imagine if i . . . read the good news
 
Apr 26, 2024 - 09:57 AM
 
Thanks to BlazeLabs!
JOURNALS
ACADEMIC COMMONS
Academic Commons *
Chronicle of Higher Education
Larry Lessig, Harvard Berkman Klein
Jonathon Richter, Immersive Learning Research Network
Doug Blandy, UO Folklore
Mark Johnson, UO Philosophy
Antonio Lopez, John Cabot Univ.
Victoria Vensa, UCLA Art|Sci
Berkeley DMAX/BAMPFA
Berkman Center, Dana Boyd
Berkman Center Harvard Law
MediaBerkman Harvard Law
Bioneers Collective Heritage Institute
Cardozo Law, Susan Crawford
Complexity Digest
Cooperation Commons *
Digital Humanities UCLA
welcome
Harvard Free Culture Computer Society
Santa Fe Institute
Intl. Society for Systems Sciences
New England Complex Systems Institute
Institute for Ethics and Emerging Tech
Kairos: Rhetoric, Tech, Pedagogy
MediaTropes
MIT CMS New Media Literacies
NML Blog
MIT Center for Civic Media
Music Cognition Matters
New Media Consortium
Pressthink, New York University
On The Commons
Open Source Lab, Oregon State Univ.
Our (and Your) RISD
Regenerative & Permaculture Institutes
Creative Commons
Stanford Archeolog
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Stanford Humanities Lab
Stanford Metamedia
Stanford MetaverseU *
Stanford Open Source Lab
Stanford Philosophy Talk
Uplift Academy, Tom Munnecke
Contribute
There are 4 unlogged users and 0 registered users online.

You can log-in or register for a user account here.
Thursday, January 29, 2004 - 02:17 PM

Printer-friendly page Send this story to someone
Open IntellectYou want to help build a truly open network that values freedom of communication and doesn't treat the individual as just another pair of eyeballs. You like the idea of open-source software. Well...just found this..Open Instant Messaging, instant messages are similar to email because they consist of text that you type back and forth. However, unlike email, responces are in seconds. A shinning example is PSI - an awesome client for the Jabber network.
Jabber is a set of streaming XML protocols and technologies that enable any two entities on the Internet to exchange messages, presence, and other structured information in close to real time. The first Jabber application is an instant messaging (IM) network that offers functionality similar to legacy IM services such as AIM, ICQ, MSN, and Yahoo. full list of Jabber clients for Windows, Linux, MacOS, and other platforms (such as Java, Flash, and J2ME).

Key advantages:
* Open -- the Jabber protocols are free, open, public, and easily understandable; in addition, multiple implementations exist for clients, servers, components, and code libraries.
* Standard -- the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) has formalized the core XML streaming protocols as an approved instant messaging and presence technology under the name of XMPP.
* Proven -- the first Jabber technologies were developed by Jeremie Miller in 1998 and are now quite stable; hundreds of developers are working on Jabber technologies, there are tens of thousands of Jabber servers running on the Internet today, and millions of people use Jabber for IM.
* Decentralized -- the architecture of the Jabber network is similar to email; as a result, anyone can run their own Jabber server, enabling individuals and organizations to take control of their IM experience.
* Secure -- any Jabber server may be isolated from the public Jabber network (e.g., on a company intranet), and robust security using SASL and TLS has been built into the core XMPP specifications.
* Extensible -- using the power of XML namespaces, anyone can build custom functionality on top of the core protocols; to maintain interoperability, common extensions are managed by the Jabber Software Foundation.
* Flexible -- Jabber applications beyond IM include network management, content syndication, collaboration tools, file sharing, gaming, and remote systems monitoring.
*Diverse -- a wide range of companies and open-source projects use the Jabber protocols to build and deploy real-time applications and services; you will never get "locked in" when you use Jabber technologies.


Open Instant Messaging | Log-in or register a new user account | 0 Comments
Comments are statements made by the person that posted them.
They do not necessarily represent the opinions of the site editor.
Fly Through https://vimeo.com/74455488
Twitter RSS

INTERNET ARCHIVE

WIKIMEDIA FOUNDATION

PUBLIC LEARNING

OPEN COURSEWARE

OPEN DL, ML, & RL

       • Deep Learning
       • Machine Learning
       • Reinforcement Learning
       • Artificial Intelligence

OPEN FORGES

OPEN METAVERSE

       • Blender [3D Suite]
       • Firestorm Viewer
       • GitHub
       • Libre3D
       • Metaverse Project
       • Mozilla Hubs
       • NIH 3D Print Exchange
       • OpenKinect
       • OpenNI2
       • OpenSim
       • OpenSourceVR
       • OpenWonderland
       • PlayCanvas
       • Sirikata
       • Sketchfab
       • Thingiverse
       • 3D Warehouse
       • Unity 3D
       • WebGL (Moz)
       • WebXR API (Moz)
       • Yeggi
       • YouMagine


SCENARIO COMMONS
Blog. Cliff Gerrish - Echovar
Blog. Solving For Pattern
Blog. PaulBHartzog
Blog. Dave Pollard
Blog. George Por
Electronic Frontier Foundation [EFF]
Free Software Foundation News
Login






 Log in Problems?
 New User? Sign Up!
Future of the Book
High Fidelity Dreams Scott Draves
H+ magazine
IFTF Future Now
Kolabora Collaboration
Make Magazine & Craft Zine
Nation of Makers
Neurotechnology Zack Lynch
NextNow Collaborative
Unconference.net
Visual Complexity
Wikinews
WorldChanging