so easy.
Words to Know
- Avatar: a character that you can use when interacting with friends online. By changing hairstyles, clothes, accessories, and backgrounds, you can create your own unique persona.
- Contact: a person with whom you interact; someone to whom you might want to send an email, instant message, or text message.
- Display image: a picture or avatar that represents you in some way and that you share with your contacts during IM conversations.
- Instant messaging: the ability to exchange messages in real time with other people over the Internet.
- PC-to-PC calling: the ability to call another person’s computer from your computer; similar to placing a phone call. Both you and the person you are calling must have a Yahoo! ID and be logged into Yahoo! Messenger.
- Windows Live™ Messenger: Microsoft® Windows’ free instant messaging application.
- Yahoo! Contacts: your Yahoo! online address book with a listing of people and their personal information.
- Yahoo! Messenger: an application that lets you communicate using your voice, text, or other means with one or more people over the Internet in real time (instantly).
- Yahoo! Phone In: a premium, subscription-based service of Yahoo! Voice that attaches a phone number to your Yahoo! ID so that you can receive phone calls to your computer through Messenger.
- Yahoo! Phone Out: a pre-paid Yahoo! Voice account that allows you to make calls using Messenger from your computer to any regular phone or mobile phone in over 30 countries.