Hi all,

Thanks for the suggestions so far. Building on these, I'd like to propose a
few directions we could explore:


*1. Outreach at conferences and meetups*During the Summit, we discussed the
idea of having someone represent XMPP at selected events. Rather than
relying on a single representative, we could form a small team of
experienced speakers. To support them:

   - Offer training or coaching on public speaking and outreach for
   non-XMPP-native audiences.
   - Maintain a prioritized list of conferences and meetups for XMPP
   presence.
   - Create a shared repository of slides, topics, and workshop materials
   (including suggestions from Dan and Winfried) to avoid starting from
   scratch each time.


*2. Improving presence in third-party media*Our external footprint is often
weak or outdated. Wikipedia is a clear example. I've started work on the
XSF talk page (following COI guidelines), but more help would be welcome.
Other opportunities include:

   - Additional XMPP-related Wikipedia pages and translations.
   - "Awesome Lists" (https://github.com/sindresorhus/awesome) for
   decentralized systems.
   - ... other protocol, developer, or infrastructure directories where
   technologies are compared.

Looking ahead ambitiously: We could explore getting XMPP visible in widely
read publications (such as TechCrunch, The Verge, Wired, InfoQ). Pragmatic
first steps could include:

   - Identifying content we already have from XSF or projects suitable for
   external audiences.
   - Investigating workflows for submissions or pitches.

I'm interested to hear whether these directions make sense and who might be
willing to help move them forward. Could the CommTeam help coordinate
improvements or identify owners for specific tasks?

Kind regards,

  Guus


On Fri, Feb 6, 2026 at 12:57 AM Winfried Tilanus <[email protected]>
wrote:

> In my experience 101 type of talks on topics like:
> - setting up your xmpp server (private or not) for sysadmins
> - getting started with xmpp development for developers
> - programming real time communication in language X or Y at language
> specific meetups
> - setting up a private and secure messaging setup for a more security
> focussed audience
>
> I haven't tried hands-on workshops yet  ('after this workshop, you have
> your own federated xmpp server running'), curious how they will fall in the
> different audiences.
>
> In general I think it is a thing of connecting networks we are already
> participating in.
>
> Winfried
>
>
> On 5 February 2026 21:45:28 CET, Dan Caseley <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> When I reflect on this year vs last year at the stand, there was far less
>> "oh, you're still alive?" and far more "we already use Matrix" or "I can't
>> convert my friends & family".
>>
>> I think the second one is a technical problem that's somewhat solved in a
>> subset of clients & servers, and we could do more on that. But I think
>> that's probably digital outreach rather than eventing.
>>
>> I think the first one is a social problem, and I think there are a bunch
>> of talks you can do around that.
>> - How to quickly set up a server that ties into an auth provider for
>> quick "free" chat with minimal server requirements
>> - XMPP without Federation: Why Chat for Enterprise might want to
>> segregate, and why that doesn't mean no S2S
>> - XMPP in the Cloud, and On-Prem
>> - It's not all talk: pubsub, forms, and other first class citizens of XMPP
>>
>> I think there are topics above that hold some interest and some punch to
>> keep XMPP alive in people's minds, whilst also increasing the chances of
>> creating hooks for business and government (the latter of which I know was
>> of interest at Summit). This is all riffing though - I'm sure others will
>> have more and better ideas.
>>
>> I'd hope, for keeping it low fuss and low cost, we'd only need slideware
>> for these. Of course, live demos are always cool, but some client/server
>> demos can have some risk on the event network conditions etc.
>>
>> I'd also love to see us attracting communities to organising around XMPP,
>> in the same way they might do that around a Discord or Slack channel now. I
>> believe that's a key driver for getting folks to bring it into the
>> workplace, and to attracting developers and activists. But I don't have any
>> ideas on how to get there...
>>
>> Dan
>>
>> On Thu, 5 Feb 2026 at 18:30, Guus der Kinderen <
>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi everyone,
>>>
>>> At the Summit, we had a good discussion about outreach and positioning
>>> of XMPP, and whether we could be more deliberate in how we present XMPP as
>>> a technology in relevant communities and markets.
>>>
>>> One concrete idea that came up was: Having XSF representatives speak at
>>> selected events (conferences, meetups, etc.)
>>>
>>> More generally, this raises questions such as:
>>>
>>>    - Where do we want XMPP to be more visible?
>>>    - What audiences should we prioritize?
>>>    - What kinds of materials, messaging, or support would be needed?
>>>    - How can we do this in a sustainable, volunteer-friendly way?
>>>
>>> This thread is intended to collect ideas, experiences, and opinions on
>>> whether - and how - we might move toward more structured outreach.
>>>
>>> No decisions are implied at this point; the goal is simply to start a
>>> focused conversation.
>>>
>>> Kind regards,
>>>
>>>   Guus
>>>
>> --
> Normally there is some text here, bragging about the new phone and
> excusing for the brevity. That is insane: if this phone was really that
> great, I would have sent a decent mail.
>

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