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  3. current thoughts after experimenting with some proposed discord alternatives recently:matrix: despite the honourable efforts of instance maintainers, i actually think that client apps are the achilles heel of matrix.

current thoughts after experimenting with some proposed discord alternatives recently:matrix: despite the honourable efforts of instance maintainers, i actually think that client apps are the achilles heel of matrix.

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  • ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA ari@fedi.arimelody.space

    current thoughts after experimenting with some proposed discord alternatives recently:

    matrix: despite the honourable efforts of instance maintainers, i actually think that client apps are the achilles heel of matrix. every app is missing features i would really rather have, even if the server supports them all. everything feels like a hack built on a hack, and its fragile ecosystem shows. i can't recommend it if you're moving from discord, but i welcome you to try it out and see if it works for you and your friends!

    signal: if your primary use for discord is DMs and group chats, you may feel right at home with signal! i just chatted with my girlfriend for about four hours with webcam and screenshare, and it was a very pleasant experience! do note that the desktop app is rough around the edges; signal is a mobile app first.

    mumble (in progress): i have a server i've kept as a voice chat fallback for discord for months- if i can convince my friends to Put Up With the huge interface downgrade, i'd love to test it on its strengths. its weaknesses are quite the blight, though. it's open-source, so i wonder could a third-party client claim superiority with a better UX and design.

    fluxer: evidently vibe-coded: the commit history dates back to early january with an inhumane amount of code in its first commit (1.4m lines of code across 9k files. ok bud). assuming that didn't kill it for you already, (bold take based on speculation. read the developer's own blog post on fluxer's development before making up your mind on this) i'm concerned about the long-term maintainability of the app. i expect it to be unstable for quite some time, and self-hosting is not recommended by the developer for the time being. on the upside, they seem like a nice fellow! no ill will here. the app's design also blatantly rips from discord, which i suppose is a selling point to some, but i'd personally like to see something new.

    stoat (ex. revolt): same "copying discord" comment from before applies. despite being open-source, it seems to sorely lack self-hosting support, which i consider a must-have for my future community chat app. it's failed to take hold of discord's marketshare since it launched, and i suspect there's a good reason for that.

    teamspeak: even ignoring controversial military ties, i echo similar sentiments to mumble, except that teamspeak also fails by being closed-source. for my purposes, it's mumble but worse. at least it's a bit prettier, i guess...

    fiore@rentseeking.questF This user is from outside of this forum
    fiore@rentseeking.questF This user is from outside of this forum
    fiore@rentseeking.quest
    wrote last edited by
    #12
    mumble alternative client would go hard actually . i love mumble , i would live in mumble if it had screenshare support . while now i have to move somewhere else everytime i wanna share my screen , which is . not great lol

    ive been looking around for a simple screensharing solution to use together w mumble . i literally just wanna be able to start obs if im sharing , and to point my video player to the stream if im watching . that would literally be enough to make me happy

    maybe smth p2p thats implemented in a mumble client could work but im not quite sure bweh
    ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA ari@fedi.arimelody.space

      current thoughts after experimenting with some proposed discord alternatives recently:

      matrix: despite the honourable efforts of instance maintainers, i actually think that client apps are the achilles heel of matrix. every app is missing features i would really rather have, even if the server supports them all. everything feels like a hack built on a hack, and its fragile ecosystem shows. i can't recommend it if you're moving from discord, but i welcome you to try it out and see if it works for you and your friends!

      signal: if your primary use for discord is DMs and group chats, you may feel right at home with signal! i just chatted with my girlfriend for about four hours with webcam and screenshare, and it was a very pleasant experience! do note that the desktop app is rough around the edges; signal is a mobile app first.

      mumble (in progress): i have a server i've kept as a voice chat fallback for discord for months- if i can convince my friends to Put Up With the huge interface downgrade, i'd love to test it on its strengths. its weaknesses are quite the blight, though. it's open-source, so i wonder could a third-party client claim superiority with a better UX and design.

