I am not able to connect via the web UI or Slack app either.
On Thursday, May 18, 2017 at 1:15:17 PM UTC-7, Gregg Reynolds wrote:is it just me? i've been unable to connect to clojurians (by cellphone) for about 30 minutes, but i can connect to other slack groups.have we hit https://github.com/clojurians/clojurians-chat/wiki/Slackpocalypse? we're almost to 10K subscribers.g
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I'm experiencing the same thing, while I am able to connect with my other slack teams.
On May 18, 2017 3:32 PM, "Jason Stewart" <jste...@fusionary.com> wrote:I'm experiencing the same thing, while I am able to connect with my other slack teams.this is not looking good. https://davechen.net/2017/01/slack-user-limit/
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 4:17 PM, Kenny Williams <kenny...@gmail.com> wrote:
I am not able to connect via the web UI or Slack app either.
On Thursday, May 18, 2017 at 1:15:17 PM UTC-7, Gregg Reynolds wrote:is it just me? i've been unable to connect to clojurians (by cellphone) for about 30 minutes, but i can connect to other slack groups.have we hit https://github.com/clojurians/clojurians-chat/wiki/Slackpocalypse? we're almost to 10K subscribers.g
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You know, there's this awesome bit of tech called IRC...someone should check that out.
You know, there's this awesome bit of tech called IRC...someone should check that out.
Here is an essay I wrote in January 2016 against using Slack for FOSS (which cites that Ryver page):
http://pdfernhout.net/reasons-not-to-use-slack-for-free-software-development.html
The biggest practical issue (ignoring philosophical ones or theoretical ones) is probably "Slack is focused on teams, not communities".
The essay mentions some FOSS alternatives including Mattermost (which can import Slack history) and Matrix.org (which is decentralized).
Perhaps someone knows if there is already a Clojure/ClojureScript frontend to Matrix.org? :-)
--Paul Fernhout (pdfernhout.net)
"The biggest challenge of the 21st century is the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity."
This isn't really an IRC/Slack style platform, afaics, but the discussions that led up to it included concern about Slack's message limit. (These discussions can be found on the Google OCaml Aggregation list starting last summer.)
FWIW my research group used Slack for a while, but we switched to Discourse close to two years ago and have been quite happy with it (https://push-language.hampshire.edu, although only a tiny subset is publicly viewable).
We're a much smaller community, with different needs, but still, I can attest to Discourse being nice in several ways. Among other things, it seems to encourage more deliberative interactions than I generally see on Slack, with a better mix of rapid communication with longer-term documentation.
I'm inclined to think moving away from slack would be wise, but only with the blessing of the core Clojure team. After all any of us could set up something on matrix or discourse etc. but if successful that would lead to fragmentation of the community.I wonder what the thinking within the core team is on this.
On Friday, May 19, 2017 at 2:27:35 PM UTC-5, Gregg Reynolds wrote:I'm inclined to think moving away from slack would be wise, but only with the blessing of the core Clojure team. After all any of us could set up something on matrix or discourse etc. but if successful that would lead to fragmentation of the community.I wonder what the thinking within the core team is on this.Our "official" channels for Clojure discussion are the clojure, clojurescript, and clojure-dev mailing lists. We moderate and maintain these lists.The Clojure/core team has no involvement with the creation or management of the Clojurians Slack channel. The community does not need our blessing to set up a discussion forum - we're happy to have more places for Clojure folks to talk about Clojure. I'd rather have the community decide what they want to do - we (the core team) are not looking to add additional moderation/admin duties beyond what we currently do.
Perhaps the new group that was established under the Software Freedom Conservancy could be of assistance in choosing and managing a preferred forum.
I personally monitor (to varying degrees): the mailing lists, Slack, #clojure on irc, clojure subreddit, and Twitter and try to answer questions in those locations based on my available time to do so.
Alex
Slack is working for me today. There are posts in the Clojure channel, for example, from just two hours ago. Maybe the end of the world didn't occur? On the other hand, the Specter channel says only "To see this channel's full history, upgrade to one of our paid plans." I'm not sure I understand. Is the idea that old posts are simply getting dropped to retain no more than 10K posts, and there have been 10K since the last Specter post? I'm a little bit confused by the whole situation. I was a latecomer to Slack, and still don't use it as much as some other folks. Did we start using Slack knowing that one day it would be cut off when there were too many posts?
