You want to see one of the most fascinating uses of IRC in a focused, dedicated community let me introduce you to the player group known as the "Fuel Rats" of Elite:Dangerous[1]. They use IRC for far more than just a hub to congregate and socialize, 100% of their actual dispatch operations are planned, coordinated and excuted on IRC.
If you run out of "fuel" in game, and you need a Fuel Rat to come rescue you, you do it in IRC. Dispatch talks to you in their IRC channel, other dispatchers are communicating in NOTAM[2] like notation with pilots out 'rescuing' other players.
You did say up to 2013. I know a lot of games that were heavily IRC based in coordination, but move on to either Slack or Discord around 2015. Though the link suggests it's still IRC main.
No, these are actual In-Real-Life-People. Maybe parent got their dates a wee bit wrong.
When I started playing Elite:Dangerous (circa release date 2014?) I ran out of fuel in a system I couldn't refuel in (wrong type of sun or something like that)...and so was stuck. The only way out was to self destruct.
After some googling I discovered the Fuel Rats on Reddit and then their IRC channel. So as per their S.O.P. I put out a call for assistance on their IRC channel and within 10-15 mins or so one of their crew appeared in-system and refuelled me. I don't like to abuse the word "awesome", but these folks were awesome. They were like the AA or RAC of the galaxy :)
The service is entirely free, in game and out of game. Fuel Rat 'rescuers' (or just 'fuel rats,' there might be a better term they use) do it for the fun of it. It's an amazing example of emergent gameplay.
I've been saved once or twice by fuel rats. The process is fantastic and seeing the dispatchers in action is fascinating. After they refuel you, they give you a little talk and help you avoid running out of fuel again.
"Right when Elite:Dangerous was coming out, I had just quit a 3-year stint of playing World of Warcraft ... When Frontier decided to add a feature to the July 2015 release, consisting of a refuelling limpet/probe that could be used to transfer fuel to someone who was out, I had a brain-flash and did a posting announcing that I was starting an organization called “The Fuel Rats” who would undertake to rescue people in-game who ran out of fuel. And, The Fuel Rats were an unexpected success ..."
Put me into the "they should move to Discord" crowd.
The hardest part of using their (really good) services was having to use IRC. If they'd used Discord, I'd hop into a server effortlessly. Instead, I had to navigate the byzantine vagaries of terrible UX while running out of oxygen. D:
This is 100% just how you feel, and it's not based on facts. IRC clients come in many varieties and the basic functionality matches Discord in ease of use.
Depends little bit, what you want. I don't like irssi too much, but for something over gnu screen or tmux this is pretty usable for longer sessions, collecting channel conversations (so, poor man bouncer + client setup).
HexChat is decent Linux or Windows client. When I used Windows, I liked mIRC, this was (and probably is) very versatile. I have seen customisations where you don't even feel that mIRC is used.
I think another good example of IRC usage was the channel for kimchi and its associated tools. It's a GUI for libvirtd but the interesting part is that they used to hold daily standups in IRC.
Just like we do today in Webex Teams for example.
I personally never liked the transition to web based chat because IRC was a lot more information dense than any web chat can be.
Being able to paste inline code doesn't sell it for me since there are pastebins you can host on prem easily.
I love going on Freenode, simply because the people that lurk on any given project's room have always been incredibly helpful to me, and really nice too. I am in the #clojure room semi-often (asking silly questions), and occasionally the Haskell room if I'm up for learning a bit more about theory.
I like how simple IRC is, but I get why so many people have an aversion towards it. In the age of Slack, telling people to install Weechat and connect to a server manually is kind of scary. I largely embrace the transition to something new, but I do have an issue with the open-source world moving to a proprietary platform.
I wish XMPP were more popular, since I think a federated chat system with an open protocol is pretty neat, but sadly I fear that the Slack hype-train might be a bit too far-gone.
I like it for the same reason. It's super nice when your doing some oss development, and have to ask something.
If you head into the xorg channel, you will find yourself talking to all the people who were also attending conferences about xorg 5-10 years ago. Those are exactly the people I want to talk to, when I have questions about xorg.
Funny this is the worst possible IRC network to use - so many channels are overly restrictive which leads to a crappy user experience. The usual claim is to "combat spam" but most other networks (OFTC) don't implement these policies and have little to no trouble with spam.
When there is a connection hiccup (once every couple months) and you get tossed to your backup nick then, in many channels, you can't send. What's worse, you can't re-nick while still in the channel. So you have to /part all such channels, re-nick, then /join them again. Often I just don't bother rejoining. It's extremely frictional.
For example, to join #django you have to be a registered user (+r), so you have to learn about NickServ and how it works before even being able to ask a question on a channel.
> I think a federated chat system with an open protocol is pretty neat
Have you looked into Matrix? It still has a few kinks to work out, but it seems to fit the bill, and the idea of bridging to other protocols (namely IRC and Slack) is an interesting idea for reducing friction.
I use XMPP with bridging to IRC (to access freenode). There would have been no need to reinvent that particular wheel. Sadly the hype-train comment upthread also applies to Matrix.
Well, yes - the hype train is the whole point, as they were looking for something more popular than XMPP.
Though I would disagree with there being no need for reinvention - historically (and AFAIK unchanged) there are several real issues with XMPP [0]. The idea of XMPP appeals to me, but its complexity and UX are costly, whereas Matrix just works well and is easy to use, which hopefully will allow it to spread beyond tech circles.
I probably should have been clear, I meant that the slack hype train has been joined by discord, even though it is essentially the same, it has just been marketed differently.
The biggest feature for me of Slack is newlines. The ability to break up a piece of text visually so that I can structure a complex question or explanation for more readability is incredibly valuable.
Chat history, ability to message people who are offline at the moment, sharing images/videos, no NickServ weird identification, no weird permission systems, no splits
A bouncer resolves many of these issues or you could use Matrix. It feels like dropping IRC entirely is akin to throwing out the baby with the bathwater.
Then you have to pay for a server and you have to admin that.
> or you could use Matrix
Sure. I wish Matrix well, and I hope they one day reach the point where they can beat Slack or Discord on the polish front.
> It feels like dropping IRC entirely is akin to throwing out the baby with the bathwater.