      fluxer: evidently vibe-coded: the commit history dates back to early january with an inhumane amount of code in its first commit (1.4m lines of code across 9k files. ok bud). assuming that didn't kill it for you already, (bold take based on speculation. read the developer's own blog post on fluxer's development before making up your mind on this) i'm concerned about the long-term maintainability of the app. i expect it to be unstable for quite some time, and self-hosting is not recommended by the developer for the time being. on the upside, they seem like a nice fellow! no ill will here. the app's design also blatantly rips from discord, which i suppose is a selling point to some, but i'd personally like to see something new.

      stoat (ex. revolt): same "copying discord" comment from before applies. despite being open-source, it seems to sorely lack self-hosting support, which i consider a must-have for my future community chat app. it's failed to take hold of discord's marketshare since it launched, and i suspect there's a good reason for that.

      teamspeak: even ignoring controversial military ties, i echo similar sentiments to mumble, except that teamspeak also fails by being closed-source. for my purposes, it's mumble but worse. at least it's a bit prettier, i guess...

      sqaaakoi@wetdry.worldS This user is from outside of this forum
      sqaaakoi@wetdry.worldS This user is from outside of this forum
      sqaaakoi@wetdry.world
      wrote last edited by
      #13

      @ari I have not tried Fluxer, but I have seen that it blatantly clones some of the worst features from Discord.

      If you have not read https://blog.fluxer.app/how-i-built-fluxer-a-discord-like-chat-app/ already, I suggest you do.

      The article addresses the vibe-coding concerns (which say it's not "vibe-coded" but LLMs are being used, so... the concerns are still valid)

      Regarding Matrix, client feature support is indeed the major issue. The 2 clients I see recommended most often for Discord users are Cinny and Commet. Both of these clients are... fine for casual use. They are both missing major features and for various reasons I can't recommend either as a perfect replacement.

      lukadjo@app.wafrn.netL 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • jes@labyrinth.zoneJ jes@labyrinth.zone
        @ari Some of the Matrix issues I think could've been avoided if deleted messages were completely removed instead of being replaced.
        there could be like a month or two of rollback but everything before that would be non-existant.
        or you could have all the messages being stored on the origin homeserver and only being requested by demand, having to download every message and image ever posted to the room is unsustainable.
        I know this is only one of the issues, but it's one of those issues that can COMPLETELY kill it being anywhere near a competitor to discord, as it can't hold even medium size discord servers worth of users.
        ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
        ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
        ari@fedi.arimelody.space
        wrote last edited by
        #14

        @Jes honestly i just don't think federation is a great fit for a community chat app. this may be a controversial take, but i'm actually perfectly happy with the independent silos provided by teamspeak, mumble, and almost all game servers. i don't really think retaining the rooms and members of dead servers is particularly useful, and i think attempting to build software that carries the burden of everyone else's activity like that in the first place was asking for trouble.

        jes@labyrinth.zoneJ 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • piku@blahaj.zoneP piku@blahaj.zone

          @ari@fedi.arimelody.space what if client that combines mumble and full ircv3(including, for example, pfps, multiline messages, emoji reacts)

          that could be nice

          ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
          ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
          ari@fedi.arimelody.space
          wrote last edited by
          #15

          @piku if the app could be built on top of IRCv3 without stunting its future development (tech debt, limiting features, etc), this sounds good! i haven't looked into those protocols (yet) so can't make an assertion either way

          navi@social.vlhl.devN 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • byte@awawa.clubB byte@awawa.club
            @ari how about mattermost? seems mostly like slack replacement, but does the same things
            ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
            ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
            ari@fedi.arimelody.space
            wrote last edited by
            #16

            @byte i just poked at this and, well, i'm sure someone who loves slack could enjoy it, but most people i know Do Not Love slack

            it's marketed as a corporate instant-messaging app, and that's perfectly okay- but that likely hurts its viability as a more
            community-centric chat app

            byte@awawa.clubB 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA ari@fedi.arimelody.space

