Today, however, Kik chief executive Ted Livingston (a former RIM employee) told us that the application is still finding an audience on iPhones, iPods, and Android devices — it now has 3 million registered users. That’s really impressive for a service that launched less than three months ago. (I was just marveling at photo-sharing app Instagram, which launched at around the same time and reached 1 million users last month.)
[aditude-amp id="flyingcarpet" targeting='{"env":"staging","page_type":"article","post_id":236281,"post_type":"story","post_chan":"none","tags":null,"ai":false,"category":"none","all_categories":"business,mobile,social,","session":"B"}']VentureBeat founder Matt Marshall is a huge fan of the app. He praised the way it helps you find address book contacts who have also downloaded Kik, and that Kik gives text conversations on your phone a much more real-time feel by showing when messages are delivered and read, or even when your contact is typing out a response.
In discussing the growth, Livingston got theoretical, noting that “strong tie” social relationships (like your connections on Kik) are more important than “weak ties” (like most of your “friends” on a site like Facebook) and that text messaging dominates communication between strong ties. As evidence, he pointed to a presentation from Google’s Paul Adams (now at Facebook).
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Livingston wrote:
Does this mean that there is a huge, yet to be seen social network for your strong ties that will be built on “text messaging 2.0”? A network that will be fundamentally different than Facebook, designed for intimacy and immediacy rather than exhibitionism and voyeurism? I certainly think so.
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