What baby are you throwing out? I appreciate that these services are proprietary but there's so little lockin in practice that I struggle to care. My gang already switched from Axon to Skype to Mumble to Discord, if and when Discord becomes onerous then we'll move again. Perhaps even to IRC. But for the time being, UX matters and IRC's remains extremely poor.
Going through the list of nuances would take a while, but i think it's fairly easy to see just how different IRC is to Slack from the get go. For one, setup is stupid easy compared to IRC. Making a server? Click of a button. It comes with a bot. I can add people directly.
I get the feeling you or someone is going to use this to argue how all of this can be achieved on IRC in some way, but it's just too much work. If you're someone who is trying to make open source chatting cool again, please respect opinions like mine regardless of how stupid you think they are. If IRC isnt at least as easy to use as Slack, i'm not using it for the same things.
Yeah, we get it, you're lazy, can't be arsed, you want someone else to do the work. We like configurability, decentralization, freedom of choice. We are different people. We will never agree. I suspect your kind outnumbers my kind by about 99 to 1.
If another user asks a question, and you are apathetic or bored of the answers to that question, thats fine. You’re allowed to have different preferences and not obligated to care about others’ preferences.
But I implore you not to respond with an insult to an answerer as if they’d barged in with an unsolicited opinion.
Yup. This was the exact reaction I expected to see on HN. Somehow, you're never welcome if you ever take an easy approach. I'm sorry i don't force feed myself nails for breakfast to get an extra dose of iron like you do, but forgive me for thinking there must be some sort of way where you can have both open source AND modern features! Wow, what a new concept for you hackers who just can't help but do everything the hard way even if it's totally unnecessary.
For what it's worth, I do some things the hard way. I like digging into the nitty gritty. I'm not a different species. The fact that you think I am is the reason you'd never get any middle ground accomplished. Being "outnumbered 99 to 1" not only reveals how you think of yourself as some kind of victim, but also implies that you exist in some strange reality where being in the minority is the 'right' side to be on. Funny, usually it's the opposite.
I just don't get it. Why, why can't we have both? Why is decentralised, open source, configurable, modern and easy
impossible to achieve all at once?
How do you expect to be able to set up a server with a click of a button, without paying for it, without hosting it yourself, to work without SaaS? What you want is a predatorily priced VC funded SaaS that only offers this cheap service to get you into their ecosystem. It's not possible to do this in a self-sustaining way.
Ofc you can use IRCCloud Teams, create servers with one click, but also pay for that.
And what other modern features ate you looking for? This is IRC today: https://quasseldroid.info/assets/images/phone.png and emoji reactions, typing notifiers as well as threads are already supported in some clients and being standardized.
I can’t quite tell from that screenshot: is there an IRC client that supports newlines and where you have some indication of whether the other clients support newlines?
The inability to structure text visually is my biggest reason for avoiding IRC.
It isn't impossible. It just isn't Slack. Slack is a service offered by a private company. You want to have it easy by consuming a service; I want to slog through the mess of setting up things. One of these things is on the path to "decentralised, open source, configurable, modern and easy". The other is not. I leave it to you to ponder which is which.
> I just don't get it. Why, why can't we have both? Why is decentralised, open source, configurable, modern and easy impossible to achieve all at once?
Because you don't do it. If anyone who wants a different user experience than IRC chooses to use a proprietary system, then how do you expect that user experience to come about as Free Software?
Long answer: My colleagues don't want to so I use it mostly for forums. Some programming languages have chat channels and I have heard that for open source dev it is still somewhat common but I suspect it is declining. It's a pity because I think Slack is stupid. Slack does not have the transparency of IRC and frankly the fact that you can share files and use fonts and indents are not selling points for me.
EDIT: Slack is stupid for me. To each their own I guess?
EDIT2: Just to make it clear, judging from other answers a lot of programmers use IRC every day. But not all of my colleagues are programmers. Some fall in the chasm between "data science" and programming and for such people IRC is unfortunately unfamiliar.
Indeed, you're still paying for electricity to run a server somewhere of course. ZNC, Quassel, The Lounge, WeeChat if you want to do it yourself. IRCCloud if you want to pay someone to do it for you.
We used bots to do that, but in todays world it's so easy to just stay logged in all the time, just leave a screen or tmux session running as a background process on a server
Would people pay for for a cloud service that bridged some of the gaps between Slack and IRC. Like notifications and offline message retention. Or would you just use Slack in those cases?
Some would consider that a feature, you only see the activity of the channels you've joined (but you can search for others at any time and you can preview messages in them before joining).
switching the channels is slow & non-intuitive
isn't "/join #channel-name" the same way you switch channels in IRC?
Most IRC clients allow you to quickly switch to frequently viewed channels via shortcuts (even irssi, a terminal client, does that). With Slack it is a clunky Ctrl-K and a first few letters of the channel name that may or may not lead to what you really want.
Yep, must say I miss the Escape-sequences for changing channels. Works fine via wee-slack though but unfortunately you need permission to join via wee-slack since it requires an API-key.
?? Slack has shortcuts for both of these. Cmd+0,1,2,3 to switch between orgs, opt+up/down to switch between channels. And also, as you mentioned, cmd+k for search-switching
I know Slack does support shortcuts, but search-switching is inferior to a direct shortcut. Let's say that you frequently use channels a and b in the org A and a channel c in the org B (this mode of operation is common). How do you get to a, b or c without even looking at the screen?
Yes I use it all the time especially when I'm learning a new thing or researching a strange behaviour of a program. I prefer much better the freedom to ask/discuss anything and the fast ask/reply/clarify cycle of IRC than fe stackoverflow with its strict rules.
Freenode has channels with people that are very helpful and friendly. Some channels I am frequent and would recommend: #django, #elixir-lang, #kotlin, #android-dev. I also visit (and get help) #mysql and #postgresql.
Actually I wanted to write a blog post to urge people to learn about and visit IRC, but I hope that this HN thread will suffice...
I pay for and use irccloud. You can probably use a VPN on top of that if you dont want even then to have your IP. You can also setup a connection bouncer on a server. Basically you tell it what ircd to connect to and it connects to it for you masking your IP. This is what IRCCloud does under the hood tbh.