              @byte i just poked at this and, well, i'm sure someone who loves slack could enjoy it, but most people i know Do Not Love slack

              it's marketed as a corporate instant-messaging app, and that's perfectly okay- but that likely hurts its viability as a more
              community-centric chat app

              byte@awawa.clubB This user is from outside of this forum
              byte@awawa.clubB This user is from outside of this forum
              byte@awawa.club
              wrote last edited by
              #17
              @ari fair
              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • fiore@rentseeking.questF fiore@rentseeking.quest
                mumble alternative client would go hard actually . i love mumble , i would live in mumble if it had screenshare support . while now i have to move somewhere else everytime i wanna share my screen , which is . not great lol

                ive been looking around for a simple screensharing solution to use together w mumble . i literally just wanna be able to start obs if im sharing , and to point my video player to the stream if im watching . that would literally be enough to make me happy

                maybe smth p2p thats implemented in a mumble client could work but im not quite sure bweh
                ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                ari@fedi.arimelody.space
                wrote last edited by
                #18

                @fiore fwiw, while looking into matrix hosting, i found that a webRTC connection over relays (see TURN) was the preferred method of setting up VOIP.

                while it would sidestep stock mumble quite substantially, if the architecture is designed to be extensible enough, i don't see why a mumble server couldn't just negotiate a relay link between participants to support even a simple video feed!

                fiore@rentseeking.questF 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA ari@fedi.arimelody.space

                  current thoughts after experimenting with some proposed discord alternatives recently:

                  matrix: despite the honourable efforts of instance maintainers, i actually think that client apps are the achilles heel of matrix. every app is missing features i would really rather have, even if the server supports them all. everything feels like a hack built on a hack, and its fragile ecosystem shows. i can't recommend it if you're moving from discord, but i welcome you to try it out and see if it works for you and your friends!

                  signal: if your primary use for discord is DMs and group chats, you may feel right at home with signal! i just chatted with my girlfriend for about four hours with webcam and screenshare, and it was a very pleasant experience! do note that the desktop app is rough around the edges; signal is a mobile app first.

                  mumble (in progress): i have a server i've kept as a voice chat fallback for discord for months- if i can convince my friends to Put Up With the huge interface downgrade, i'd love to test it on its strengths. its weaknesses are quite the blight, though. it's open-source, so i wonder could a third-party client claim superiority with a better UX and design.

                  fluxer: evidently vibe-coded: the commit history dates back to early january with an inhumane amount of code in its first commit (1.4m lines of code across 9k files. ok bud). assuming that didn't kill it for you already, (bold take based on speculation. read the developer's own blog post on fluxer's development before making up your mind on this) i'm concerned about the long-term maintainability of the app. i expect it to be unstable for quite some time, and self-hosting is not recommended by the developer for the time being. on the upside, they seem like a nice fellow! no ill will here. the app's design also blatantly rips from discord, which i suppose is a selling point to some, but i'd personally like to see something new.

                  stoat (ex. revolt): same "copying discord" comment from before applies. despite being open-source, it seems to sorely lack self-hosting support, which i consider a must-have for my future community chat app. it's failed to take hold of discord's marketshare since it launched, and i suspect there's a good reason for that.

                  teamspeak: even ignoring controversial military ties, i echo similar sentiments to mumble, except that teamspeak also fails by being closed-source. for my purposes, it's mumble but worse. at least it's a bit prettier, i guess...

                  irelephant@app.wafrn.netI This user is from outside of this forum
                  irelephant@app.wafrn.netI This user is from outside of this forum
                  irelephant@app.wafrn.net
                  wrote last edited by
                  #19

                  Xmpp is like matrix but the servers suck less and the clients suck way more

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • sqaaakoi@wetdry.worldS sqaaakoi@wetdry.world

                    @ari I have not tried Fluxer, but I have seen that it blatantly clones some of the worst features from Discord.

                    If you have not read https://blog.fluxer.app/how-i-built-fluxer-a-discord-like-chat-app/ already, I suggest you do.

                    The article addresses the vibe-coding concerns (which say it's not "vibe-coded" but LLMs are being used, so... the concerns are still valid)

                    Regarding Matrix, client feature support is indeed the major issue. The 2 clients I see recommended most often for Discord users are Cinny and Commet. Both of these clients are... fine for casual use. They are both missing major features and for various reasons I can't recommend either as a perfect replacement.

                    lukadjo@app.wafrn.netL This user is from outside of this forum
                    lukadjo@app.wafrn.netL This user is from outside of this forum
                    lukadjo@app.wafrn.net
                    wrote last edited by
                    #20

                    If you don't mind, what discord features are the worst?

