On Tue, 15 Jun 2021 at 21:18, Peter Scholtens via Users users@lists.geany.org wrote:
As an FOSS project, one further requirement I would suggest is to *keep* using an open source and federated protocol. Obliging infrequent users to sign on to a developer site seems like a too high threshold to me.
"To start chatting on Matrix you’ll need to sign up for a user account." -- Matrix intro
So its the same thing, just a different place, users will still have to make yet another account.
Or go to chat.mozilla.org and you get "sign in".
The Matrix protocol is practically proven by the reference implementation of Element, which can run as App and as webclient. Other Matrix clients exist: https://matrix.org/clients Organisations like Gnome and Mozilla have switched to Matrix, to give some examples.
The Matrix website seems to me to be totally navel gazing, all wrapped up in its own world, protocols and so on, and not at all interested in the users. AFAICT from a simple peruse its all in one conversation. I presume it isn't, but its not clear in the intro documentation how to set up a <insert Matrix's term for a Geany related group> and how to get people to find it.
Organisations like Mozilla and Gnome seem to be running their own servers, but as Enrico said, that will only happen for Geany if someone does it _and maintains it_ ... and not just for his suggested three weeks ;-)
And I still do not believe chat is a good support tool anyway, IRC or Matrix or whatever. For things like release discussions, yeah its fine, all the participants are planned to be available at once, but its poor for support, questions go unanswered because nobody knows, or possibly even worse well meaning people give bad advice, until someone who knows happens along, by which time the OP has left.
Cheers Lex
Peter Sch.
15 jun. 2021 12:47:05 Lex Trotman elextr@gmail.com:
On Tue, 15 Jun 2021 at 17:44, Thomas Martitz kugel@rockbox.org wrote:
Am 15.06.21 um 08:35 schrieb Lex Trotman:
As I said above, IM of any sort is only really useful if enough people are in the same time zone, and actually participating, but for a project with low participation by "experts" it is a poor support mechanism.
Although maybe it is useful for the folks cooperating doing releases (whatever happened to 1.38 BTW?)
Well, at least with IM chat rooms you automatically get the history to your clients while you went away, in that regard it's no worse than email or github.
Hmmm, possibly, as I've never used it I don't know how well it might work for support.
It is also nice that github, discourse, zulip etc keep conversations together, does it do that or mix them up like IRC does?
Anyhow whatever we decide, we need something that supports clients without effort (like a browser not a specific client) and needs no admin/maintenance effort since the Geany organisation has none available as Enrico pointed out above.
Cheers Lex
Time zones is a general problem which cannot be solved.
Best regards.
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