Additionally: you may request a cloak which hides your IP address, useful if you are to visit any dubious channels. on Freenode f.e. you simply ask an operator at the main channel for one and you have it.
Secondly you could also setup a Digital Ocean droplet (server) with an IRC client and ssh into that.
Why would you want to do this? For me IRC is mostly synonymous to technichal discussion on freenode. And my quasselcore runs on cheap rented machine in the cloud. So I honestly fail to see the risk with revealing that IPv4 address, even if it is a public one.
I have not measured whether that machine receives more port scanning than any other, because honestly I did not think that any port scanner would work just through a list of IRC users. Even after thinking of it, it sounds unlikely.
I will try these. Some of the ones that interest me seem to have a ton of people but such little chatter. IRC still reminds me of the days of AIM where people congregated online. People are always "online" with their phones these days so it's nice to use IRC to get that "online community" feel.
Yes probably you are right. What I forgot to add on my comment is probably the most important IRC fact: That IRC is a totally and completely open protocol; anybody can create his own client or server and either join the existing IRC networks or create his own.
Actually, even if you don't have an IRC client you can right now just telnet to irc.freenode.com port 6667 and enter a couple of commands to join a channel and see the discussion: http://protofusion.org/wordpress/2009/08/irc-via-telnet/
The fact that IRC is an open protocol is of course what makes it "non-trending". You can't easily monetize from IRC and you can't hide the data of IRC behind closed gardens. Everything is there in the open.
Yeah I'm well aware, it's just that for all purposes except when thinking about data privacy etc., IRC is dominated by slack and even discord. Yeah, there are some curmudgeons who'll say "But I can't use discord from a shell!" or whatever, but that's not really meaningful
Absolutely. Freenode is still running strong, and is probably the best place for live support for a ton of open source projects and Linux distros.
I've tried various other popular chat options (like Discord and Telegram) and have been really frustrated by some of their limitations -- particularly in regards to logging, where afaik there's no way to get the logs off their servers and on to my own machine for archiving, offline browsing/searching, advanced regex searches, etc. There's also no way to get the logs if you're not logged in, or if you ever lose access to the servers for some reason.
Discoverability on these alternate chat platforms is also really poor. At least on IRC I could always try typing in a channel like #gentoo or #linux or #debian or #ocaml or #scheme or #lisp or #emacs or #vim, etc, and have a pretty good chance of these subject-related channels existing. On Discord and Telegram, I have to find a link to the channel somehow or get invited. Which is great for private channels, but for channels that you want anyone with an interest in the subject to join, it's simply awful.
That said, they do have some advantages, like integrated images, video, and audio.. and if you need those features, then vanilla IRC certainly isn't good enough. But for me, who does 99.9% of my chatting in plain text, those other features are very rarely necessary and IRC suits my needs just fine. Also, with IRC one could at least always post links to external image/video/audio hosting sites, if you wanted to share that sort of media... which, again, is good enough for me most of the time. In fact, things like videos and images poping up all over the place on chat platforms like Telegram and Discord are just annoying most of the time anyway.
Just to note this here as it seems this hasn't been mentioned yet, the Twitch chat is based on IRC. They run their own servers and you have to log in with your Twitch credentials but you can user your usual IRC client to connect to the Twitch IRC.
In addition, special Twitch IRC clients have spawned, like TC [1] or Chatty [2] that include support for Twitch-specifics like Emotes, notifications and direct linking to the associated video streams.
Every day. I have a long running tmux session running irssi on a community Linux host that's been humming along in some forgotten corner of a vast data center for the past 11.71 years[0]. My ~/.irssi/config has me on a number of channels on a handful of different servers. Some on networks like chat.freenode.net and irc.mibbit.net, and some on single servers hosted by different groups of friends.
Freenode has been really helpful for me. I've had great conversations on ##aws, #lfs, #tmux, and #hammerspoon in recent weeks.
##security and ##ibmthinkpad are my personal favorites. They don't take themselves too seriously (as in, you're allowed to get off-topic), but can be super helpful when needed. The wealth of knowledge combined with the general lightheartedness is refreshing.
Waait a minute. I know we used to love sharing uptime on IRC back in the 90s but these days it's just irresponsible to leave a server running for 11 years without reboots.
Because when has it ever been patched? You know vulnerabilities in IRC clients do exist. That's why we were always told to not irc with root back in the days of BitchX.
I think that command is showing you the total number of hours the system has been running, not the uptime - so it could have been rebooted for patching
[Edit] - Slightly pedantically, it's the number of hours one of the disks has been powered up
That's right. We've got 4 bog standard 750G WD Caviar Blues in a software RAID array in that machine, all powered up for 11+ years, none of which appear to have caught any errors during that time. Pretty amazing.
The OS has been updated and the box rebooted for kernel updates a number of times over the years.
That's only intended to be a band-aid until you can do a reboot without heavily impacting users. Say your monthly maintenance isn't for another two weeks, but there's a kernel vulnerability that's very worrisome. You may be able to kpatch it, but you do still need to do a reboot later.
Freenode is still pretty active. I self-host an instance of The Lounge[0], which basically acts like an IRC bouncer + an account system to easily get friends/coworkers to use IRC.
I primarily use it for giving/getting help on technologies and open-source projects that I'm using.
While Freenode may not compete with Facebook, it's still pretty huge :)
There are 99 users and 84066 invisible on 32 servers
36 IRC Operators online
16 unknown connection(s)
53438 channels formed
I have 5185 clients and 1 servers
5185 5972 Current local users 5185, max 5972
84165 94773 Current global users 84165, max 94773
Highest connection count: 5973 (5972 clients) (476397 connections received)
I still use it as my primary form of communication. Only one job in my professional career have I NOT gotten from IRC. I use it mainly for conversational chats these days, though I still do get/give support on Freenode occasionally.
I know Slack is the new darling for these things, but their WebUI is so inefficient compared my IRC muscle memory. Wee-slack is great for the Slacks I can use it on (but nearly none of the community Slacks have open API slots for it.)
