Late last month, Facebook upgraded Messenger into a platform, allowing third-party apps and services to be integrated into the service. Of course, you can also access Facebook Messenger through its official iOS app, which is free to download on the App Store. If you want to use Messenger for Mac, you can download its ready-to-use client here or grab its source code here.
What’s more, it supports desktop notifications, albeit sans app icon badges for now. I’ve been using the app for the past few hours, and I’ve found it to be rather satisfactory, complete with support for sending images, emoticons, and likes in addition to text. In spite, or perhaps because, of the fact that it essentially presents the source webpage within a sandboxed browser, the app offers a good enough experience, minus the clutter of other content in the Facebook site and other tabs in a Web browser.
As such, it’s neither affiliated with nor endorsed by Facebook.īe that as it may, the so-called Messenger for Mac works quite well. Note, though, that it’s an unofficial app, developed as it is as a free and open-source project by Rasmus Andersson and Josh Puckett, both of whom work at Dropbox. But if you want to go a bit further and access Facebook Messenger for Web using a standalone Mac app, you’re in luck.Īs reported by TechCrunch, there’s already a Facebook Messenger for Mac app.
The website lets you access the social networking giant’s hugely popular messaging service on a Web browser, outside of the Facebook website itself. Facebook has just launched a dedicated website for Messenger.