So, I'm using Zulip right now on a daily basis.
I maintain my first impression that it's really not user friendly.
The fact that you are required to create topics for discussions (or find a
suitable topic in a list of a gazillion topics previously created,
obviously without a search engine where you need it - you have a global one
at the top where you can find topics) is a pain. You also need to use
ctrl+enter to send a message, the default enter is a new line in your
message. The UI is not very good and I don't see any improvement since the
last time I tested it so I'm wondering if they are investing in it.
We could decide to use it as a dev team as I suppose we would get used to
it, but I seriously don't think it's a good alternative for our users to
occasionally come chat with us.
As for Gitter, I agree with the notification issue, the web client is all
buggy. Haven't tested the desktop client yet.
I must admit that I prefer using Gitter. Probably until I get bitten by the
1-1 history issue :).
wonder if it's gonna be viable in the long term.
I suppose we'll see.
--
Guillaume
On Thu, Dec 6, 2018 at 8:58 AM Yoann Rodiere <yoann(a)hibernate.org> wrote:
The WildFly team is moving from Slack to Zulip, because Zulip seems
to be
the only solution that is free, provides unlimited history, and allows
unlimited users even in private rooms (for OSS projects, at least). Gitter
has all that, except unlimited users, as we are limited to 25 people per
private room.
You can join them here:
https://wildfly.zulipchat.com/
Back to our solution... We are now 71 days away from the decommissioning of
HipChat. *Is everyone happy with Gitter?* Do you see a strong reason to
keep looking for another solution?
For my part, I noticed problems with the web client, in particular with
notifications, which are sub-standard, but with the desktop client
everything seems to work fine. It's simple, but it does the job.
Yoann Rodière
Hibernate NoORM Team
yoann(a)hibernate.org
On Wed, 21 Nov 2018 at 14:40, Yoann Rodiere <yoann(a)hibernate.org> wrote:
> On top of not being able to add more than 25 people to a private room,
> there's another limitation of Gitter that Fabio just noticed: the chat
> history for 1-to-1 conversations is very limited. In our case, we can
only
> see 2 days back, and there's no concept of archives like there is in
rooms.
>
> Meanwhile, the WildFly team is giving up on Slack because of the very
> limited size of history in free plans. They are investigating Zulip,
> RocketChat and MatterMost in particular. Maybe let's see what they end up
> choosing and why?
>
> Yoann Rodière
> Hibernate NoORM Team
> yoann(a)hibernate.org
>
>
> On Tue, 13 Nov 2018 at 11:33, Yoann Rodiere <yoann(a)hibernate.org> wrote:
>
>> On Tue, 13 Nov 2018 at 08:49, Yoann Rodiere <yoann(a)hibernate.org>
wrote:
>>
>>> > Assuming the new chat platform takes off, there's a risk it might
be
>>> too successful as well
>>>
>>> Ok. Well, I guess we'll see. As I mentioned above, I don't think
forcing
>>> people to have a GitHub account will be very effective, but I can't
suggest
>>> a perfect solution either. Bots answering with a few links
(documentation,
>>> etc.) to the first message of each user come to mind, but that could be
>>> considered rude, so I wouldn't do that unless the traffic becomes
>>> unmanageable. Other solutions include kicking out "spammers" (but
that
>>> doesn't work if it's many users asking a single question), or
making
the
>>> -dev rooms invite-only and only checking the user rooms once in a while
>>> (might work if Gitter sends emails when your are mentioned while
offline).
>>> So, yeah, in short: I don't really know.
>>>
>>> > More just accountability. But if some form of login in needed to use
>>> Gitter, that's enough for me. Sounded like the other option was
"allow
>>> anonymous", which I wanted to avoid.
>>>
>>> Then it should be fine: anonymous access apparently only allows to read
>>> messages. Login through GitLab, GitHub or Twitter is necessary in
order to
>>> start posting new messages.
>>>
>>> Yoann Rodière
>>> Hibernate NoORM Team
>>> yoann(a)hibernate.org
>>>
>>>
>>> On Mon, 12 Nov 2018 at 19:34, Steve Ebersole <steve(a)hibernate.org>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> For me its not so much about "the right kind of people". More
just
>>>> accountability. But if some form of login in needed to use Gitter,
that's
>>>> enough for me. Sounded like the other option was "allow
anonymous",
which
>>>> I wanted to avoid.
>>>>
>>>> On Mon, Nov 12, 2018 at 11:41 AM Sanne Grinovero
<sanne(a)hibernate.org
>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> On Mon, 12 Nov 2018 at 17:27, Yoann Rodiere
<yoann(a)hibernate.org>
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>> >
>>>>> > I don't see why we should force people to have a GitHub
account,
>>>>> considering there are other means of logging into Gitter.
>>>>>
>>>>> Ok.
>>>>>
>>>>> >
>>>>> > As to getting the right type of people, I'm not sure
it's relevant.
