Create temporary chat rooms with tiny URLs with TinyChat
No matter how much you love Twitter, sometimes 140 characters isn't enough to express complex thoughts. That's one reason you see people posting links on Twitter to blogs and other web sites where you can find additional information. A while back we covered TinyPaste, a service that sort of lets you cheat at Twitter by creating a long string of text or links to photos or videos and creating a short URL that you can use to publicize the link on Twitter.
Now the makers of TinyPaste are back with a new service that lets you create an instant chat room, complete with a short URL that you can use to promote the chatroom on Twitter or other sites. TinyChat is about as simple as a build your own web chat page could be. You just click a button to create a room and then enter the room or copy the link to share with others. That's pretty much all there is to it.
You can save a log of the chat as a text file, email it, or post it online. And you can even embed a TinyChat room on your web site.
There aren't a ton of advanced features. You can't upload files to a chat room, for example. But TinyChat has the basics covered. There are a few emoticons and you can perform basic actions with the "/me" command.
Now the makers of TinyPaste are back with a new service that lets you create an instant chat room, complete with a short URL that you can use to promote the chatroom on Twitter or other sites. TinyChat is about as simple as a build your own web chat page could be. You just click a button to create a room and then enter the room or copy the link to share with others. That's pretty much all there is to it.
You can save a log of the chat as a text file, email it, or post it online. And you can even embed a TinyChat room on your web site.
There aren't a ton of advanced features. You can't upload files to a chat room, for example. But TinyChat has the basics covered. There are a few emoticons and you can perform basic actions with the "/me" command.













Comments
4
Subscribe to commentsJash SayaniFeb 17th 2009 12:10PM
Wow! This is the coolest web app so far !!
But what if people find out URLs and join wrong chat rooms to see other's conversation ??
EvenioFeb 17th 2009 1:13PM
I noticed that /me is essentially the only command it seems to support; typing *anything* after a forward slash will merely append everything after the slash as your /me action. Not exactly an IRC substitute, and a little basic for my liking, but for quick multi-user chats without having to worry about everybody using different IM services, it seems quite serviceable. I'd sure like to see it grow its feature set a little, though. (Not a lot, because that'll make it bloated in the end, but a little.)
You can also type in anything you want as the room address — you don't have to use their auto-generated codes (i.e. "mi5n") if you don't want to, and can even give your room a name this way.
Amit BanerjeeFeb 25th 2009 11:52AM
Very well ! But as Jash said How secured is the chatroom ?? And is it permanent ?
Adeel RazaApr 9th 2009 1:09PM
TinyChat is good for temporary chatting. If you're looking for a well-built permanent chat site, try http://www.gixawchat.com/