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA ari@fedi.arimelody.space

                      current thoughts after experimenting with some proposed discord alternatives recently:

                      matrix: despite the honourable efforts of instance maintainers, i actually think that client apps are the achilles heel of matrix. every app is missing features i would really rather have, even if the server supports them all. everything feels like a hack built on a hack, and its fragile ecosystem shows. i can't recommend it if you're moving from discord, but i welcome you to try it out and see if it works for you and your friends!

                      signal: if your primary use for discord is DMs and group chats, you may feel right at home with signal! i just chatted with my girlfriend for about four hours with webcam and screenshare, and it was a very pleasant experience! do note that the desktop app is rough around the edges; signal is a mobile app first.

                      mumble (in progress): i have a server i've kept as a voice chat fallback for discord for months- if i can convince my friends to Put Up With the huge interface downgrade, i'd love to test it on its strengths. its weaknesses are quite the blight, though. it's open-source, so i wonder could a third-party client claim superiority with a better UX and design.

                      fluxer: evidently vibe-coded: the commit history dates back to early january with an inhumane amount of code in its first commit (1.4m lines of code across 9k files. ok bud). assuming that didn't kill it for you already, (bold take based on speculation. read the developer's own blog post on fluxer's development before making up your mind on this) i'm concerned about the long-term maintainability of the app. i expect it to be unstable for quite some time, and self-hosting is not recommended by the developer for the time being. on the upside, they seem like a nice fellow! no ill will here. the app's design also blatantly rips from discord, which i suppose is a selling point to some, but i'd personally like to see something new.

                      stoat (ex. revolt): same "copying discord" comment from before applies. despite being open-source, it seems to sorely lack self-hosting support, which i consider a must-have for my future community chat app. it's failed to take hold of discord's marketshare since it launched, and i suspect there's a good reason for that.

                      teamspeak: even ignoring controversial military ties, i echo similar sentiments to mumble, except that teamspeak also fails by being closed-source. for my purposes, it's mumble but worse. at least it's a bit prettier, i guess...

                      alexia@app.wafrn.netA This user is from outside of this forum
                      alexia@app.wafrn.netA This user is from outside of this forum
                      alexia@app.wafrn.net
                      wrote last edited by
                      #21

                      fluxer has existed before LLMs became popular, the history was squashed into one commit because the dev did not want all the messy commits they made from school (they submitted this at their uni or whatever) visible.

                      from the relevant blogpost:

                      I published the project with a squashed history because the early work happened privately, and I didn't want to make 3,000+ messy commits part of the public record. I'm proud of where things are now, and the codebase has improved a lot over the 3+ years it was developed in private.

                      Squashing commits during a closed source to open source transition is common practice, and it doesn't imply the project was vibe-coded.

                      Link Preview Image
                      How I built Fluxer, a Discord-like chat app

                      Fluxer is a free and open source instant messaging and VoIP platform built for friends, groups, and communities.

                      favicon

                      Fluxer Blog (blog.fluxer.app)

                      ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • alexia@app.wafrn.netA alexia@app.wafrn.net

                        fluxer has existed before LLMs became popular, the history was squashed into one commit because the dev did not want all the messy commits they made from school (they submitted this at their uni or whatever) visible.

                        from the relevant blogpost:

                        I published the project with a squashed history because the early work happened privately, and I didn't want to make 3,000+ messy commits part of the public record. I'm proud of where things are now, and the codebase has improved a lot over the 3+ years it was developed in private.

                        Squashing commits during a closed source to open source transition is common practice, and it doesn't imply the project was vibe-coded.

                        Link Preview Image
                        How I built Fluxer, a Discord-like chat app

                        Fluxer is a free and open source instant messaging and VoIP platform built for friends, groups, and communities.