>>>>> Most people are likely to have one, and those who don't are
likely
to not
>>>>> have one for political reasons (think free software extremists)
rather than
>>>>> because they aren't tech savvy enough: while the
"hibernate" naming
might
>>>>> confuse users looking for information about grizzly bears, I doubt
my
>>>>> grandmother, my 7-year-old nephew or even my non-software-engineer
of a
>>>>> wife would end up on Gitter by mistake.
>>>>>
>>>>> Well since that's obvious, clearly I was referring to a
different way
>>>>> of cathegorizing people joining@ not by age or expertise in
technology
>>>>> but in having reasonable expectations and willing to do some
research
>>>>> before bothering us all.
>>>>>
>>>>> You probably weren't around yet, but Hibernate has had hard
times in
>>>>> which it was "victim of its own success": just too many
>>>>> kinda-interested people making a ton of basic questions that could
be
>>>>> easily solved otherwise.
>>>>>
>>>>> Some "barriers" we have in place have made it manageable;
of course I
>>>>> can't tell if it's all merit of the barriers of entry or
just people
>>>>> coming in lower volumes with better intentions, but I'm
confident
that
>>>>> some of the barriers we have have helped to keep some sanity (e.g.
>>>>> login on #hibernate-dev on IRC requiring an account).
>>>>>
>>>>> Assuming the new chat platform takes off, there's a risk it
might be
>>>>> too successful as well. But I guess we'll see, or let's use
a very
>>>>> bad chat platform so to keep people from coming :P
>>>>>
>>>>> >
>>>>> >
>>>>> > Yoann Rodière
>>>>> > Hibernate NoORM Team
>>>>> > yoann(a)hibernate.org
>>>>> >
>>>>> >
>>>>> > On Mon, 12 Nov 2018 at 18:02, Sanne Grinovero
<sanne(a)hibernate.org
>
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>> >>
>>>>> >> On Mon, 12 Nov 2018 at 16:02, Steve Ebersole
<steve(a)hibernate.org
>
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>> >> >
>>>>> >> > What is it a conscious decision to not require a
GitHub account
>>>>> to join these rooms? I just noticed that is a toggle-option in the
room's
>>>>> settings also.
>>>>> >>
>>>>> >> I don't remember. We created these rooms as an
experiment in
2014..
>>>>> >> Yoann created some more rooms recently.
>>>>> >>
>>>>> >> Should we enforce people to have a Github account? I'd
like that,
I
>>>>> >> think it would better nudge towards getting the right type
of
people
>>>>> >> to join.
>>>>> >>
>>>>> >> Thanks,
>>>>> >> Sanne
>>>>> >>
>>>>> >>
>>>>> >> >
>>>>> >> > On Mon, Nov 12, 2018 at 6:17 AM Guillaume Smet <
>>>>> guillaume.smet(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>> >> >>
>>>>> >> >> On Mon, Nov 12, 2018 at 11:35 AM Sanne Grinovero
<
>>>>> sanne(a)hibernate.org>
>>>>> >> >> wrote:
>>>>> >> >>
>>>>> >> >> > If one wants a lot of features then clearly
only Slack is the
>>>>> way to
>>>>> >> >> > go. Not saying we should go with Slack, just
that we'll need
>>>>> to be
>>>>> >> >> > patient and we'll always be short of some
features - if
that's
>>>>> not
>>>>> >> >> > acceptable then only Slack will make you
happy.
>>>>> >> >> >
>>>>> >> >>
>>>>> >> >> TBH, I don't care about fancy features. Gitter
is OK for me but
>>>>> yeah not
>>>>> >> >> having sound is really annoying.
>>>>> >> >>
>>>>> >> >> I might miss notifications from time to time.
>>>>> >> >>
>>>>> >> >> In any case, it will mostly be a problem for you
all if you
ping
>>>>> me :).
>>>>> >> >>
>>>>> >> >>
>>>>> >> >> > BTW the issue you linked to suggests the
native clients don't
>>>>> have
>>>>> >> >> > this specific problem.. might want to try
that?
>>>>> >> >> >
>>>>> >> >>
>>>>> >> >> I prefer to have it in the browser where I do most
of my
>>>>> interactions with
>>>>> >> >> people.
>>>>> >> >>
>>>>> >> >> And AFAIK, Yoann wrote they were only packaged as
deb (and not
>>>>> very excited
>>>>> >> >> about compiling it).
>>>>> >> >>
>>>>> >> >> BTW, tbh, I'm a bit worried GitLab has only
one dev on it if
>>>>> they want to
>>>>> >> >> become a player in this area. They certainly have
some work to
>>>>> do to catch
>>>>> >> >> up with others.
>>>>> >> >>
>>>>> >> >> --
>>>>> >> >> Guillaume
>>>>> >> >> _______________________________________________
>>>>> >> >> hibernate-dev mailing list
>>>>> >> >> hibernate-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>>> >> >>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/hibernate-dev
>>>>> >> _______________________________________________
>>>>> >> hibernate-dev mailing list
>>>>> >> hibernate-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>>> >>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/hibernate-dev
>>>>>
>>>>
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