Yep, I use IRC all day, every day. I keep in touch with many of my friends on IRC, hang out in social and technical channels, organize developers on my projects, provide support channels on IRC, ask questions and reach out to projects I'm collaborating with... I'm in hundreds of channels on a dozen networks. I run a dozen IRC bots. IRC is still king. Nothing beats plaintext communication on a well-established protocol with hundreds of implementations. Least of all a proprietary walled garden like Slack, Discord, etc
If you think you don't like Slack, just wait until your company forces you to use Microsoft Teams ... Slack is really focused, performant, and an absolute joy to use in comparison.
If you think you don't like X, just wait until your company forces you to use Microsoft Y.
- _emacsomancer_'s law
I've used slack for school, and it was pretty useful. I'm using Teams at work, and it seems remarkably less so. I'm not sure if it's because nobody's comfortable using it for anything other than skype meetings, or because it somehow seems less intuitive or well thought out as slack. Probably a bit of both.
One thing that kind of kills me - we use visualstudio.com too for git (incidentally, it's interesting to see a strong tfs team struggling with git - vs/git integration is useful only if you're relative comfortable with git in the first place), and there doesn't seem to be any kind of strong integration between vs.com and ms teams. That's weird. I see my team on teams, I converse with them on teams, I have access to my backlog items on teams (with an azure plugin), but why can't I see my team's board? vs.com's UI takes some getting used to, but at the very least it seems like it should be accessible, with very little additional work, within teams.
Teams feels a lot like a half-baked (maybe 3/4 baked) response to Slack that could really be so much more.
"and there doesn't seem to be any kind of strong integration between vs.com and ms teams"
Is Teams the bastard stepchild of Microsoft? I haven't used Teams, but I recall reading a personal account probably 6 years ago about what working on Google+ was like. Every time something integrated to it, it was a mess and dragged the other products down. Word got around and groups actively avoided the Google+ team and were scrambling for justification as to why they shouldn't get integrated.
0 chance I could find the comment now, but it stuck with me all these years.
You can add a tab with an arbitrary URL to your 'team' - it's the "Website" Tab type. Presumably you could put the vs.com link for your team's board in using that?
> just wait until your company forces you to use Microsoft Teams
Teams isn't that terrible.
On my current gig, we use Teams (free for us because of some Action Pack or Office package - and that's fine because it's one less spend for us) and used to use Slack. I've used Slack and HipChat in previous employments as well.
I'll be honest, I don't see much difference between any of them, they all have their UIX minor annoyances and good points.
Ultimately with all these things it's all about good team etiquette and not interrupting your colleague workflow expecting responses within two minutes of pinging someone (we treat it like email, asynchronous, and for non-urgent communication). To be honest, I dislike the immediacy of these tools and usually mute every channel. If something's really that bloody urgent then just pick up the sodding phone :)
The underpinnings are a step in the right direction, but the UX is a dumpster fire, which makes me pine for the usability of the lesser dumpster fire of Lync/Skype for Business.
God forbid you ever need to be doing two IM conversations at a time, or attend a meeting and carry on a backchannel conversation concurrently.
It's apparently too difficult to do a MDI interface in Electron.
To be honest there's just four of us all working remotely so I've not bumped into this. But I take your points onboard. I will admit I thought the screen sharing capability in Teams was fairly poor, but it's not something we do often and can resort to TeamViewer or something like that if need be. But I do realise that's not an option for folks working in a regimented and heavily controlled environment such as a bank.
Also we're in our mid 40's to 50's so perhaps there's a generational discipline we have with these toys that the young guns may not have :) Don't get me wrong, I was a complete asshole on the college VAX messaging thing back in my teens :)
To be honest it doesn't seem any worse than Slack (I only use the desktop client). But as I mentioned earlier, we're a fairly small team and use it sparingly.
It’s Groove, rewritten from scratch, one more time. Ray Ozzie just can’t stop rewriting this damn app, again and again and again, and taking 5-7 years each time. - Joel Spolsky, 2008
IRC is still the backup communication network at large tech firms - I can personally attest to its use at Amazon and Facebook. Typically there are other, more advanced chat platforms in use for day-to-day (Amazon Chime and WorkChat, respectively), but when shit hits the fan those have deep dependency chains, whereas IRC basically just needs a single box with a network connection...
I used to be on Efnet and DALnet and ETG servers a lot in the 90s and 00s for anime. Now I’m on Freenode all the time for #python, #django, #ubuntu, #debian, etc. It’s a good place to ask quick questions. But even more importantly, I use it for rubberducking (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubber_duck_debugging), especially when I’m digging deep into an issue in a particular piece of software and I don’t expect my colleagues in the office to (immediately) understand what I’m talking about.
I’m even in ##latin to learn, you guessed it, the Latin language.
Weirdly this is the first time I've hearing the term, even though it is something I've practiced for years. Basically I was taught that if you ever really wanted to understand or proof something, teach it to someone else.
Woah thanks for the rubber duck link, that’s fun. But wouldn’t unit tests be even better? You “explain” the code line by line via unit test, except at the end of the exercise you have some tests! I’m only suggesting this because in the past few years I’ve basically discovered this approach to rubber ducking (writing tests when confused/something not working, using said tests to even step through code in a smaller context) and it’s been great.
Been using IRC pretty much daily for over 25 years, and I'm not stopping. That's where my friends are, most of whom are old-ish farts like me.
Also I like the barrier to entry IRC has, it keeps the worst of the worst out because you need some technical skill to even get in. That's why most programming language / distro channels on IRC are of better quality than random slacks or discord servers.
Technically, the barrier to entry is as low these days as any other messaging service: you can sign up on IRCCloud and instantly have a friendly browser-based experience without worrying about setting up a persistent client, logging etc. by yourself, and mobile and desktop clients are available.
These days the network effects just favour old farts and engineers.
Yes! I am one of the IRC operators for the IRC network Tilde Chat[0]. It is the main source of communication for the Tildeverse[1] community which is a group of Linux/BSD servers that offer free shell accounts to whoever wants one. It's a niche little community, but if you like unix and chatting on IRC then you'll feel right at home.
I use irccloud and I go on the DarkScience[0] IRCd. I even went as far as paying for the 1 year, I like just having it all in 1 client that never drops. I know I can setup a bouncer, but oh well. I prefer smaller communities. When I need programming or OS help I go on freenode where plenty of language communities are. Edit: Found out irccloud now supports connection bouncing, so you can use any irc client with them too[1].