                        favicon

                        Fluxer Blog (blog.fluxer.app)

                        ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                        ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                        ari@fedi.arimelody.space
                        wrote last edited by
                        #22

                        @alexia i've edited my post to correct that statement. it was definitely wrong of me to lean on that assumption without reading deeper. i was unaware of this blog post at the time and kinda rushed a surface-level evaluation of fluxer as i already wasn't a huge fan of the "discord-like" model.

                        that's definitely a blunder on my part, and i think the best thing i can do is give it a better chance so i can evaluate it more fairly. i'll likely make a successor to this original post when i have a greater idea of the options available, with fluxer as a particular point of interest!

                        alexia@app.wafrn.netA 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA ari@fedi.arimelody.space

                          @piku if the app could be built on top of IRCv3 without stunting its future development (tech debt, limiting features, etc), this sounds good! i haven't looked into those protocols (yet) so can't make an assertion either way

                          navi@social.vlhl.devN This user is from outside of this forum
                          navi@social.vlhl.devN This user is from outside of this forum
                          navi@social.vlhl.dev
                          wrote last edited by
                          #23
                          @ari @piku

                          IRCv3 is fully backwards and forwards compatible, capabilities are negotiated upon connection -- and you can say "for capability X, you need Y and Z", so the whole mechanism is meant to allow new features while also semi-transparently handling older clients as well

                          so tech debt isn't an issue i'd worry about, and as someone looking into ircv3 and meaning to write my own clients, the main thing missing right now is just, people, writing software and getting involved with writing/reviewing the protocol extensions
                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA ari@fedi.arimelody.space

                            current thoughts after experimenting with some proposed discord alternatives recently:

                            matrix: despite the honourable efforts of instance maintainers, i actually think that client apps are the achilles heel of matrix. every app is missing features i would really rather have, even if the server supports them all. everything feels like a hack built on a hack, and its fragile ecosystem shows. i can't recommend it if you're moving from discord, but i welcome you to try it out and see if it works for you and your friends!

                            signal: if your primary use for discord is DMs and group chats, you may feel right at home with signal! i just chatted with my girlfriend for about four hours with webcam and screenshare, and it was a very pleasant experience! do note that the desktop app is rough around the edges; signal is a mobile app first.

                            mumble (in progress): i have a server i've kept as a voice chat fallback for discord for months- if i can convince my friends to Put Up With the huge interface downgrade, i'd love to test it on its strengths. its weaknesses are quite the blight, though. it's open-source, so i wonder could a third-party client claim superiority with a better UX and design.

                            fluxer: evidently vibe-coded: the commit history dates back to early january with an inhumane amount of code in its first commit (1.4m lines of code across 9k files. ok bud). assuming that didn't kill it for you already, (bold take based on speculation. read the developer's own blog post on fluxer's development before making up your mind on this) i'm concerned about the long-term maintainability of the app. i expect it to be unstable for quite some time, and self-hosting is not recommended by the developer for the time being. on the upside, they seem like a nice fellow! no ill will here. the app's design also blatantly rips from discord, which i suppose is a selling point to some, but i'd personally like to see something new.

                            stoat (ex. revolt): same "copying discord" comment from before applies. despite being open-source, it seems to sorely lack self-hosting support, which i consider a must-have for my future community chat app. it's failed to take hold of discord's marketshare since it launched, and i suspect there's a good reason for that.

                            teamspeak: even ignoring controversial military ties, i echo similar sentiments to mumble, except that teamspeak also fails by being closed-source. for my purposes, it's mumble but worse. at least it's a bit prettier, i guess...

                            ghost_desu@eepy.moeG This user is from outside of this forum
                            ghost_desu@eepy.moeG This user is from outside of this forum
                            ghost_desu@eepy.moe
                            wrote last edited by
                            #24

                            @ari@fedi.arimelody.space When I started looking into it, I thought self hosting and encryption being annoying would be the main issue with matrix, but it's 100% the clients, they're fine but dear god it's not something I could use long term

                            ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA ari@fedi.arimelody.space

                              @Jes honestly i just don't think federation is a great fit for a community chat app. this may be a controversial take, but i'm actually perfectly happy with the independent silos provided by teamspeak, mumble, and almost all game servers. i don't really think retaining the rooms and members of dead servers is particularly useful, and i think attempting to build software that carries the burden of everyone else's activity like that in the first place was asking for trouble.

