Hi Andy,
On Mon, 25 Mar 2024 at 01:32, Andy Smith via BitFolk Users <
users(a)mailman.bitfolk.com> wrote:
So, if you do actually engage in online chat for any projects or
communities please would you fill in this short questionnaire to let
us know about it?
https://forms.gle/cYyP2QFZzpDWdJ9T6
I have filled in the form.
I'm also not promising to set something up on whichever platform
comes out top (this is not a vote!). It would be very
interesting to
me to find out where people are, though.
My teenage kids see Email as "old people letters", which are only
helpful
for resetting your Fortnite or Pinterest password and not much more.
Similarly, I now see IRC as "old people chat", while fully getting that I
am a member of the "old people" group.
Personally speaking, I think "chat" is such a broad question. I think you
mean "social chat," sharing the odd amusing link, talking about stuff
that's good, bad, frustrating, etc. It's a "friendly group chat."
I used IRC between 1999 and now, but I only spend a little time on it
because all the active communities are elsewhere. Partly because I don't
have a super robust IRC client, I can use it from anywhere, including
mobile. I have "The Lounge" (a free software web client for IRC) running at
home, but over time, I've become less inclined to open it.
Work stuff is on Slack, and many open-source and old people reliving their
youth in retro computing communities are on Discord. The hardcore Free
Software people seem to all be on Matrix. All three of these platforms are
crap for different reasons. I'm in exactly one group on Signal because that
was dictated by someone else. I'm not too fond of that either. I'm in
WhatsApp chats with many non-nerds (and family). Some people use Facebook,
Instagram and Snapchat groups, but those people were mostly born in a
different century to me.
Personally, these days, I spend more time talking to
friends/associates/like-minded people (who aren't work colleagues or in
topic-specific chats) on Telegram. There are a few nerdy podcast-related
channels and some group chats I'm in there. I'm sure people find Telegram
terribad, too.
Essentially, none of the options are amazing. For me, Telegram is the least
worst, and Discord is the worst, with Matrix, Signal, and IRC lumped in the
"meh" department. I have them all open all the time on every machine, with
notifications off, and dip in as and when I have time or the inclination.
I was quite pleased to see Andy badgered into joining Telegram, tbh, as I
now see his ramblings, which I missed from the Bitfolk IRC channel I never
looked at. <3
/2p