I love IRC, particularly #freenode. I really detest having to first search out then go through the whole process of signing up for yet another Slack group.
Tech support, guidance on opening bug reports, etc. There are some projects where there's not an open forum to post questions, but opening an issue or filing a bug report will immediately get your head bitten off by an angry dev unless you've read X number of docs, combed through closed issues to make sure it hasn't been asked previously, reproduced the issue, provided a GDB stacktrace of the issue occurring, etc.
IRC support channels can provide some immediate front-line support and allow you to ask basic questions without being told to go die in a fire.
Freenode traffic on certain channels has gone way, way down, like dead, no action, long-term lurk only. I suspect many 20-somethings (or younger) have never heard of Freenode, and why would they, it does not work on a smart-phone. Meanwhile, rich content services that do work on phones, seem to be very, very popular and growing constantly. Personally, I do not trust all communications to a corporate entity. It would be a better world if distributed FOSS systems, perhaps Freenode? get better somehow
If it's not game like then 20-somethings and younger--especially younger--won't bother. But these youngins are not what you want when you're trying to learn something. Especially professionally and the professionals are more likely to be on IRC without any green behind their ears.
Phone IRC apps are the most annoying things in the world. Constant join and part messages as they disconnect and reconnect. That's one advantage of things like Slack; they handle persistence at the server level, rather than relying on the client. That being said, I'm a huge IRC fan and use it at work all day every day on two internally managed servers.
I agree there. I dont worry about anything with irccloud. You might be able to achieve the same with a bouncer but then you still gotta invest in hosting one too.
If you don't want to pay for IRCCloud I would totally vouch for Matrix. I've hosted Quassel, ZNC and The Longue and different times but moving to Matrix and their IRC bridge has made my life much easier.
I use rcirc [1] on Gentoo from exwm [2]. I frequent freenode, oftc [3]. Honestly, I love irc. Also, exwm changed how I work in a very positive way. Next, I want to try the Next browser written in Lisp [4]. Although I have never used it, I know of people that use Bitl Bee [5] to interface with slack from emacs irc clients.
It's a fix point of internet chatting. It has just enough, people on it are either ~ok or great, it requires barely nothing.
I may have ran slack once but didn't stay. I used discord to talk to collapse minded groups, and although discord seems a great piece of work (audio chat is neatly done), both the resources required and the structure/format made chatting way less flowing compared to IRC.
IRC is still actively used as a main communication channel internally at Google to coordinate during outages due to its reliable
and low-dependency nature (where a Slack equivalent app relies on hundreds of service dependencies). I know for a fact that Google is not the only company, and many others that practice SRE-like roles do the same.
Yes, Freenode! IRC is way better because it's minimal, fast, immediate feedback and people seem to be more interested in exchanging ideas, help, etc - the community seems to be way more skilled than the new generation of coders who use those web-based chat services. There are no photos, etc. You need to think before posting a question, needs to be clear.
If you visit one of these web chat thingies, you'll notice that people take ages to reply if they do end up replying back to you; In IRC it's live!
If you work for a company that provides a popular chat service and your team is one of the main dependencies then you use IRC while working on finding and fixing the cause of the outage. It’s not sexy but when everything else fails it does the job.
I use it most days - I have a Quassel (https://quassel-irc.org) core set up on my raspberry pi, and connect to it with my phone/laptop. Official support communities for most Linux distros, general chat, and more technically-focused communities are there. It's the only form of 'social network' I use - otherwise I just don't use social networks.
Every single day! Both to grouse about technology in channels dedicated to them and to speak socially with friends.
I find it pretty confusing that I see posts like "is IRC dead?" or "does anyone still use IRC?" as often as I do. I find IRC is a very active and I'm constantly discovering new corners of it. I'm on about 15 networks and know there are many, many more I haven't explored.
I'm on Freenode from time to time, mostly for Wikimedia and a bit for free software support as well. I'd be there all the time if I had more time.
I've seen a lot of people switching to XMPP, then Facebook, then Gitter, then Discord, then Slack, then… At the end, the result is mostly a fragmented community because not everyone is moving to the next trendy protocol, and there is an increasing number of alternatives. Sure, there's some merit in lowering the effort for newcomers, but it doesn't fully outweight its cost, IMHO.
IRC is the only protocol that remains widely used in the (very) long run and doesn't die when it gets out of fashion (see: it's been out of fashion since before fashion protocols were born).
I'm closely following Matrix, though, because of the bridges (especially the IRC bridge, obviously).
Not sure what I'd do without them, it feels like a "real" social network, where we are different people chatting in real time over several days, the simplicity of the protocol forces people to be clear in their words and not use excessive emoji (although, yes, IRC does support emoji)
If anything the decline of other groups running their own IRC has been good for mine, as their groups decide to continue living by becoming a channel on my network- then their members bleed into all of our social groups in addition to their own, obviously it won't last. But for now it feels very natural and organic.
If you want to join we're on irc.darkscience.net/+6697 (SSL) #darkscience
however, I used to use IRC at work, that seems to have been taken over by slack in most companies though.
I use it all the time at work. Along with Mattermost (yuck) it is a solution that works on a secured network. If your computer can reach something like Slack, your computer is exposed.
At home I recently used it to chat with open source developers about a bug. They found the cause, then my son and I fixed it.
I'm very curious why you dislike Mattermost, my company has been considering moving over from Slack, but we've not spent a lot of time evaluating it - they seem very similar on the surface?
Not only do I use it quite often (wow, the developers you can talk to who hang out on linux forums), but I know a number of companies where the entire tech team just hangs out in the company channel, getting things done. Faster than email, the terminal is always open, live chat...
The NetHack community is pretty much centered around IRC. After the demise of Usenet, much of the discussions shifted to the Freenode IRC networks with https://nethackwiki.com/ being the place for dumping less fleeting information.
There are various channels for NetHack variants and for the different public servers that offer online play. Most discussions happen on the public server du jour channel, currently this would be #nethack-hardfought.
Lately, there has opened up a connection to the roguelikes Discord server (https://discord.gg/vg9WWf2) with two-way bridges from Discord to IRC and back.
