(I'm a little ashamed that I lurk on this list but the thing that brings me
out of lurking is a post on communication technologies)

Not Zulip.

Please not Zulip.

I've used Zulip once many years ago, and once this year. Both times, its
interface felt clunky, and it felt like it was trying to get the best of
IRC, Slack, and a BBS and instead getting the worst of all the worlds.
Synchronous communication was confusing, asynchronous communication was
limited, and topics and channels didn't really do anything to organize
things.

I have two alternatives to add to consideration:
* Mattermost: it's an open-source clone of Slack, which has its advantages
and disadvantages, but at least it's familiar and heavily used UI
* Discourse: it's an asynchronous communication tool, but that may
acceptable or preferable, and there is already a Haskell Discourse set up (
https://discourse.haskell.org/)

On Wed, May 19, 2021 at 11:59 AM Ben Gamari <b...@well-typed.com> wrote:

> Carter Schonwald <carter.schonw...@gmail.com> writes:
>
> > I personally vote for irc.  Perhaps via Libera.
> >
> > What are some example vibrant  technical communities on matrix? I’ve
> > experienced such on irc but less so via more recent / newer platforms
> >
> I know that many subcommunities within the Rust community use Matrix. I
> have had quite good interactions in this context. Frankly I think that
> most of these newer options are technically much more conducive to
> technical collaboration than IRC.
>
> Cheers,
>
> - Ben
>
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