- cross-posted to:
- irc@lemmy.sdf.org
- cross-posted to:
- irc@lemmy.sdf.org
I found myself loving what this guy writes about IRC, and I think a lot of his words will go straight to the heart of specially the older nerds here on Lemmy.
Hope you enjoy.
For me IRC scores points on not having push notifications, rich text, custom emojis, embedded images/video, etc. It’s plain text communication — multiplayer notepad, if you will — and it’s great at what it does. I love that I don’t need anything but a terminal window for utilizing the full capabilities of IRC, and the lack of persistent chat history is a great counter to FOMO. (Yeah, you can stay online or have a bot that logs everything — the point is that most people don’t.)
Just love the 1995 website feeling :-)
Yeah me too, I’ve been missing this. Personal websites that aren’t corporate are so cool.
I’m working on a decentralized free hosting protocol (hosts your stuff, help others host theires. It’s all automatic, you just share some stuff and people share yours. All encrypted and so on), it’s working, would you be interested in checking it out?
So, like Geocities but, decentralized?
Not to undermine your project, but what’s the difference with it, and just quickly spinning up a LAMP?
Geocities, that’s a name I haven’t heard in a long time! Wasn’t that a 3D world or could you share files too?
LAMP is centralised, that’s the real difference.
With Tenfingers, you can shut your pc down and your site (or what ever data you share) will still be up.
It’s also hard to shut down, files are encrypted (so you must have access to the link file to even know what people share) and possibly shared in lots of different countries.
Geocities, at least how I remember it was a service from Yahoo for people to build their own websites. It was incredibly easy to use. I even had a diablo 1 fan page that was full of cringe XD
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Cool, gonna check that out!
One difference with Tenfingers is it’s built to be tamper free and takedown safe, so if you put up a video of the Tiananmen square protest or have an old (but somehow “owned”) song there, nobody can really know and even if, they’d have more than a hassle to just even limit the availability.
I used to love IRC and have a fair amount of nostalgia for it. That said, a post advocating for IRC that doesn’t even mention Matrix is failing to discuss the best replacement for IRC. Matrix is the IRC killer. After using Matrix, I don’t understand how anyone could want to go back to IRC with its net splits, non persistent chat history, lack of rich text, etc.
Okay, but does Matrix allow you to
/slap
people?I know this is a joke, but it does allow for /me commands, so this is certainly possible in a client. The macro does not appear to be available in Element, however.
would love to know some good matrix servers? do you have suggestions?
The server you sign up with doesn’t matter all that much. Just pick one of the reputable ones and follow the rules. You can generally join rooms on any server.
I see the Matrix rooms being bridged with their IRC counterparts. So IRC servers can live a few more years, I think.
They certainly can and will live for a while, but the IRC side is missing out on useful features and I honestly find rooms that are bridged to IRC a little annoying in Matrix because IRC folks generate a lot of join/leave events.
Irc clients don’t need to be in a web browser, and personally I don’t want persistent chat saved forever. I also just want text much of the time.
That said, I do find some of the features in discord (and hence in matrix) nice. I just currently have only a support for lemmy in Matrix and haven’t seen groups use those servers yet. Discord hasn’t yet caused a migration.
There are a lot of Matrix clients to choose from; they’re not all electron web apps and there’s even a terminal app available. There could easily be a Matrix client that behaves the way you want, but I couldn’t tell you if one exists. You’d have to try a few and see if they have settings that work well for you.
I guess I’m a little curious about why you wouldn’t want persistent chat history. Major IRC networks log all chats anyway, so it’s only you who’s missing out on having that chat history available if you are ever offline.