Every day. I run my own "thelounge" instance, which is a node app sitting on one of my VPS servers. It's web-based and running all the time, so it's very easy to read stuff I missed while I was "offline".
How can you open up thelounge without compromising everyone on the same box? Is there any in built protection in thelounge against people abusing your service to enter irc? Basically I don't want to get myself K-lined for someone else's wrongdoings
I am logged into several channels 24/7, in one (with a close group of friends) pretty much without a break since about 1999. I also frequent some channels with technical topics.
IRC appeals to me by its simplicicy, just like good old plain text email does. It is a great design that has outlived many of the better, more colourful or more modern alternatives, and will continue to do so.
Like everywhere on the internet there is a resident braggart, a few weirdos and a few ever silent lurkers in every channel, but after 20+ years on this medium my mental filters are well honed.
When I have questions that I don't really expect Google to have answers for, I use IRC.
Mostly about second opinions, in depth technical stuff, or when I don't have time to create a question on stack overflow because Google can't always find the lexical context between my Google search and the actual solution.
Chat is also much better than forums when you want to interact. Slack and discord are bloated software, which are centralized. IRC is much more lightweight and simple, and most of the time logs are available. It's more open.
I still use IRC heaps!
I idle on efnet just for old times sake (I hang out in #LiCe and #epic, I still maintain the LiCe IRC Script which was popular back in 1994. Yes, 25 years ago.
I hang out in PfSense, Proxmox and rspamd to offer (and get) assistance with those OpenSource projects.
And a number of the private trackers I use still heavily rely on IRC as a means of communication.
So yea, it's still used. But it's certainly dwindling.
All the time. Easily the best forum I’ve found for asking a quick question on occasion. Not every community is super lively but there’s some good ones and it’s nice to see the regulars after all these years.
And it’s nice that after a while just by taking a break and checking the conversation out, you’ll start answering people’s questions too. Always nice to help someone out.
Freenode will always have a place in my heart and an open window on my desktop.
I almost got into IRC ten years ago, when I was active in a programming community that used it in addition to their message board. The idea of having to keep my computer on all the time in order to stay in the loop, and having to learn yet another set of arcane commands for a chat window, was a big turn off then. I wouldn't even consider it today unless there was a specific need to use it, sorry.
The Archive Team of independent website archivists use IRC, on Efnet, to communicate, coordinate, and plan. I got to witness and particiate in the "googleminus" project which succeeded in capturing 98% of public Google+ content before that site went down.
The ability to collaborate, combine and share information, and respond to contingencies on the fly was impressive.
I like IRC, and I'd like to use it more, but it all depends on the community.
Back when I was getting to grips with .NET, the #csharp channel was invaluable in getting immediate technical help. They were the ones that introduced me to LINQ, Hangfire, and reverse proxying with nginx. Despite also being an avid Stack Overflow user at the time, #csharp was a far more approachable place, and I'll always be thankful for their support.
Nearly two years ago I picked up Ruby, but sadly the IRC communities around Ruby and Rails seem pretty dead, especially compared to Slack. I'm sure it's mostly lurkers, but I've always preferred to see lively IRC channels, where you could jump in at any point and see technical discussion or just shooting the breeze. Sometimes, I'd just go to a channel to chat about my day, or about the tech scene where I am compared to where others live.
Yep been using IRC for over 10 years now and still love it. Always seem like any gui base chat client required more resources then they should. Also the clients didn't allow for modifications I would want/need. Also at the time getting into desktop chat clients one of the popular ones to make profit turn their client into a massive botnet selling cpu power to business. This lead me to distrust gui clients early on.
I recently had a handful of friends that wanted to get away from IRC mainly because smart phone interaction is not the best. Since we switched to keybase I feel like we talk less. Also the desktop client doesn't close without using kill command which makes me open it less.
I use IRC just for chatting with friends and strangers on internet. Shout out to the #csharp channel on freenode some great people that regularly answer questions and help people out.
Python, Rust, and Postgresql have all had really great IRC communities. Unfortunately, stakeholders in Rust decided to move to discord and decommission the Mozilla server, but there remains a determined smaller community on Freenode, ##rust.
IRC remains one of the best ways to connect with technologists and talk shop.
To be clear, the Rust teams decided (mostly) to move to Discord and Zulip; Mozilla decided to disband its IRC. These decisions were made by disjoint sets of people.
IRC is great. I've been on Freenode since I was an obnoxious teen. There are upsides and downsides to not (generally) having server-side channel history; one big upshot is that nobody needs to maintain the infrastructure to store, curate, and archive 30 years of IRC logs for a whole network.
XMPP is still a mess after all these years; there is no reason you should have to send so much XML just to send an IM or update your presence.
I'm kinda waiting for SMTP to receive the slight adaptations it requires to be a decent IM protocol. As a long time SMTP operator, I think it's pretty darn close (especially looking at the way Gmail and Inbox [RIP] show threads), if SMTP daemons would cache trusted/known well behaved hosts, or batch/stream envelopes, that's prettymuch all that's missing on the server side.
I used IRC from 1992 to 2019, and was gradually pushed away from IRC by years of harassment from anonymous/registered accounts. It turns out that IRC's anonymity is incompatible with harassment swarming behaviors. I'm sad to see it fail as a social platform, but I won't miss it.
Any vaguely modern IRC server runs nameserv and allows you to block unregistered nicks from channels. It's not by any means a solved problem but it's a good stopgap against spam floods and the like.
That is disappointing to hear. I have only been using IRC regularly since 2005. I have never been harassed, but I only spend time on tech channels such as #emacs, #python, #gentoo etc.
Yes. I co-run a small, quirky IRC network/channel. We welcome all peoples who enjoy fun and discussing programming/hardware/technical stuff. Details here https://irc.darwin.network/
Of course. I use IRC for a bunch of different reasons. I have some bots, I occasionally frequent a few channels related to specific topics and it's a place where the snr can be quite high at times thanks to the fact that most of the noise is on other networks.
I use a chatroom which is bridged between IRC/Slack/Discord. I stuck with IRC for a while out of hate for Slack and then I moved to Discord out of hate for Slack.
