matrix-hookshot
convos
matrix-hookshot | convos | |
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2 | 17 | |
249 | 1,006 | |
4.4% | 0.5% | |
8.8 | 8.4 | |
14 days ago | 18 days ago | |
TypeScript | Perl | |
Apache License 2.0 | Artistic License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
matrix-hookshot
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How do you handle push notifications?
Matrix synapse with the hookshot bridge for webhooks: https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-hookshot - Element for client.
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Matrix 2.0: How we’re making Matrix go voom
Matrix's moderation should be at least as good as Gitter. The GitHub integration is okay (it lets you create/comment/resolve issues using your GitHub identity from Matrix, and also can expose GitHub issues as Matrix rooms using https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-hookshot). It's not quite as tightly integrated as GitHub was to Gitter though, but we're working on putting it in the Right Panel.
Some example Matrix communities which seem to work well include Mozilla (chat.mozilla.org), GNOME (https://matrix.to/#/#community:gnome.org) and KDE (https://webchat.kde.org/). Smaller ones include folks like Helix editor: https://matrix.to/#/#helix-community:matrix.org. I don't think anyone's written a guide for getting up and running though, which in retrospect is a crying shame; we'll get it on the todo list.
(p.s. thanks for Hex Fiend! :D)
convos
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Show HN: GodotOS: A Fake Operating System Interface Made in the Godot Engine
Excellent idea! You'll have a mature, open standard protocol under the hood, with no vendor lock-in, excellent extensibility, and great modern frontends like The Lounge (https://thelounge.chat/) or Convos (https://convos.chat/) to choose from (and you can choose).
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Wave of Spam Hits IRC
And UnrealIRCD still rocks. For a quick-and-dirty setup I've deploy ng-ircd but Unreal has always been my go-to for anything serious. If nothing else it can be useful as a backup or internal platform during the rare events that Slack or Discord are having an incident. The common complaint is a lack of channel back-log but it can be front-ended with TheLounge [1] or Convos [2]. I personally prefer to handle that with gnu screen or tmux and WeeChat [3].
[1] - https://github.com/thelounge
[2] - https://github.com/convos-chat/convos/
[3] - https://weechat.org/
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Matrix 2.0: How we’re making Matrix go voom
For the other layers one can front-end IRC with TheLounge [1][2] or Convos [3][4]. TheLounge only persists history in private mode meaning that users are created in that front-end and chat messages are in Redis. For small networks or groups of friends this is probably fine.
Notably missing is voice chat. I use the Mumble client [5] with the Murmur or uMurmur [6] server which is light-weight enough to run on ones home router. I use it on Alpine Linux, works great. It's not a shiny and attention grabbing as Discord but probably fine for everyone else. For people to create their own voice channels would require the full-blown Murmur server.
[1] - https://github.com/thelounge
[2] - https://thelounge.chat/
[3] - https://github.com/convos-chat/convos/
[4] - https://convos.chat/
[5] - https://www.mumble.info/
[6] - https://github.com/umurmur/umurmur/wiki/Configuration
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IRCv3 2022 Spec round-up
FWIW TheLounge [1] and Convos [2] can front-end an IRC server giving it much of the look of a modern client and also chat persistence when using TheLounge in private mode. The trade-off in my opinion is scalability. With a bog standard IRCD I can handle tens of thousands of clients per node. Adding web persistent chat adds memory usage.
[1] - https://github.com/thelounge https://thelounge.chat/
[2] - https://github.com/convos-chat/convos/ https://convos.chat/
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Eww: ElKowars wacky widgets
IRC is a mature, extensible, open protocol, with a wide variety of server and client implementations to suit many use cases, servers can be self-hosted and federated, and modern web-based clients like The Lounge or Convos offer a user experience equivalent to Discord, Slack, etc.
- Show HN: Convos Self Hosted IRC Web Client
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Looking for OSS version of Teams For Buisnesses
Standard IRC with a web interface like The Lounge or Convos
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Eric July - Discord "goes woke", begins banning "medical misinformation".
And there are some great web-based clients like the Lounge and Convos that offer an equivalent UX to Discord or Slack, are open-source, self-hostable, and based on a mature, reliable, and extensible open protocol.
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IRC client with web interface?
Take a look at convos to see if it fits your needs: https://convos.chat/
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Simplicity of IRC
There are web front-ends to IRC that can mitigate message loss without having to run bouncers. Convos [1] and TheLounge [2] come to mind but there are others [3]
[1] - https://convos.chat/
[2] - https://thelounge.chat/
[3] - https://www.ilmarilauhakangas.fi/irc_technology_news_from_th...
What are some alternatives?
coturn - coturn TURN server project
LANraragi - Web application for archival and reading of manga/doujinshi. Lightweight and Docker-ready for NAS/servers.
pushover-bash - A bash script to send Pushover messages
The Lounge - 💬 Modern, responsive, cross-platform, self-hosted web IRC client
matrix-docker-ansible-deploy - 🐳 Matrix (An open network for secure, decentralized communication) server setup using Ansible and Docker
DFeed - D news aggregator, newsgroup client, web newsreader and IRC bot
Kiwi IRC - 🥝 Next generation of the Kiwi IRC web client
slackcat - Post to Slack from stdin
matrix.to - A simple stateless privacy-protecting URL redirecting service for Matrix
spcss - A simple, minimal, classless stylesheet for simple HTML pages
element-x-ios - Next generation Matrix client for iOS built with SwiftUI on top of matrix-rust-sdk.