umurmur
Kiwi IRC
Our great sponsors
umurmur | Kiwi IRC | |
---|---|---|
7 | 12 | |
229 | 830 | |
0.0% | 1.8% | |
0.0 | 8.4 | |
about 1 year ago | 23 days ago | |
C | Vue | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | Apache 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.
umurmur
-
VoRS: Vo(IP) Simple Alternative to Mumble
>...its server side is still written on Qt, which requires hundreds of megabytes of additional libraries to build it up.
See:
https://github.com/umurmur/umurmur
-
Ask HN: Why are so many OSS communities on Discord?
I've tried to make this argument in the past and gained no traction. What I did instead was to create self hosted chat things as a fallback for the times when Discord or Slack have a green status page but their applications fail to operate. Even light-weight daemons like uMurmur [1] or devzat ssh-chat can be handy in a time of need if a quorum know to fall back to it. Self hosted tools are also handy when one wants to share links or text that should not be on 3rd party sites forever and for eternity
[1] - https://github.com/umurmur/umurmur/wiki/Configuration
[2] - https://github.com/quackduck/devzat
-
Ask HN: Why isn't WiFi calling free?
Adding a more private self hosted option, there is uMurmur [1] which is light-weight enough to run on a Linux router. One of the mobile apps that works with it is Mumla.
There is of course the full blown Murmur [2] install that works a little more like Discord in that people can create channels and there is a permission system.
[1] - https://github.com/umurmur/umurmur/wiki/Configuration
[2] - https://wiki.mumble.info/wiki/Main_Page
-
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
-
Signal Says It Will Exit India Rather Than Compromise Its Encryption
I suppose people should decide for themselves if they take the word of a centralized service. Convenience is a factor after all.
For those that have small circles of friends they wish to chat with and minimize the number of ISP's their traffic traverses, I would suggest tinkering around with uMurmur [1] There are pre-built packages in several operating systems package managers. The configuration is dirt simple [2] and the daemon is very light weight, designed to run on home routers. Use certbot to generate LE certs or just use self-signed. One TCP and one UDP port must be forwarded to the daemon, default port being 64738. One can set a server-wide password to keep strangers off of it, or set passwords per-channel.
uMurmur is not E2EE but if it is running on your own router and you are talking with your friends that you know and trust then maybe that is less of an issue. The mobile client is Mumla. Just put in the IP or hostname of the uMurmur instance.
[1] - https://github.com/umurmur/umurmur
[2] - https://github.com/umurmur/umurmur/wiki/Configuration
-
Mumble: Open-Source, Low Latency, High Quality Voice Chat
I like https://umurmur.net/ since it can run totally headless at the cost of some of Murmur's features. Mainline Murmur (the Mumble server) requires QT5 and mDNSResponder and various DB drivers and even D-Bus if you look at it crossways
-
Remotely transfer audio from Raspberry Pi
I believe quite a few people use umurmur for stuff like this. Note that it's encrypted and I don't believe that can be shut off, so don't run it over, say, HamWAN, but I don't imagine that was the plan anyway.
Kiwi IRC
-
Matrix 2.0: How we’re making Matrix go voom
> At that point you've just reimplemented a less-standard version of matrix with extra steps though.
There are IRCv3 specifications that allow this richer experience, and they are at least as standard as Matrix. Check out https://ergo.chat/ with modern clients like https://sr.ht/~emersion/goguma/ (Android), https://git.sr.ht/~emersion/gamja/ https://kiwiirc.com/ (web), or https://git.sr.ht/~taiite/senpai (TUI)
> but in practice using your enhanced server from an unenhanced client will always be painful
IRCv3 normally makes sure new specs don't make it worse for older clients. Could you give me some examples to see if we can fix that?
- IRCv3 2022 Spec round-up
-
Long term good standing user account seems to be disabled, is it ok to ask here for advice for what looks like a automated P2P-NET ban?
First try the web-based ones - https://kiwiirc.com/ - https://mibbit.com/
-
y a-t-il encore des utilisateurs de chan IRC ?
Un client en ligne : https://kiwiirc.com/ Un serveur français : https://www.epiknet.org/irc/
-
Looking for a single-room web-based chat client
You can take a look at kiwi irc: https://github.com/kiwiirc/kiwiirc and configure the channels it joins.
-
Looking for some very specific courses. Voice acting, acting, voice over, narrator stuff, I just wanna know how people do this shit!
Their IRC link is on their homepage. If you don't have an IRC client you can use https://kiwiirc.com/ in browser.
-
Ergo IRC Server
It depends. There's a lot of people on/around IRC who really like it (see libera and all the other networks), and yeah there definitely are people spinning up new smaller networks. Especially with things like https://sr.ht/~emersion/gamja/ and self-hosted https://kiwiirc.com/ , as well as really polished client experiences like irccloud, it's easier to convince people to join in.
Right now I'm working with a dev from libera on a client that aims to replicate a lot of things experience-wise from newer chat services. Hoping that with that, smaller self-contained servers can become more of a norm~ But for now, your best bets for finding activity are probably Libera and a couple of the other larger networks.
- Can you build IRC Chats between users into a website chat frame
-
Lispers active anywhere else with a better topical discussion tool?
I use https://kiwiirc.com and it allows me to create a temporary account without an e-mail. I think you need an e-mail if you want to 'reserve' your name
- How to setup web IRC
What are some alternatives?
fivem - The source code for the Cfx.re modification frameworks, such as FiveM, RedM and LibertyM, as well as FXServer.
The Lounge - 💬 ‎ Modern, responsive, cross-platform, self-hosted web IRC client
Mumble - Mumble is an open-source, low-latency, high quality voice chat software.
InspIRCd - A modular C++ IRC server (ircd).
element-x-ios - Next generation Matrix client for iOS built with SwiftUI on top of matrix-rust-sdk.
ZNC - Official repository for the ZNC IRC bouncer
oxen-core - Oxen core repository, containing oxend and oxen cli wallets
Convos - Convos :busts_in_silhouette: is the simplest way to use IRC in your browser [Moved to: https://github.com/convos-chat/convos]
element-x-android - Android Matrix messenger application using the Matrix Rust Sdk and Jetpack Compose
Shout - Deprecated. See fork @ https://github.com/thelounge
pantalaimon - E2EE aware proxy daemon for matrix clients.
ngircd - Free, portable and lightweight Internet Relay Chat server