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Based on our record, Spacevim should be more popular than Quassel IRC. It has been mentiond 38 times since March 2021. 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.
> But all of the modern services like Teams, Slack and Discord, have seamlessness between client devices as their first priority. Can't speak for the others, but Teams is really hit-or-miss. Missed notifications, missed messages, out of order messages. Then it appears to be fixed for three months only to happen again. It mostly seems to happen on Android. In general, you're right, multi-device appeared to have... - Source: Hacker News / 10 months ago
You can use a bouncer to do this. ZNC is the most popular. Quasse is a different take on the bouncer, where you have a special client that logs into your Quassel server, and the server logs into IRC. Has certain advantages, like more seamless scrollback and so forth. A variant take on this is irccloud, which is probably the "best" if you just want something turnkey that works with minimal fuss. It has good push... Source: about 1 year ago
I use purple-discord (libpurple/Pidgin plugin) + BItlBee (IRC chat gateway, libpurple variant) + Quassel (distribued IRC client, like a bouncer) on a home server, and use Quasseldroid to connect on mobile. I would eventually like to simplify this setup. Source: over 1 year ago
I've been a massive user of IRC since the mid 90s... Have written lots of bots, scripts etc plus set up plenty of stuff to deal with being able to disconnect your client without missing out on anything (currently use https://quassel-irc.org/ with the daemon on a VPS). I was even l33t enough to "read bitchx.doc" back in the day... Source: about 3 years ago
I don't know how much you actually care, and I'm the nano OP of this comment chain/thread but there are some vims (and emacs) with plugins and what not built in. Only one I can think of off the top of my head is https://spacevim.org/ but theres a bunch. - Source: Hacker News / 9 months ago
On the vim side, you can try https://spacevim.org. Source: 12 months ago
There's also spacevim: https://spacevim.org/ And to a certain extent the new Helix editor which uses space and context sensitive popup menues for discoverability to great effect IMNHO: https://helix-editor.com/. - Source: Hacker News / about 1 year ago
Hi, I'm new to using vim I followed the instruction from spacevim.org but this won't work.. Source: about 1 year ago
You can find distributions with plugins for those editors, like Doom Emacs or space vim. These days, I enjoy doing (neo)vim configs (with lua). Both can use the language server protocol (with different plugins or natively in neovims' case) and so you'd get similar setups done like in code. Source: about 1 year ago
HexChat - HexChat is a fork of XChat with bug fixes and new features.
Neovim - Vim's rebirth for the 21st century
mIRC - mIRC: Internet Relay Chat client
Spacemacs - Community-driven Emacs distribution that meshes Emacs and Vim features.
Kiwi IRC - A hand-crafted IRC client that you can enjoy. Designed to be used easily and freely.
Doom Emacs - Emacs configuration similar to Spacemacs but faster and lighter.