anyone using IRC today?

You'll find me on freenode, IRCNet and EFNet, mostly in BSD-related channels, and most of the time "idle" ;)
 
I stopped using IRC years ago. Most of the channels I used to frequent had too many jerks and a%#holes on them so I stopped going on. Most other forums seem to descend into that kind of behavior too. This forum isn't like that though, conversation here remains pretty civil which is why I like it here.
 
Most of the channels I used to frequent had too many jerks and a%#holes on them so I stopped going on.
Just pick your channels accordingly. I even left some official FreeBSD channels because of moronic behavior. But I'm still on e.g. #freebsd-ports, some german channel, and a few others, and they are all fine ;)
 
I have noticed that IRC is actually getting better again since many of the "cool guys" have migrated to Discord, Slack and other low effort / "user-friendly" services.
 
i was on undernet in early 2000s when junkmale was starting freshports. freebsd 5 was -current

but the channel slowly died
 
What is your opinion about mailing-lists ?
What channel do you use for what kind of communication ?
Hi Alain , if the question if for me , I dont use social networks, only the date apps ;)
only this forum, and never use IRC before, but for coworkers tell me and for my research I believe that
is a very cool to chat today
 
And what about USENET?

Perhaps it had its deficiencies since the beginning, but it still exists and is the forum for some pieces of
software, although not so alive as 30 years ago.
 
Let's say if have a question. Any. Did IRC allows you to answer ?
Yes but you have to give people time to see the message and answer. Unlike a forum, there is no history / database mechanism in IRC.

Your best bet is to run something like irssi in a tmux session on your server and leave it logged in idling.
 
I guess you need at least two running instances for this nowadays? ?
Best way to ensure the other guy responds ;)

This latest business with freenode is a little odd. I don't really know too many details other than a bit of an ownership grab.

Hopefully it doesn't fragment the communities. Freenode was not the best but it was consistent. Hopefully the new https://libera.chat/ alternative can work well.
 
And what about USENET?

Perhaps it had its deficiencies since the beginning, but it still exists and is the forum for some pieces of
software, although not so alive as 30 years ago.
In mine OS/2 time I was USENET user and later on Linux too but I thing is at least 20 years as I didn't use...time is going...
 
Hopefully it doesn't fragment the communities. Freenode was not the best but it was consistent. Hopefully the new https://libera.chat/ alternative can work well.
It already does, with some projects moving, some (so far) staying on freenode, and some having duplicated channels (inner fragmentation). More fragmentation would only be avoided if all projects that were on freenode before would consistently move. I don't really expect that outcome :(
#FreeBSD IRC cannot be used freely because it appears to be encrypted. ;)
Errr, what?
 
IRC has an unwritten social code that's not intuitive, and is most effectively learned through experience (which means failure, embarrassment and frustration). Failing to follow this code, it can be hard to get help. It's very different from forums, social media, mailing lists etc.
#FreeBSD IRC cannot be used freely because it appears to be encrypted. ;)
You probably mean the fact that users with unregistered nicks are automatically forwarded from #freebsd to #freebsd-irc. Anyone can register a nick to use #freebsd. To learn how, enter /msg nickserv help when connected to the IRC server.
 
FreeBSD IRCs hosted on freenode as #freebsd is useless for the visiting user, they don't allow to send any message to the general room because they have it encrypted. That happened on the occasions when he came in for consultation. ;)


There used to be other FreeBSD related IRCs from other countries hosted on the same freenode, however they allowed to send inquiry message from the visiting user without being registered because it is very difficult and confusing to register, and they only gave answer saying that for French freebsd inquiry for example.
 
#FreeBSDHelp on EFnet has no such requirements but it's also a bit more "free" in terms of overall policy, keep in mind that people have "RL" so answers might take a while.
 
being registered because it is very difficult and confusing to register
How using /msg nickserv register <password> <email> and following the instructions in email is confusing?
 
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