• Blaze (he/him)
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      45 days ago

      But as long as things remain as they are, I don’t see the general public warming to Matrix.org/Element. The platform is cumbersome for newcomers and lacks user-facing features that people actually want, while simultaneously overexposing complex settings like roles, permissions, and addresses. It’s the ideal enterprise software – and I don’t mean that as a compliment. Even overloaded platforms like Discord ultimately focus on what users want: Dumb emojis and stickers, silly color themes, and intuitive server and friend management. Matrix, by contrast, feels like it was built for compliance departments and bureaucrats, not communities.

      Fair. Element X not supporting threads isn’t really giving a good perspective on the platform.

      • @[email protected]
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        25 days ago

        Things don’t remain as they are if other services are not encrypted anymore (or have backdoors)

    • @[email protected]
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      45 days ago

      It is just people who are inpatient and think that a company offering FOSS software has as much resources as a company offering proprietary data collection services which they can sell

      It does what I need it to do and even more. All I need is a tool to communicate with my friends in secure way

      People who want to use it as replacement for discord are those who complain most, but I use it as replacement of WhatsApp etc.

      • AwesomeLowlander
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        15 days ago

        The guy who wrote that article has been pushing matrix for 5 years or so, and his complaints sound pretty legitimate. Not exactly clueless user bullshit. Did you read the article?

        • @[email protected]
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          35 days ago

          I did not say that the author is clueless, I just don’t see how you can expect fast development in a capitalist world when they don’t really sell anything

          Don’t get me wrong, I am frustrated about slow progress as well, but I have the opinion, that only whining about it does not make it better

          If you are not happy with the speed of progress, “just” get a team, fork it, and do it yourself

          Article was way to long, so I only skimmed it

          • AwesomeLowlander
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            25 days ago

            If you are not happy with the speed of progress, “just” get a team, fork it, and do it yourself

            Never understood this argument. Not everybody can be working on everything, and while Matrix is open source it’s also got an official company maintaining it, so you’d have an uphill fight from the start. The obvious other choice is to use an alternative, which is what the author did by moving back to xmpp.

            • @[email protected]
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              15 days ago

              This exchange shows a clash of philosophies. While you are not wrong exactly, neither is your interlocutor. The “capitalist” mindset (as illustrated by your good-faith comment) is to treat this like shopping - “we’ll just go elsewhere”. But the whole point of FOSS is that we do the work, not “them”. So while it’s true that “not everyone can be working on everything”, ultimately that’s very much our problem and one that only we can solve.

              • AwesomeLowlander
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                15 days ago

                But in this case, we have a choice between two FOSS solutions, so whichever choice we make, we’re still going to be promoting FOSS. It’s not like we’re discussing leaving matrix for discord or WhatsApp.

                • @[email protected]
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                  15 days ago

                  OK. So this is just another XMPP-vs-Matrix debate. Assuming that the holy grail is a distributed, federated drop-in replacement for Whatsapp, then, as I understand it, Matrix is a far more advanced on that path. In any case, just as there are not competing protocols for email, the ultimate solution is clearly one protocol. Everyone jumping ship every 3 months will not get us there.