General experience is, the worst inputs come from the IRC interface. Occasionally that is a regular with a long running connection, or a genuine interaction with a normal person, but handwavingly-mostly the IRC side is someone who has clicked on a web IRC gateway, doesn't know what they're looking at, wants a "give me the codes" style answer or just wants to rant, doesn't respond to people when they offer help, and doesn't stick around. Most people who join IRC and stick around, join and ask "oh there's a Discord, how can I get an invite?". The only genuine spam I've seen came from the IRC side, things like religious spam/flood messages. The biggest restrictions on things like inline-code are that the IRC interface can't deal, because it risks getting rate-limited for "flooding" the IRC servers because one bot user is echoing all the chat from every other user. Markdown which works well enough in Slack and Discord is left as Markdown markup and makes examples look broken in most (all?) IRC clients. The slack and Discord can usefully impersonate each other's users with a hint that you're looking at text from a relay, IRC can't so all the text actually comes from a relay bot user which breaks nick highlighting, nake autocomplete, channel connected user lists.
The Slack experience is still user-hostile and indefensibly poor, I yearn for the days when typing some plain text didn't have 5-10 seconds of lag all over the place, but the Discord user experience side is tolerably fine in almost every way, and better in many ways, except the ideology of it being proprietary and closed source and slurping data into the cloud forever.
I leave my IRC bouncer running, and for a while I used it to join other IRC channels. But IRC increasingly felt like that's all anyone does - typical experience of finding a random channel - dozens of users and nothing but join/parts for the past couple of days.
[just wants to rant / hate for Slack - this also includes me, btw]
One more "yes, daily" here. I'm on Freenode for tech topics: #octave, ##matlab, #zsh, #bash, #machomebrew, and #macports are active and useful.
And I have a group of friends who are on a private IRC server and have been for years. We recently considered switching to a "modern" chat platform. Tried Slack, Matrix, Mattermost, Zulip, and a couple others. Decided we still liked the "feel" of IRC best. (I hate all the whitespace and decoration that modern PWAs use.)
Bouncers or IRCCloud solve the offline-delivery problem, and I can live without the other features that newer chat systems provide.
I do on occasion but just for social purposes, not for work.
I'm still confused/impressed at how slack took a free service, stuck something similar but not quite as good in a browser, sold subscriptions and got rich doing it.
I do! I have 91 windows open in my current irssi session. I think only 50 of those are actual channels and the other half is active or dead queries between people.
I use have slack for some group of friends, but I have been less active after they removed the IRC bridge. I try to avoid Discord.
IRC is also used for my core group of friends, some of them I got over when we started University together as I couldn't stand Facebook messenger. A lot of time is also spent on various open-source projects, mainly Arch Linux but also security related channels and misc projects.
Off and on I've used it for technical discussions, questions, etc, around various open source projects. I've shut down all my IRC servers. Most folks moved to Discord or Slack.
Yes, I still use IRC. I use it on Freenode and also a few others. I would like to have server-side logging (and have implemented it in a IRC server software once experimentally), but nobody else seems to have that. (It has nothing to do with the protocol, but rather, with the implementation.)
Since now some people are using Discord instead, I am not communicating with them. IRC is much better than Slack and Discord and Matrix. (I also think that they should make this Hacker News available with NNTP, too.)
Yes of course. Both for technical and for social activities.
Side note, there's a very nice IRC log service ran by Whitequark [1] - yes, the one of Glasgow fame. The source is available[2], so you can set up your own too.
I hate Slack with a passion. I am on 14+ servers and it's completely impossible to manage, mostly because of memory.
Recently, I've decided to make a chat client (desktop) natively with C++ for Windows, Linux, and OSX that has a smooth layout like the original AIM (very easy to use). Including, with future plans to do audio/video chats and screen sharing including file sharing.
I just hope that within time, I will be able to release something to the world.
I use IRCCloud, and sit mostly on a few Freenode channels. It’s still pretty common for open source developers to congregate on IRC.
I used to run a personal ZNC instance when I still used IRC to socialize, but Discord killed it all, and honestly as stuff got “too big” I even left a lot of the Discord servers as well to escape the nasty annoying drama. Now IRC Cloud makes more sense because it gives me push notifications; I don’t actively sit on IRC much now.
Yes. In a weird way, it acts like a third place ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_place ) online. If I join #mountaincycles, there's bound to be people there who are somewhat interested in mountain cycles. The discussion usually is in no way moderated or limited to be just about cycles, though.
Yes! I'm an active IRC user for professional open source work (and personal projects) for the last 10-ish years. And still going strong.
What many people say IRC "lack" in comparison with Slack (or whatever new-fangled tool of the day is) are its strengths. What I value in IRC: lack of clutter, simplicity, bloat-freeness, open standard, and not least of all, blazing fast, among others.
Sure, IRC has its limitations, and is not suitable in certain scenarios. But is still shines brightly when it comes to distraction-free, text-based communication.
I also hope Matrix takes off. I have been using riot.im for some time to check if it could replace the many chat applications one is forced to use these days (FBMessenger, Slack, Signal, Telegram, WhatsApp, etc).
It does have its quirks but I'm finding the ability of having e2e-encrypted chat with multiple parties in a way I can move across devices quite useful. It also does support some more modern features like sharing pictures, files, and emojis without major issues.
Every single day. Logged in > 30 channels and talking to >20 people every day. It's a prereq for work anyway (more than half the company is actually on IRC). I also vastly prefer it to other solutions (yes, I tried slack, matrix, mattermost, discord, skype, google chat/hangouts/meet/whatevergooglecallsitthesedays - they all in some way)
Only really been on Freenode and a few other smaller networks (since the glory days of EFNet et al were before my time) but since 2008 I've met countless friends, some of which I know in person and I love working on open source projects with small but dedicated communities, which often use IRC.
Now if you excuse me I need to go move my bouncer to another box :)
I have at various points used IRC more or less actively. It's necessary for Bitcoin r&d more or less. I've also used Zephyr more often in the past (MIT has a lot of users), and found it's ability to handle topics in a channel (and diversions) easier to work with than IRCs single stream.
Yes. While it certainly has it's faults, it provides simple basics and has a wide variety of clients (which IMHO is the biggest downside of many alternatives, in that they either do not have alternative clients or the alternative clients do not function quite as the main ones)
I have Freenode #haskell open pretty much all the time. There's some exceptionally clever people in there, and they're all polite, friendly, and generous with their time.
