KEY POINTS
  • Google is killing Allo, the chat app that it launched two years ago. 
  • The app will stop work in March 2019, at which point users will have to download any conversations they want to save. 
  • Google has long had a complicated, messy strategy when it comes to communications apps. 
Erik Kay, engineering director at Google, introduces Allo and Duo on stage during the Google I/O 2016 developers conference in Mountain View, California May 18, 2016

Google plans to kill chat app Allo by the middle of next year, the company said in a blog post, confirming a report earlier on Wednesday about the product's imminent demise.

Despite owning the world's dominant smartphone operating system in Android, Google has never been able to create a chat experience to rival Apple's iMessage or Facebook's Messenger and WhatsApp.