The colours are really jarring, and would out me off immediately (even though its just a theme). Highly recommend some more popular/less jarring themes on the screenshots.
oh there is a wide range of IRC clients for the terminal indeed. The project here was to implement bubbletea/lipgloss. Its like CSS for terminal UIs! Check it out when you can, pretty neat visuals.
tangential question: are there still any IRC servers and (small) channels with cool people? I recently lost a virtual friend I had talked to for over 20 years, all thanks to some random mIRC channel back in the day. he ran the server with a bunch of ppl for so long. so sad. i really miss the times when we could have fun with just plain text.
I've been using IRC on and off for three decades, now. It will never be what it was, so don't expect much. Most of channels are kept alive by bots and otherwise idling accounts like mine that drop into the background of our desktop and get forgotten about for days, sometimes weeks at a time. The political channels on a few servers are, of course, active but you'll not find any useful discourse there since it's all being driven by conservative and liberal zealots. I assume they are not what you meant by "cool people."
Whatever cool people there were have either died or saw the writing on the wall as IRC slowly faded into obscurity with the introduction of better (debatable) chat systems, especially these days with things like Discord or Slack that do every IRC does in some capacity and more, perhaps most importantly simply making chat accessible in a safe way to less technically savvy users. That genie is kinda out of the bottle, so getting anyone aside from grumpy old guard to use IRC versus the modern alternatives is pretty much impossible. As a result, and aside from the bots doing things like letting me play IdleRPG or whatever, you're more likely to encounter people like me who don't feel like we fit in anywhere or conspiracy theorists, returning to IRC the way Romero's zombies wandered to the shopping mall because they had a vague memory of it from a former life.
ZUSE was initially made to go along a CLI I've built for a synthwave radio NightrideFM (https://nightride.fm/), that has a hacker subchannel named Rekt Network (https://rekt.fm/). Both communities are still very active there!
I hang out on IRC. Its not active like back in the day but a lot of OG legends lurk and a couple of times a day you can help someone switch to Linux if you have time. I have a TODO to get more serious about finding active channels.
You can access FIDO over NNTP at https://syncro.net (news://cvs.synchro.net to get the groups) and Usenet at https://eternal-september.org, with news://eternal-september.org (or snews:// for TLS, secure times) for the same group fetching.
On the ghosts towns, with FIDO/DOVE you get far less posts, but every group has some content. With Usenet, you either have loaded technical groups (and some less tech bound ones such as misc.internet.discuss) plus some niche hobbies (chess, classical music...) except modern PC gaming. The rest, as you said... shadows from better places.
For postmodern bullshiters, hauntology it's never a thing on open services. There's always some people having fun there. Former propietary or web bound services are dead, forgotten and lost. Such as MySpace, Digg, unpatched MSN-AOL-ICQ, the Spanish slashdot clone (Barrapunto), Libertonia (es.comp.os.linux related slashdot clone) and so on.
To be clear, you still can't click, drag, and highlight text for basic operations like quickly and easily copying some text in any Bubbletea/Lipgloss interfaces, right?
Unless that has changed, that dynamic places this behind most other CLI-based IRC clients, including some that are decades old.
Thats neat actually, will take a look into how viable it can be. Bubbletea (and lipgloss) are like CSS for the terminal, you do the styling, calculate margins, manage responsive things wich is quite cool already. I believe what you mean is totally doable, just that I'm not much of a mouse user myself - it slows me down. Thanks for the feedback.
For what it's worth, I rarely do use the mouse in my terminal, but on those few occasions when I do want to, Bubbletea/Lipgloss applications have had a history of being pretty infuriating for me as a user.
P.S. Keep up the great work! The world needs more IRC.
I can select text with my mouse cursor in all terminal applications that are not Bubbletea/Lipgloss, and cannot do so in Bubbletea/Lipgloss applications.
The real tragedy isn't IRC clients, but that IRC missed its chance to become the dominant decentralized protocol before Slack/Teams took over.
The core issue wasn't just tooling. IRC's protocol fundamentally lacked what modern teams need: native multimedia support, seamless file sharing, persistent searchable history, and rich formatting. While IRCv3 improved extensibility, it didn't address these feature gaps.
It seems that IRC's simplicity was both its strength and fatal weakness. Great for tech communities, but too bare-bones for mainstream adoption.
I feel that we traded decentralization for features, and now we're stuck with proprietary silos
this is just XMPP and it has been around for years before Slack was even a thing
Slack won anyway for the same reasons most centralised, commercial, closed sourced products often win: less fragmentation, more marketing, stronger network effects, simpler onboarding for normies, richer integrations, and most importantly, an enterprise sales team that actually showers
There's also https://github.com/gomuks/gomuks/tree/master for golang folks (although it's currently doing a transition to being a web client... and then back to being a TUI apparently)
I don't understand projects like these. Open source is mainly driven by people that want to do something with computers that's not yet possible so they write some code to help them.
However TUI IRC clients already exist in the form of venerable weechat, and all the other examples people already gave in the thread.
So I ask what is the purpose? Learning? Sure I can see that, but why is a project with 5 commits being presented on HN as some kind of innovative application? Trustworthy projects need tenure and they need humility. This has neither.
I don't understand why people are always against people posting interesting projects here. Showing it to people is a very nice way to get feedback on things and then when it gets reposted again in the future we can see what has changed from looking back on the first post.
An interesting project needs to fulfill a couple of requirements that I think this specific one doesn't: solves a problem that people have in some capacity, it's proven to be something more than a one weekend adventure, and is actually doing something innovative or interesting.
I understand I'm being overly negative here, and that there's at least 60 people disagreeing with me, but tell me why is this project interesting for you?
Maybe if we let people here just vote on the projects that get attention? And then rank them by votes against whatever else (with some algorithm that does attrition by time or something). Would that make it more acceptable?
Indeed. Maybe it's not obvious from my previous posts, but I am not actually arguing against OP, or anyone else, posting their pet project, rather against the 60+ people that are actually finding it "interesting". :)
Opposing views are always good for improvement. I'm easy to please, so just seeing irc client mentioned gets me interested, but more than that I would say the fact that this terminal client natively builds for windows as well is nice as I could use it in my work computer in a terminal app tab.
1. Written in Go, not C so I might be able to contribute.
2. Not crazy complex to configure (lost my old weechat config, and I'm not going through all that effort again).
3. Can be embedded into other go applications (see above where it was originally written to be embedded into a music TUI).
Will this project end up as a small weekend project with only a few users? Possibly, but that isn't a reason not to create something and share what it with people.
There's a ton a great software that started to solve a problem that the developer had, that eventually hit pretty mainstream usage.
The combination of those two make it difficult to even see what you’ve made.