Quassel IRC
Atom
Quassel IRC | Atom | |
---|---|---|
10 | 284 | |
713 | 58,803 | |
0.6% | - | |
4.2 | 8.1 | |
5 days ago | over 1 year ago | |
C++ | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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.
Quassel IRC
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IRC Is the Only Viable Chat Protocol
> But all of the modern services like Teams, Slack and Discord, have seamlessness between client devices as their first priority.
Can't speak for the others, but Teams is really hit-or-miss. Missed notifications, missed messages, out of order messages. Then it appears to be fixed for three months only to happen again. It mostly seems to happen on Android.
In general, you're right, multi-device appeared to have been solved for IM - at least MSN messenger and Skype had it - right around the time when the smart phone came around, but then we had the same problem again in the mobile world, because somehow those messengers couldn't successfully move to phones: WhatsApp and the likes was bound to one device again. They added web access later, but that was more of a hack than true multi-device support.
The big problem the phone messaging apps solved was that their protocols didn't require a persistent connection. Theoretically, all the other protocols, MSN, ICQ, Skype, IRC could have been extended to support this too, but it's always faster to just build something new and be first to market.
If you want to use IRC today and have that modern multi-device experience, IMO the most decent solution is Quassel[1] (and Quasseldroid for Android). It's like a bouncer, but uses a custom protocol between the bouncer (quassel-core) and the GUI (quassel-client), so that it can perfectly sync state across all devices, and with flaky connections on mobile. It obviously required you to run the core on some server so it's accessible from everywhere, so nothing for "normies" as TFA calls them, but to me it's what makes IRC usable in the modern world. I wouldn't want to use irssi in a screen via ssh in termux on my phone.
The next best thing, if you're a Web 2.0 aficionado is probably The Lounge[2].
[1] https://quassel-irc.org/
[2] https://thelounge.chat/
- mIRC i början av 2000?
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Looking for C++ projects to contribute to
Quassel IRC: A modern, cross-platform, distributed IRC client. Tech Stack: C++, Qt.
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Client that simultaneously supports both PC and Android?
You can use a bouncer to do this. ZNC is the most popular. Quasse is a different take on the bouncer, where you have a special client that logs into your Quassel server, and the server logs into IRC. Has certain advantages, like more seamless scrollback and so forth. A variant take on this is irccloud, which is probably the "best" if you just want something turnkey that works with minimal fuss. It has good push notifications, a good web client, and excellent mobile clients
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Is/are there any FOSS Discord Client for Android?
I use purple-discord (libpurple/Pidgin plugin) + BItlBee (IRC chat gateway, libpurple variant) + Quassel (distribued IRC client, like a bouncer) on a home server, and use Quasseldroid to connect on mobile. I would eventually like to simplify this setup.
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Saturday APPreciation (Feb 05 2022) - Your weekly app recommendation/request thread!
Personally, I use a self-hosted "Core" (server) of Quassel I compiled from source and host remotely. Attach to the Core "locally" on a ZeroTier LAN network through a persistent physically independent WireGuard/reverse proxy/edge node microserver using various open source apps (preferably compiled from source). On Android I use QuasselDroid and of course compiled from source .
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Thoughts on the state of the freenode IRC network - Edward Kmett
I've been a massive user of IRC since the mid 90s... have written lots of bots, scripts etc plus set up plenty of stuff to deal with being able to disconnect your client without missing out on anything (currently use https://quassel-irc.org/ with the daemon on a VPS). I was even l33t enough to "read bitchx.doc" back in the day...
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AWESOME WINDOWS TOOLS
Quassel - Quassel IRC is a modern, cross-platform, distributed IRC client.
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Convos solves IRC's persistence problem
Seems really similar to Quassel (https://github.com/quassel/quassel/), though I don't believe that has a webclient...
Atom
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Is downloading vs code okay in this case ?
For JavaScript, HTML, and CSS, Visual Studio Code is the best solution because it already runs on the Electron framework. So, try VSCode. Don't worry; your device won't be harmed. If its performance was unbearable, you can always put it aside. You can also try Atom. It is outdated, but it could be answer to your need.
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I am having an issue
you can still get atom from it github page: https://github.com/atom/atom/releases/tag/v1.60.0
- Dev environment for scripting?
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Ask HN: Design of Emacs type extensible editor based on electron?
I'm surprised that nobody here mentioned Atom [1]. IIUC, Atom was designed to be hackable like Emacs.
A successor to Atom is Pulsar [2].
[1] https://github.com/atom/atom
[2] https://pulsar-edit.dev/
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App LIST!!!
atom (RIP buddy! Free) Atom is a hackable text editor for the 21st century, built on Electron, and based on everything we love about our favourite editors. We designed it to be deeply customizable, but still approachable using the default configuration
- I started a course by Dr Angela Yu and one of the CSS courses tell me to download Atom.io. However, there is no way to download it anymore. I'm going crazy, can someone please help??
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Code Editor from scratch ?
Hey everyone, I'm developing an open source text editor called Valence. I'm just getting started with its development and the next and main thing I need to implement is the editor itself. Now I know there are many different code editors like CodeMirror, Ace.js and Monaco but I want to start from scratch and build something like Atom had done. Currently I created a contenteditable div and also added a custom cursor. BTW I'm using React, TailwindCSS and TypeScript. Here is the component
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I've been using Atom to edit code, and then this popped up today. Anybody know the story behind this? (using a Macbook with BigSure OS installed)
These versions of Atom will stop working on February 2 [2023]. To keep using Atom, users will need to download a previous Atom version.
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" “Atom” will damage your computer. You should move it to the Trash.“Atom” will damage your computer. You should move it to the Trash. "
For Mac users - mv ~/.atom ~/atom_bak rm -fr /Applications/Atom.app download https://github.com/atom/atom/releases/tag/v1.60.0 Drag download to Applications folder - to install
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Can't install AUR atom
And it doesn't match because https://github.com/atom/atom/releases/download/v1.63.1/atom-amd64.deb returns a 404 not found error, so of course it doesn't match.
What are some alternatives?
The Lounge - 💬 Modern, responsive, cross-platform, self-hosted web IRC client
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
ZNC - Official repository for the ZNC IRC bouncer
Geany - A fast and lightweight IDE
Weechat - The extensible chat client.
vscodium - binary releases of VS Code without MS branding/telemetry/licensing
hexchat - GTK+ IRC client
Spyder - Official repository for Spyder - The Scientific Python Development Environment
Convos - Convos :busts_in_silhouette: is the simplest way to use IRC in your browser [Moved to: https://github.com/convos-chat/convos]
notepad-plus-plus - Notepad++ official repository
Shout - Deprecated. See fork @ https://github.com/thelounge
KDevelop - Cross-platform IDE for C, C++, Python, QML/JavaScript and PHP