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Re: Matrix communication protocol.


From: Adrien Bourmault (neox on Freenode)
Subject: Re: Matrix communication protocol.
Date: Fri, 31 Jul 2020 11:12:45 +0200
User-agent: K-9 Mail for Android

   For instance, Conversations is in the FSD, as confirmed free software.
   [1]https://directory.fsf.org/wiki/Conversations.im
   I don't understand your statements. XMPP is used by major companies
   like Whatsapp for example, if you need a proprietary one (so Facebook
   use it).
   Conversations is GPL v3, so this is copyleft isn't it ? The Matrix
   protocol is not especially copyleft nor XMPP. These are just spec
   documents that describes functions. If Matrix is under copyleft, Vector
   is actually violating its own license !
   Conversations advocates for free software, unlike Element for example.
   This is a huge difference.
   Librement,

   Le 31 juillet 2020 10:58:30 GMT+02:00, Msavoritias
   <marinus.savoritias@disroot.org> a écrit :

As I said they mainly had issues with the UI/UX and some features that
were missing like stickers. I searched for the second one and there
didn't seem to be an intention to implement stickers.
Things don't seems to be changing on that front though. The last client
on that page Zom moved to matrix too.
If you ask me they are different crowds. XMPP is for techies with no
chance of going mainstream.
Matrix takes a more radical approach and even now it is used more than
XMPP. With XMPP being mostly gone since Google and Facebook Stopped
using it. Gone outside of the tech communities that is. Only place I
see recommending it is for the enccryption.
If you ask me I would prefer a copyleft protocol. Because neither XMPP
or Matrix can stop themselves from being EEE. But I will take what i
can get.
In mobile at least there doesn't seem to be enough development outside
of Conversations. I know it is pretty popular with privacy folks though.
So maybe it finds some use there.
I like the standarization you said the community is trying. But I think
its too late for that. With all the fragmentation and people moving on.
You are right that people still use it but I think it is more like IRC.
It is good for the minority but you are not going to convince new users
to join there.
We should look how to convince new users to join in modern protocols.
If Conversations are the benchmark for how much behind XMPP is in
capabilities that a modern user wants, then I don't know if it can be
overcomed.
MSavoritias
On Fri, Jul 31, 2020 at 03:00, Denver Gingerich <denver@ossguy.com>
wrote:

     On Thu, Jul 30, 2020 at 09:51:43PM +0200, Msavoritias wrote:

     Conversations is badly designed. I am talking from experience
     trying for
     people to adopt it.

     I haven't had any bad experiences getting people to adopt
     Conversations. Maybe you could be more specific about what
     particular aspects of Conversations they have issues with?

     Every other client listed on this page:
     <<[2]https://xmpp.org/software/clients.html>> for android is
     basically
     with
     design from twenty years ago.
     There doesn't seem to be new clients popping up. for mobile at
     least.
     In contrast Matrix <<[3]https://matrix.org/clients/>> has a lot of
     new
     clients
     with active development.

     I agree that the XMPP community could make a prettier clients page
     with screenshots and such, like Matrix has. There are at least as
     many XMPP clients under active development as there are Matrix
     clients.

     Its not the problem of something Conversations are missing.
     Although it
     misses a lot of stuff. Like stickers and widgets.
     The thing is that every client I installed had different
     capabilities
     entirely. It made sense when I read the phylosophy behind XMPP and
     Matrix
     though. Matrix wants to be ,from my perspective, a coherent
     standard. One
     piece. XMPP is more modular. Which explains the fragmentation in
     the XMPP
     ecosystem.

     True that is another thing the XMPP community could work on. We do
     have compliance suites that will tell you if your client meets a
     certain "coherent standard":
     <[4]https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0423.html#im>
     However, we haven't done enough work to advertise this or certify
     clients, so it's not yet easy to benefit from this work as a person
     new to XMPP.
     There seem to be enough people using XMPP for it to continue on an
     upward trajectory. It might not see the hockey stick growth that
     other protocols do, but it also hasn't flamed out, which I fear may
     happen with some of the newer, more hyped protocols.
     Denver
     <[5]https://jmp.chat/>

References

   1. https://directory.fsf.org/wiki/Conversations.im
   2. https://xmpp.org/software/clients.html
   3. https://matrix.org/clients/
   4. https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0423.html#im
   5. https://jmp.chat/

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