(I haven't tried the new Discord group yet, and as I've said earlier, have no opinions about relative benefits of different post-IRC platforms. I've also heard positive things about Gitter btw; it wasn't mentioned earlier in this thread. I do think there might be benefit to using fewer rather than more of these options.)
I don't have any strong moral objections to using non-FOSS tools so long as the company/group isn't going to pivot and monitize our content. My concerns are more practical and unfortunately it seems email lists are the most stable & sustainable.
In other news... I'm designing/building a community platform (targeted specifically at software development) in Clojure & ClojureScript, that includes chat and mailing lists, but it isn't *anywhere* near ready. Initially I am leveraging GitLab & Mattermost until the Clojure versions (or integrations?) are ready. I have larger plans involving cooperatives that make it worth having access in Clojure & ClojureScript. Maybe some time in the next year it will be ready for a community as large as this... or not. If anyone is interested in helping design or build it feel free to ping me offline at alan coopsource org, w/ the usual punctuation implied.
My 2ct.
Alan
Slack is working for me today. There are posts in the Clojure channel, for example, from just two hours ago. Maybe the end of the world didn't occur? On the other hand, the Specter channel says only "To see this channel's full history, upgrade to one of our paid plans." I'm not sure I understand. Is the idea that old posts are simply getting dropped to retain no more than 10K posts, and there have been 10K since the last Specter post? I'm a little bit confused by the whole situation. I was a latecomer to Slack, and still don't use it as much as some other folks. Did we start using Slack knowing that one day it would be cut off when there were too many posts?
Took a quick look. I must say the UI is not particularly impressive. So far, I find discord much more intuitive.
2017-05-22 0:28 GMT+02:00 Gregg Reynolds <d...@mobileink.com>:Took a quick look. I must say the UI is not particularly impressive. So far, I find discord much more intuitive.If discord was decentralized _and_ open source, then I'd say we could have this comparison.
As it is, I'd much rather forfeit some user-friendliness and take the opportunity to improve one of the various clients or write my own (how many clients does discord offer? http://matrix.org/docs/projects/try-matrix-now.html) over getting locked into yet another proprietary silo and finding myself at yet another dead-end sooner or later.
Also, development is steady and I've already witnessed some pretty cool improvements over the short months I'm using it.Also, it can immediately replace your IRC client (thanks to its IRC bridge) and even give you message persistence as an added benefit, in effect it can already be your IRC bouncer without you running anything.
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Took a closer look - now I remember where I saw matrix before, they participate in tadhacks. It's not really an app, much more ambitious than that. Definitely deserves a closer look.
I doubt the whole community would want to move there from Slack
my main requirements are that a) people can find me easily, b) everything works with no hassle and c) old conversations don't disappear. Matrix fails pretty badly on a), is ok with some serious usability issues on b) and is ok for c), modulo that searching is a pain (can either search a single room or all rooms, not all Clojure-related ones).
I doubt the whole community would want to move anywhere from Slack.
What would you need to solve your discoverability issues (a)? Isn't it as easy as handing out a link like https://riot.im/app/#/room/#clojure-community:matrix.org ? Not even registration needed.
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On 24 May 2017 at 00:13, Herwig Hochleitner <hhochl...@gmail.com> wrote:I doubt the whole community would want to move anywhere from Slack.Perhaps this will have to wait until Slack inevitably throws us off, then.
It's a far cry from searching for "cursive" from anywhere in Clojurians, though. Searching for channels based on some vague criteria seemed difficult, and searching for Clojure related content across channels is also a pretty bad experience.
There has been some talk of making a Clojure-related room directory in an external webpage or something but it's still a kludge. I'm not sure to what extent this would be fixed if we ran our own room server, but then someone has to maintain that.
I watched the matrix video linked above and it seems there is a Slack bridge that would allow Slack fans to stay put and others to choose their own client or even go back to IRC. What am I missing?
I too have no skin in this game... I still prefer this mailing list, as is self evident. I suppose I could build a matrix bridge for Google Groups.
On Tue, May 23, 2017 at 2:22 PM, Andy Fingerhut <andy.fi...@gmail.com> wrote:I have no skin in this game, but wasn't the move to Slack pretty much a "vote with your feet" combined with word of mouth advertising? It seems to me the same could happen to add another on-line chat tool/system, without anyone taking a poll/voting on this or any other medium. We'll know when it has happened by the rumor mill on Slack, IRC, and/or this email group.
2017-05-23 23:04 GMT+02:00 Colin Fleming <colin.mailinglist@gmail.com>:
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