Anyone got a BOSH-compatible server I can play with? On Wed, Jun 25, 2008 at 3:42 PM, bear <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > hmm, going to have to get some tutorials on the various client libs > folks have settled on (and poke Nathan to demo the ones we use) :) > > > On Wed, Jun 25, 2008 at 4:26 PM, Steve Ivy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> All, >> >> Thanks for the great info! Gives me some stuff to think about. I >> hadn't seen JSJaC before, I'll definitely be looking at that further. >> >> --Steve >> >> On Wed, Jun 25, 2008 at 11:17 AM, Daniel Mills <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >>> We're not exposing XMPP to users directly. Currently, we use it only to >>> implement bookmarks sharing notifications between accounts. The >>> notifications are processed and displayed along with other Weave >>> notifications. We hope to use XMPP to implement the actual data >>> distribution, though (we do that over WebDAV right now). >>> We wrote our own XMPP stack to get started, but we're considering to switch >>> to JSJaC in the future. >>> Dan >>> >>> On Jun 25, 2008, at 11:04 AM, Mickaël Rémond wrote: >>> >>> Interesting. Are you using any special mechanism or direct messaging to the >>> users ? >>> Le 25 juin 08 à 19:58, Aza a écrit : >>> >>> In Mozilla Labs, we are using XMPP in Weave to push around real-time updates >>> to the stuff you want to sync between browsers/mobile/etc. >>> >>> -- aza | ɐzɐ -- >>> >>> On Wed, Jun 25, 2008 at 10:21 AM, Mickaël Rémond >>> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >>>> >>>> Hello, >>>> To complete on this: >>>> - we have worked on lots of big non chat / IM oriented project. Some of >>>> them are in the gaming world (from betting to more casual games). >>>> - quite a large part of our customer base is building various types of >>>> social network. If you search a bit I am sure you will find some (maybe not >>>> easily the biggest ones however). >>>> We have developed our pluggable and extensible pubsub API especially for >>>> this type of needs. >>>> This is something I will talk about in London on friday: >>>> >>>> http://www.process-one.net/en/blogs/article/erlang_exchange_london_uk_june_27th/ >>>> Le 25 juin 08 à 19:05, Blaine Cook a écrit : >>>> >>>> * Obviously Twitter is one of the better-known examples, send millions of >>>> messages a day, and have a [proper] PubSub endpoint that hasn't gone live. >>>> * iminlikewithyou uses XMPP to run their games (possibly other stuff) >>>> * In a conversation with Alex @ twitter, he mentioned that some "big >>>> media" online gaming company is using XMPP (specifically Openfire) to >>>> handle >>>> all of their chat stuff. >>>> >>>> * I'm working with three separate (two high-profile) sites that are >>>> interested in adding XMPP support, espeically the PubSub angle. >>>> >>>> I think the challenge is finding applications of XMPP where the developers >>>> have opened up access to outside developers. Thankfully, I think that's the >>>> shift we're seeing, and many of the examples on this thread are along those >>>> lines. >>>> b. >>>> >>>> On Wed, Jun 25, 2008 at 8:01 AM, Steve Ivy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> There's been a long discussion recently (some of which happened on >>>>> this list) about open messaging between websites and between users on >>>>> those websites, based somewhat on the current social network friends >>>>> messaging model. I think there's a general consensus that XMPP can and >>>>> should play an important role in this idea of an open, distributed, >>>>> near-real-time network of websites, but I also think that there is >>>>> disagreement on what the transition from xmpp's real-time network to >>>>> the web's non-real-time, non-persistent network looks like. >>>>> >>>>> In the interest in understanding different ways that XMPP can be >>>>> used/built on, I'm wondering if anyone has some examples of a >>>>> real-world XMPP deployment for non-IM purposes? Perhaps something >>>>> based on PubSub? >>>>> >>>>> Thanks, >>>>> >>>>> --Steve >>>>> >>>>> -- >>>>> Steve Ivy >>>>> http://redmonk.net // http://diso-project.org >>>>> This email is: [ ] bloggable [x] ask first [ ] private >>>> >>>> >>>> -- >>>> Mickaël Rémond >>>> http://www.process-one.net/ >>> >>> -- >>> Mickaël Rémond >>> http://www.process-one.net/ >>> >>> >>> >>> >> >> >> >> -- >> Steve Ivy >> http://redmonk.net // http://diso-project.org >> This email is: [ ] bloggable [x] ask first [ ] private >> > > > > -- > --- > Bear > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work) > [EMAIL PROTECTED] (jabber & email) > http://code-bear.com/bearlog (weblog) > > PGP Fingerprint = 9996 719F 973D B11B E111 D770 9331 E822 40B3 CD29 >
-- Steve Ivy http://redmonk.net // http://diso-project.org This email is: [ ] bloggable [x] ask first [ ] private
