Skip to content

Piero Bosio Social Web Site Personale Logo Fediverso

Social Forum federato con il resto del mondo. Non contano le istanze, contano le persone

Techie question..

Uncategorized
4 3 2
  • Techie question..

    I'm currently on and have been for a couple of years. I see people talk about . Could some one give me a quick rundown of how they compare.

    boosts appreciated

    I'm interested in comparinsons relating to:
    app and platform support
    self hosting support
    ability to pay someone for hosting
    encryption level
    general usability for "non techie" family and friends
    community/political drama
    comunication types supported (text/voip/sending files, and so on)

  • Techie question..

    I'm currently on and have been for a couple of years. I see people talk about . Could some one give me a quick rundown of how they compare.

    boosts appreciated

    I'm interested in comparinsons relating to:
    app and platform support
    self hosting support
    ability to pay someone for hosting
    encryption level
    general usability for "non techie" family and friends
    community/political drama
    comunication types supported (text/voip/sending files, and so on)

    @openess I don't have direct experience with matrix

    I self-host xmpp and I'd call it one of the easiest things to self-host: I did the original installation (years ago) using debian packages on a cheap vps and now I have to take care about it for a few minutes every now and then for general system security updates, plus once every two years for a distribution upgrade (half a day? when things go *badly*) and maybe a few hours another once per year when compliance.conversations.im tells me that I need to enable some other feature.

    I know that conversations.im offers managed hosting, and I believe that there are other places, but I've never really looked into them

    I'm not qualified to talk about the quality of the encryption, but with modern clients it's usually active (e2e, of course) by default

    For my non-techie family members I've created an account on my server, which probably solved what I suspect could be the major hurdle, and since then they have been able to use it without significant problems. The main support I have to give them is reset their password when they change devices and have lost / forgotten it.

    I'm not aware of significant drama (it may be there, but not very visible?)

    It supports text and sending files. video calls is available between users of some clients, but it's not something I need, so I don't know which clients they are.

    one caveat is that xmpp is *old* and there are a lot of old clients that aren't kept updated, and using those will result in a significantly worse experience. For non-techie users I solved the issue by telling them which client to use (conversations, on android), and there is a word-of-mouth list of clients that are guaranteed to be a safe choice: said conversations, gajim and dino-im on pc, and I believe monal on iThings; there are other clients that are good, if somebody wants to experiment a bit, but those are a good first choice.

  • Techie question..

    I'm currently on and have been for a couple of years. I see people talk about . Could some one give me a quick rundown of how they compare.

    boosts appreciated

    I'm interested in comparinsons relating to:
    app and platform support
    self hosting support
    ability to pay someone for hosting
    encryption level
    general usability for "non techie" family and friends
    community/political drama
    comunication types supported (text/voip/sending files, and so on)

    @openess the basics, encrypted one on one and group chats are simple to self host with either ejabberd or prosody. It's more difficult to host audio/video chat. Who is doing their own turn/stun?

  • @openess the basics, encrypted one on one and group chats are simple to self host with either ejabberd or prosody. It's more difficult to host audio/video chat. Who is doing their own turn/stun?

    @poetaster @openess I am (running coturn), and I believe at least one of the users on my server is using it successfully.

    Personally I don't do a lot of video calls :)


Gli ultimi otto messaggi ricevuti dalla Federazione
Post suggeriti
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    12 Views
    To understand how we can replace Google push notifications (FCM) with something open source and decentralized, we need to understand how they work and why they are needed in the first place. This talk explains the mechanics of push notifications and why, despite their potentially bad reputation, they are a more elegant solution than having every app maintain its own persistent server connection. While open-source tools like microG can remove proprietary Google software from your Android phone, the actual notifications are still sent via Google's servers (Firebase Cloud Messaging). UnifiedPush is a framework that allows push notifications to be delivered in a decentralized manner or through self-hosted servers. Numerous open-source Android apps already support UnifiedPush, including Tusky, Ltt.rs, Fedilab, DAVx⁵, Fennec, Element, and many more. The presentation ends with a short demo on how to use UnifiedPush on Android. Talk given at FOSDEM 2026 https://fosdem.org/2026/schedule/event/7HJJS7-unifiedpush_-_push_notifications_decentralized_and_open_source/
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    10 Views
    If a friend bought the #39C3 ticket for you and sent the .pkpass file via #XMPP, those files are now properly identified in #Conversations_im and display with a nice icon instead of a generic unknown file icon.
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    3 Views
    There is currently a poll to include the #XMPP logo in #FontAwesome.Give us your 👍 https://github.com/FortAwesome/Font-Awesome/discussions/21069
  • 0 Votes
    6 Posts
    18 Views
    @Monal @daniel @larma I don't think that making it opt-out is a good idea, it would potentially put a lot of traffic to the server and make P2P nearly impossible.