• Kairos
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      26 months ago

      Yeah.

      I used it recently. Its actually really nice! Its fast. It also suffers from clients being weird. Although it is very stable. And extremely resource light. Apparently a single server can support 100,000 users or something. And it has distributed servers too (which is possible because it’s stateless. Wish Matrix had it though)

      Matrix is in my (and a lot of other people’s opinion) way better for the future. The encryption is better, and there’s a lot more stuff supported by it. Importantly moderation.

      • @amanneedsamaid@sopuli.xyz
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        26 months ago

        Dino on Linux and Conversations for Android are both amazing clients imo, but the rest I’ve tried are SEVERELY lacking. Especially on iOS.

        I personally think the future from a technological perspective is SimpleX Chat. Fixes so many issues that plague other private IMs, however I’m waiting to switch until I see that their venture capital strategy is actually sustainable and won’t enshittify it.

        • Kairos
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          26 months ago

          That’s what I use actually. Very nice, but just… Matrix makes more sense for the masses.

          What does simplex do? Is it a P2P thing?

          • @amanneedsamaid@sopuli.xyz
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            26 months ago

            Matrix is definitely closer to Discord / a platform built for communities.

            SimpleX is not P2P, as I understand it messages are forwarded through a random(?, at least varying) number of servers, so no server knows the sender and recipient. The main issue it attempts to solve is a complete lack of a persistent identifier. Your “account” does not have a single address you can be messaged on (you can create ephemeral ones). You can create a new identity for each person you message, meaning you don’t have to trust the people you’re messaging to keep your messaging account’s ‘identity’ secure.

            I also really like how easy it is to route through proxies (esp on Android)