Now that people have moved from reddit to lemmy I’m glad to be using more FOSS software. Now all that’s left is discord but I can’t find a good replacement.
Matrix is quite a long way from Discord still. Even the devs know and track that: https://github.com/vector-im/element-meta/discussions/723
It’s super cool to know that irc the first ever federated technology was invented In 1988
I like Matrix for text but voice calls aren’t the best
I actually think that voice calls via Element are really solid. 1 on 1 calls can be done via P2P which is amazing for audio and video quality. Group calls are also pretty great with the upcoming (and already available) voice rooms. I really enjoy it and barely use Discord anymore since I got most contacts to switch.
I mean, let’s be honest. Discord is actual garbage. Their clients are slow and usability on Linux is extremely limited. For example, streaming with audio is not possible on Linux for some really stupid reason. They use a very old version of Electron for everything. They are financed by China afaik. Push notifications on Android aren’t reliable. It’s just a hot mess. I’d take Element any day. Although, I will admit that Element has issues, too. The voice rooms are still in Beta, there are some quirks and steaming with screen audio doesn’t work on Linux.
I didn’t know matrix had group calls. That’s nice I’ll have to check it out. And yes discord client is fucking trash and doesn’t support wayland so I want out
Revolt and Matrix/Element
- Matrix
- XMPP
- IRC
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https://matrix.org/ might be interesting to you
If you remember using teamspeak or ventrillo… Their is a FOSS alternative called mumble that works similarly. Its essentially the closest to what you’re asking that has both VOIP and other features. Some communities especially mmorpg clans and gaming clans still use it. Idk how popular it is in general though. Discord is supported by huge donations which is why they’ve been able to dominate, but teamspeak/mumble still exist and essentially are the same thing but less modern.
IRC and Matrix are both IM systems but are alternatives to discord if that’s all the functionality you seek. Matrix is also in the fediverse.
Someone said matrix moved to voip so I wanna try that. I made an account a while back but never used it
If you get Beeper.com which is based on Matrix.org you can have both: FOSS and chatting with your friends on Discord.
Interesting. Never heard of Beeper. Looks like they even have a client for desktops. Does it also cover (video) calls and screen sharing for Discord and/or Signal?
Sadly it doesn’t cover screen sharing, haven’t tried calls yet.
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Thought so too, but they actually don’t charge anything. Wonder if I’m the product then.
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There is also Rocket.chat, to complete the list, though it is supposed to be difficult to host.
I would recommend Matrix. My small instance is running Conduit, and it works great!
How’s voice chat on matrix done?
It has native voip now, where it used Jitsi before. But I’ve only used it as a messenger—no experience with calls.
That’s nice. I need to try it
We’d need something that can be indexed, can host dynamic voice chat across instances (p2p) and competitive compression to be able to compete against Discord.
https://www.opensourcealternative.to/ lists rocket.chat as an alternative to Slack and Discord
I have not used it. I have used Mattermost. And it can do channels, teams, hashtags, @ mentions etc similar to Slack. Though it requires the server be hosted and administered by you or someone you know.
Matrix is good but it feels more like a WhatsApp group or something. Definitely room there to have a client that’s more fun, like Discord
Been checking out matrix clients and so far Cinny looks and feels closer to discord and fluffychat is pretty good to. Both work better then element in my experience
Mumble is a good program for voice and text chat.
The resource usage is minimal, so you could even run the server on a Raspberry Pi if you have a half decent internet connection.
I used the ‘betterdiscord-installer’.
Ferdium still looking good.
However, Discord isn’t so much an application as a protocol - you’re just changing the client.