Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Three.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, tho’ this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we budge on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in act on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Three.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Three Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the photos and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Trio.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, however this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we stir on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in act on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Three.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Three Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pics and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Three.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Three.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, tho’ this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we budge on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in act on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Trio Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pics and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Three.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Three.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, however this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we budge on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Three.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Trio Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pics and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Trio.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, however this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we stir on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Trio Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pictures and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Trio.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Three.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, however this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we budge on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Three Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pics and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Trio.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, however this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we budge on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Three.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Three Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pics and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Trio.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, tho’ this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we stir on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Three.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Three Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the photos and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Three.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, tho’ this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we stir on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Three Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pictures and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Trio.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Three.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, tho’ this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we budge on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Three Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pics and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Trio.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, tho’ this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we budge on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in act on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Three was leaked just as soon as the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Trio Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pics and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Trio.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, tho’ this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we budge on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Three Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pics and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Three.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, tho’ this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we stir on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Three was leaked just as soon as the Two.Three.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Three Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the photos and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Three.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, tho’ this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we stir on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Three was leaked just as soon as the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Trio Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pics and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Trio.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, however this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we budge on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in act on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Trio Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pictures and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Trio.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Three.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, tho’ this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we budge on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in act on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Three was leaked just as soon as the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Trio Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pics and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Trio.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, tho’ this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we stir on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Three was leaked just as soon as the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Three Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the photos and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Trio.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Three.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, however this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we stir on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in act on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Three.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Trio Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pics and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Trio.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, tho’ this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we budge on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Three.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Three Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pics and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Three.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, however this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we budge on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Three Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pics and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Three.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Three.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, tho’ this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we stir on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Three was leaked just as soon as the Two.Three.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Three Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the photos and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Trio.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, however this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we budge on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Trio Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pics and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Three.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Three.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, tho’ this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we budge on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Three was leaked just as soon as the Two.Three.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Trio Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the photos and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Trio.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, tho’ this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we stir on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in act on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Three.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Trio Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pics and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Trio.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, however this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we budge on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Three was leaked just as soon as the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Three Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the photos and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Three.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, however this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we stir on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in activity on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Three was leaked just as soon as the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Trio Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pics and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Trio.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Three.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, however this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we budge on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in act on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Trio was leaked just as soon as the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Three Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the photos and movie goes to Google.

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Install Google Talk With Movie Talk On Any Android Device

Google recently released the Android Two.Three.Four update for the Nexus S and one of the primary features of this update is an updated Google Talk client featuring movie talk support. If you don’t want to wait for the Two.Trio.Four OTA update for your device, we have the extracted version of Google Talk that will bring movie talk support to it, however this isn’t entirely glitch-free. Read on for details.

With Apple’s Facetime for iOS devices out there for a while now, Android had to play catch-up and Google’s solution to this was ingenious! Instead of creating an entirely fresh app for this, they determined to tap into the existing user base of Gmail users and updated Google Talk to support Audio/Movie talk. A key benefit of this is the capability to have a voice/movie conversation with not just other Android users but also those using Gmail’s version of Google Talk with the Audio/Movie plugin enabled. When attempting the Android app on our Nexus S using the version in the official OTA update, we had no issue making a movie call to a colleague who was using Gmail’s web version of Google Talk and the results were pretty satisfactory on Wi-Fi.

Before we stir on further, let’s take a look at a movie of the app in act on a Nexus S.

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While this updated Google Talk 1.Three was leaked just as soon as the Two.Three.Four OTA update for Nexus S was shoved by Google, users who attempted it out on other phones had moderate-to-little success with it when installing it using the APK file. It turns out, a required system library called libtalk_jni.so is also required for it to work flawlessly. While the result of this hasn’t been 100% successful, it has worked for a lot of users.

Getting this working will require your phone to be rooted very first. You can learn about rooting at our Android rooting guide. Once your phone has been rooted, simply download it using one of the links given below and flash it to your phone from recovery after wiping cache (don’t wipe data).

Note that there are several versions included here and which one works for you depends on your device and the current OS it is running. Android Two.Trio Gingerbread is a minimum requirement so it won’t work on Froyo or earlier. You can attempt out any of these versions to see which works best for you.

Once installed, simply launch Google Talk, tap on your display picture and enable ‘Allow movie and voice chats’. That’s all, you are ready to have movie and voice conversations with your Google Talk contacts!

Download Link one (Confirmed to work for most on CyanogenMod 7; may work for others too)

Download Link two (Version that simply copies the two required files)

Download Link three (Version that mounts/unmounts /system for copying the two required files)

Download Link four (Version that always uses cellular data only and not Wi-Fi)

Note: Credit for the pictures and movie goes to Google.

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