Also the #postgresql channel is great.
I'm using the weechat client, which I found much easier to use and more polished than irssi.
I do. For everything: Twitter, Mastodon, Jabber, and of course IRC, everything goes over IRC.
And while I am sorry to see people reinventing the wheel with all those crazy web-based protocols, I can't help but think it's kind of nice with less people around. :p
I like LimeChat http://limechat.net/mac/ for an open source app, it's been somewhat dormant but it got an update semi-recently.
Textual https://www.codeux.com/textual/ is a proprietary paid app that seems to be under more active development. I used it for a bit and enjoyed it, but prefer FOSS when possible and switched back to LimeChat when it got updated again.
Yes, I use it quite a bit. There are a couple of good Mac-focused channels on Freenode. I think I originally went there for the Hackernews #startups channel where there were interesting peopple talking about interesting things.
Absolutely. Every time I want to learn about a new tech or have questions about an open source project, my first port of call is freenode. I've had some excellent help and discussions, even in the last couple of months.
Of course. I use it every day for keeping in touch with technically minded communities and some talking channels. Irssi is my wagon, it runs on my server in a screen and I use ssh to access it, both on desktop and mobile.
I search questions on Google/Stackoverflow, I post questions on IRC because I do not want to put all of it out there and get berated by the SO community. Though I still know that most IRC channels have public logs.
Yes -- though my company is looking to move away from it sometime soon (sadly?), so my use will decrease. It won't disappear entirely, at least for now, as there are other uses outside the company's control.
Yes. I use IRC to chat, to roleplay, to interact with people and the like. Basically, I both can't and won't use Discord (too much Google reliance - the client program is in unheaded Chrome). So I use IRC.
AWS IRC chat channel can be a God-send when you are stuck and need direction pronto. The only caviat maybe that its best to hit the AWS IRC chat channel during North American (especially EST) work hours.
Yes, on freenode, irc.tildeverse.org, irc.sdf.org, and several others. I find peer groups and support on my tools, languages, and hobbies. IRC is the best. It's not going anywhere.
What alternatives would you propose? If it is Slack and the other proprietary abominations designed to take away your freedom, then the choice seems pretty obvious to me.
IRC was a pretty big part of my life. I remember when EFnet split to form IRCnet like it was yesterday. I’m probably still connected in a detached screen(1) session somewhere.
Yes! It has been around a very long time and is robust and well understood, and is not proprietary, and is decentralised. I hope it stays around for the next few decades.
I did to get some Haskell help about 4 years ago, and it was very good for that. But that's mainly down to other humans, not something special about IRC itself.
I try it from time to time for asking questions on what I think will be technical forums, with mixed results. (Yes, I know how to ask technical questions...)
I haven't gotten into Discord yet. Isn't it a pain that there are so many Discord servers and you can't just have one server with all the channels (ala Freenode)?
It is normal to be connected to multiple servers at once, and the UI makes it easy to keep track of them.
As the other commenter said, it is much better to think of each server as a channel. A Discord server is typically dedicated to a single topic or organization. My old World of Warcraft guild has a Discord server. On that server, you'll have separate channels for general chat, announcements, and several voice channels for groups.
yes because it's free, simple to extend, low bandwidth compliant. there are some problems people still want to solve (see https://ircv3.net/ and https://irc.com/)
I barely use it, so maybe people can correct me on this one if I've got it wrong, but: It seems to me like it's now used almost exclusively for communication around underworld/illegal stuff. I would definitely be quite scared to hang around IRC not being anonymous (not talking about freenode here, of course, which is where open source developer folk hang out).
IRC needs to evolve to meet the standards of now. Which means, make it more easily accessible, like easy as opening a website.
And two, I feel there should just be a single network. Either that or make it easy to explore other networks. The kids these days are not going to bother understanding or picking and choosing which network to go.
We use IRC as a central way of communication for our LAN parties, starting in 1998 and spanning at least eight directly connected party series/"brands" over all those years.
The number of attendees ranges from about 100 up to 3,500+ (German record, 2005, still holds), including roughly two dozen parties with 1,000 to 2,500 attendees.
On the orga side, we use it daily for internal discussion and notifications. Events from our own LAN party platform's [1] party web sites (accounts, orders, forum posts, etc.), internal forums, GitLab (issues, CI build results), and social media (followers, mentions) are announced there – using a combination of web hooks, RSS, Zapier, and custom tools ([2], [3]).
These days we use IRC in tandem with a self-hosted Mattermost [4] instance, a bot to bridge between both, and the option to connect to Mattermost with an IRC client. A few things like embedded images get lost on the way, though.
On the parties itself, we run a local IRC server. There is a main party channel with auto-join. Organizers are on IRC both for internal collaboration and monitoring (e.g. [5]) as well as user support.
Tournament players are required to be present in the respective IRC channels for the tournaments they participate in.
Events from the local party intranet [1] (news posts, forum posts, tournament updates) are announced on IRC as well.
A modified version of The Lounge [6] is provided as a simple, web-based alternative as part of our intranet for everyone not used to, or too fond of, a "classic" IRC client.
Last but not least, there's #quiz, running the same MoxQuizz [7] version for ages with questions from the mid-2000s.
That said, our guests usually provide multiple locally public TeamSpeak servers for voice communication.
So while we added some more modern tools and services to the mix (for example a Telegram channel for announcements, reminders and other tiny bits of information), and are considering others (for example Discord, but dependence on Internet connectivity and third-party terms are a massive downside for us), both IRC and LAN parties are totally not dead for us.
Colloquy. Desktop version more or less hasn't been touched in 8 years, and it remains the best Mac client. Also has an iOS version that is more recently maintained.
If you run out of "fuel" in game, and you need a Fuel Rat to come rescue you, you do it in IRC. Dispatch talks to you in their IRC channel, other dispatchers are communicating in NOTAM[2] like notation with pilots out 'rescuing' other players.
It's amazing to behold.
[1] https://confluence.fuelrats.com/display/FRKB/Rescue+Standard...
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NOTAM
Disclosure: Fuel Rat 2010-2013, Retired.