Based on our record, Kodi seems to be a lot more popular than irssi. While we know about 100 links to Kodi, we've tracked only 6 mentions of irssi. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I prefer Kodi: https://kodi.tv/ It is free and open sourced and won't use DRM or phone home on you. Nothing comes out on DVD anymore, everything is Video Streaming paid per month or year. - Source: Hacker News / 15 days ago
Https://keepassxc.org/ Https://bitwarden.com/help/install-on-premise-linux/ Https://bitwarden.com/help/licensing-on-premise/ Https://bitwarden.com/blog/new-deployment-option-for-self-hosting-bitwarden/ Https://standardnotes.com/help/self-hosting/getting-started Https://syncthing.net/ Https://photostructure.com/server/photostructure-for-servers/ Https://freefilesync.org/ Https://element.io/solutions/self-hosted-or-... Source: 11 months ago
Honestly? I use https://beets.io/ to organise all my FLAC on my NAS. I expose the /Music directory over NFC. I use https://kodi.tv/ to stream music to my amp. I manually pick the album I want to listen to. Kodi also has a fairly reasonable web UI. Keep it simple. - Source: Hacker News / 12 months ago
Do yourself a favor, get a shitty PC or raspberry pi, plug it into your TV, and install Kodi on it. Source: 12 months ago
Kodi sounds like what you're describing. You connect it to a tv and it can play media from your network, or use add-ons for internet streaming. I'm not sure if it includes the most popular streaming services, but I suppose you could use a browser for those. Source: 12 months ago
If you don't mind terminal clients, irssi is still regularly updated (most recent version was released in March of this year). It's available with homebrew. Source: 10 months ago
I found Irssi which apperantly has the capability to do this but the configuration is more complex than I hoped. While my experiments haven't concluded yet, is anybody aware of an easy to use IRC client that I can use to crawl the messages in an IRC channel? Source: almost 2 years ago
Eggdrop [0] and BitchX [1] come to mind. Irssi [2] has a plugin that enables Tcl scripting. I'm currently fiddling with TkCAD [3] in order to put a small CNC machine to use here, it needs some small adaptations to work on Linux, but I find it a nice find! [0] https://eggheads.org/ [1] http://bitchx.sourceforge.net/ [2] https://irssi.org/ [3] https://github.com/revarbat/TkCAD. - Source: Hacker News / over 2 years ago
I've used irssi (https://irssi.org) for years. Have a session running on a shell host under tmux. Works perfectly for me on a desktop and a mobile ssh client. - Source: Hacker News / about 3 years ago
You might mean IRC chat room. Irssi is very popular IRC client. Source: about 3 years ago
Stremio - Watch videos, movies, TV series and TV channels instantly.
HexChat - HexChat is a fork of XChat with bug fixes and new features.
Emby - media server for personal streaming movies tv music photos in mobile app or browser for all devices android iOS windows phone appletv androidtv smarttv and dlna.
mIRC - mIRC: Internet Relay Chat client
Universal Media Server - Universal Media Server allows you to host your entire library of video, music, and pictures, and broadcast them conveniently to a wide variety of different devices.
Kiwi IRC - A hand-crafted IRC client that you can enjoy. Designed to be used easily and freely.