IRC works well enough. Let's stick to IRC for realtime chat. I often
idle in #gnustep on freenode. Not too much dev activity or idling in
there.
Beyond that... some members of this community have experience using
XMPP, and I think most would be extremely unlikely to use voice calls
(good
IRC works well for me. When I need audio or video chat for collaboration, I use
gnu jami.
--
gry at #gnustep at freenode live chat
http://www.kiwiirc.com/client/irc.freenode.net/gnustep
On Tue, 19 Nov 2019 at 15:59, Umberto Cerrato wrote:
>
> Unfortunately there seems there is nothing like it atm...
The main FOSS team-chat tool, apart from classic IRC, seems to be
Rocket.chat. We use it at my employers and it works quite well for
business stuff: i.e., not voice and video and so
On 19/11/2019 16:17, Liam Proven wrote:
On Tue, 19 Nov 2019 at 15:43, David Chisnall wrote:
Their T are not some that I would ever consider agreeing to, or that
I would ever recommend for any free / open source software project and I
would strongly recommend that anyone considering using this
On Tue, 19 Nov 2019 at 15:43, David Chisnall wrote:
>
> Their T are not some that I would ever consider agreeing to, or that
> I would ever recommend for any free / open source software project and I
> would strongly recommend that anyone considering using this service
> reads their T carefully
Hi,
Discourse came up in the discussion. I've never used it, but Swift does
and apparently it works well for them.
David
On 19/11/2019 14:59, Umberto Cerrato wrote:
Interesting timing too...
I’ll check immediately! Also because I have some Project chat on it...
Unfortunately there seems
Interesting timing too...
I’ll check immediately! Also because I have some Project chat on it...
Unfortunately there seems there is nothing like it atm... I already heard some
privacy issues with it...
That would be that kind of choice you have to make when you have a very good
platform you
Hi,
Interesting timing, Discord just came up in the context of LLVM
yesterday and ass a result, I read their T and Privacy Policy.
Their T are not some that I would ever consider agreeing to, or that
I would ever recommend for any free / open source software project and I
would strongly