- cross-posted to:
- goodnews@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- goodnews@lemmy.ml
Time for Element/Matrix to shine!
Good. I hope Zulip, Mattermost and Matrix benefit from this as they’re FOSS and therefore better for society.
At Zulip, we believe that your chat history should be a valuable knowledge repository.
omg, no. Chat apps as information repositories, really?
Look, I dislike Slack as much as the next guy, but I can’t really fault them here. If you’re looking through freaking chat history to find valuable information, you screwed up. And since people tend to misspell things, use shorthand and whatnot, you’re most likely than not, going to have a bad time searching for that Important Thing ™. Trust me, it’s painful to do.
Use forums, use ticketing systems, heck, use emails! All of these are better at archiving information and making it browsable. More than chat apps, at any rate. Just… use chat apps for, you know, chatting.
Chat apps as information repositories, really? […] use emails
How are emails better than chats in that regard?
Because emails can be threaded? So it can be used as some kind of ticketing system. Newcomers can easily catch up too.
Zulip has threading, which you can even rename after you already set a topic. I don’t know an email client where you can easily rename mail threads.
If you imagine a ticketing system based on mail conversations, it’s not far from Zulip. You should try it.
Zulip has threading, which you can even rename after you already set a topic. I don’t know an email client where you can easily rename mail threads.
Not only can you edit the topic of your own messages, but (if the right organization setting is enabled) you can actually change the topic of other people’s messages which is really awesome for moving offtopic digressions out of a conversation. all of the messages remain visible in their original temporal order in the full stream view, but when you “narrow” to a specific topic the offtopic messages disappear.
Yeah, that’s vastly superior to everything I’ve seen with emails. I wish mails worked like Zulip.
within a “stream” (the word zulip uses for channels/rooms/groups/etc), they have a concept of topics… which are sort of like linear email threads (without nested replies).
a proper ticketing system is nice to have, but, if you have any kind of chat then some information will inevitably end up there and only there. so the question is not if chat is a knowledge repository but rather how long it takes to find things there (and then to find related things after you find one thing). zulip’s fast search and topics make this very easy.
Threaded conversations is what I was getting at, yes. Also, I’m not sure about Zulip, but emails can also be backed up and archived.
see my reply above. zulip is less of a slack clone than mattermost or rocketchat are; it has “topics” within “streams” which are a kind of threading.
besides database backups it can also export everything to static html for archival.
Come to Xmpp world people! :):)
Is there an xmpp client would you would recommend as a slack replacement? Some things which make slack popular include:
- full history on the server
- fast search (across all channels in an organization)
- integration with lots of 3rd party services
- the above features working smoothly on both desktop and mobile
As far as I know the free software viable slack alternatives currently are zulip, mattermost, rocketchat, and matrix (element). It isn’t that xmpp couldn’t do what slack does, but if there is a client that does I haven’t seen it.
You can try Movim, I think it’s most alike from all Xmpp clients.
Anyone have any insight on Revolt - https://app.revolt.chat ? Seems to be a decent Discord alternative, but wondering what other’s thoughts are on it.