                              jes@labyrinth.zoneJ This user is from outside of this forum
                              jes@labyrinth.zoneJ This user is from outside of this forum
                              jes@labyrinth.zone
                              wrote last edited by
                              #25
                              @ari the only real way to do federation in chat apps is probably more like XMPP where it's a burden of the user to store chat logs
                              jes@labyrinth.zoneJ 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA ari@fedi.arimelody.space

                                @alexia i've edited my post to correct that statement. it was definitely wrong of me to lean on that assumption without reading deeper. i was unaware of this blog post at the time and kinda rushed a surface-level evaluation of fluxer as i already wasn't a huge fan of the "discord-like" model.

                                that's definitely a blunder on my part, and i think the best thing i can do is give it a better chance so i can evaluate it more fairly. i'll likely make a successor to this original post when i have a greater idea of the options available, with fluxer as a particular point of interest!

                                alexia@app.wafrn.netA This user is from outside of this forum
                                alexia@app.wafrn.netA This user is from outside of this forum
                                alexia@app.wafrn.net
                                wrote last edited by
                                #26

                                oh, ty!! not sure if the edit federated only after I replied or if it was bad timing on my part

                                ty nonetheless!

                                ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • jes@labyrinth.zoneJ jes@labyrinth.zone
                                  @ari the only real way to do federation in chat apps is probably more like XMPP where it's a burden of the user to store chat logs
                                  jes@labyrinth.zoneJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                  jes@labyrinth.zoneJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                  jes@labyrinth.zone
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #27
                                  @ari but yeah connecting directly to servers for chats seems to be the most efficient way of doing it if chat history is a concern
                                  ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA ari@fedi.arimelody.space

                                    @fiore fwiw, while looking into matrix hosting, i found that a webRTC connection over relays (see TURN) was the preferred method of setting up VOIP.

                                    while it would sidestep stock mumble quite substantially, if the architecture is designed to be extensible enough, i don't see why a mumble server couldn't just negotiate a relay link between participants to support even a simple video feed!

                                    fiore@rentseeking.questF This user is from outside of this forum
                                    fiore@rentseeking.questF This user is from outside of this forum
                                    fiore@rentseeking.quest
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #28
                                    ithink murmur supporting smth like that could be cool yes

                                    or even just . a standalone thing webrtc server , which then the client implementation could make appear as tho they were part of the same interface . idk mumble is so cool and simple , you could pretty much have a full discord replacement if you mesh mumble irc and webrtc in the right way
                                    ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • ghost_desu@eepy.moeG ghost_desu@eepy.moe

                                      @ari@fedi.arimelody.space When I started looking into it, I thought self hosting and encryption being annoying would be the main issue with matrix, but it's 100% the clients, they're fine but dear god it's not something I could use long term

                                      ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                                      ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                                      ari@fedi.arimelody.space
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #29

                                      @ghost_desu i was genuinely surprised how much the onus was on clients. really ringing home that the FOSS space has more backend developers than frontend designers

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                                      • jes@labyrinth.zoneJ jes@labyrinth.zone
                                        @ari but yeah connecting directly to servers for chats seems to be the most efficient way of doing it if chat history is a concern
                                        ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                                        ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                                        ari@fedi.arimelody.space
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #30

                                        @Jes and perfectly sensible for 99% of what people use a community chat platform for- even on discord, where albeit outages are very infrequent, it's not the end of the world if our node goes down for a little while.

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                                        • alexia@app.wafrn.netA alexia@app.wafrn.net

                                          oh, ty!! not sure if the edit federated only after I replied or if it was bad timing on my part

                                          ty nonetheless!

                                          ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                                          ari@fedi.arimelody.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                                          ari@fedi.arimelody.space
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #31

                                          @alexia i edited around the same time, no worries! regardless, i'll be taking more time to look into fluxer properly, following this.

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