Google Allo, Google’s latest attempt to stay relevant in the instant messaging market, is finally going to work on something other than a single smartphone. Google is launching a Web interface for the struggling instant messaging service.
Google Allo launched in September 2016, and it was missing so many basic messaging features it was dead on arrival. It only worked on phones, leaving tablets, laptops, and desktops out in the cold. It couldn’t be used on multiple devices at once. It didn’t work with SMS messages, so you couldn’t talk to your friends that weren’t on Allo. It didn’t even pull information from your Google account, requiring a name and picture at registration. Instead of working to quickly fix these gaps in core functionality, the Allo team burned through their first year (and all their launch hype) launching superfluous features like additional stickers and animated GIF support.
Now, almost a full year after launch, you can finally load up allo.google.com/web and type to someone via your computer. We gave it a quick trial, and it seemed fast and snappy, but, like the phone version of Allo, there are so many limitations that it makes Allo very difficult to use. You can only be logged in to a single computer at once, meaning Allo now supports up to two simultaneous devices—one phone and one computer. Login happens via a QR code—rather than a Google account—which syncs the browser instance directly to your single Allo phone.
Allo messages do a good job of appearing on the phone and the computer, but if you shut off your phone or the battery dies, the browser instance of Allo dies, too. If you log in on another computer or another browser tab, the old instance of Allo will die—only the new instance will work. Also remember that this is just a browser tab and not an app. There’s still no way to have an “always on” connection to Allo via desktop app or Chrome app extension. And speaking of Chrome, Allo Web only works in the Chrome browser—Edge, Safari, and Firefox users are out of luck. And Allo only works on Android phones right now. iOS users will have to wait to access the desktop app.



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