Hi!
Yesterday I've launched first public Bouillon server. It is relevant
to Jabber because it uses XMPP as a transport, it also uses rosters
as a material for building social network (in plain words, in reuses
existing IM contact social network). Bouillon functionality
intersects with
This is extremely impressive! Is it possible to set up such a system where a
user would be able to use their XMPP ID's from other domains to edit? For
example, is it possible that [EMAIL PROTECTED] could use the Bouillon
component on foo.org even though jabber.org isn't running the Bouillon
Consider a situation. Bouillon components of user A scans user A's
roster and
finds [EMAIL PROTECTED]. Current behavior is to ping [EMAIL PROTECTED]
co.jabber.org to
establish Bouillon conversation. So, this must be a component in the
current
state of things.
Theoretically, a user may
For those interested, the first Psi Developer Chat is now underway at
our MUC whicih is:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Drop on by if you'd like to interact with the core team and a random
assortment of volunteers and passers-by. :)
--
Psi webmaster (http://psi-im.org)
im:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hey all,
A few announcements today. First, Wildfire 3.0 beta is now available. It
includes two major new features:
* Connection manager architecture. Connection managers are light-weight
processes that handle load by aggregating client connections to a core
Wildfire server. Multiple connection
On 6/21/06, Victor Grishchenko [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
So finally, I am currently considering possible Bouillon
applications. In particular I think it worth discussing in regard to
Jabber-driven real-time wiki and Jabber whiteboarding initiatives.
Someone much more creative than I will have
On 22.06.2006, at 7:48, Hal Rottenberg wrote:
Someone much more creative than I will have to explain this to me. I
logged in, I looked at the manual. I don't quite get it. Can you
give me a more concrete example of how this might be used instead of a
wiki?
Just use it as a wiki. Addressing