> On Aug 20, 2025, at 11:44 PM, steve ulrich via NANOG <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> 
> the lindy effect for email is particularly strong in some communities.  NANOG 
> seems to be one of them.

I think that for some of us, e-mail was the original version of IM, as it 
was/is the common cross-systems way to communicate with each other.  I was 
horrified when I was forced to sign up for an AIM account with one company but 
grew to be ok with it as a way to reach colleagues.

If you were always online, you could have a bot manage your presence on IRC to 
maintain history and other elements, but these days you take something like 
Slack/Discord and whatnot and it’s very much like that but “in the cloud” as a 
service vs having to each run your own bot.

It also doesn’t have the annoying/confusing IETF-type stuff that was in the 
Jabber protocol where you could have per-device presences that are different 
and lost messages because they sent something to a machine or device that won’t 
be online for a few days.

Now with Zoom, Slack, MS Teams, Webex(Teams/Spark), etc I’m back in the world 
where I used to have a common client like Adium that aggregated it all together 
and don’t have that option really these days.  Ideally the services would work 
on some sort of federation/interop but there’s not a lot of 
motivation/justification for that.

- Jared
_______________________________________________
NANOG mailing list 
https://lists.nanog.org/archives/list/[email protected]/message/SGD77SH6HZE67QJLRQZBNNJNWXQ3PLKG/

Reply via email to