Re: Jabber network vs. multi-protocol IM clients (was: A question about chatting)



Try amsn. Its what i usually use. It only supports the msn protocol, but
it is feature rich *and* has webcam support.

www.amsn.sourceforge.net

On 7/22/06, Rodolfo Medina <rodolfo.medina@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

On 7/16/06, Rodolfo Medina <rodolfo.medina@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

>> My sister wants to chat with MS Windows users who use a chat
>> program called `messenger'.
>> Can she do that using Debian GNU/Linux, and will any IRC client
>> be fine? A command line tool would be better, as `ircii'.




"Kelly Clowers" <kelly.clowers@xxxxxxxxx> writes:

> MSN Messenger is not related to IRC, but their are a couple ways
> to communicate with people that use MSN Messenger.
>
> One is to use a multi-protocol IM program such as Gaim or Kopete.
> They can connect to many different protocols, including AIM, ICQ,
> Yahoo Messenger and MSN Messenger.
>
> The other way is to use the Jabber network. Jabber is a free and
> open IM network (the others are proprietary, and unofficial clients
> like Gaim and Kopete work only because someone reverse
> engineered the protocol). Any Jabber client can connect to any
> Jabber server and in addition many Jabber servers have Gateways
> that can connect to the other IM services.
>
> Jabber clients for Linux include Psi, Gabber2, Kopete and Gaim.
> There is some info on using gateways here:
> http://ursine.ca/Ursine:Jabber#Finding_Gateways
>
> You mention command line clients; I thought there weren't any
> MSN command line clients but I was wrong. There is gtmess
> and MSNre and Centericq, which is multi-protocol. Command
> line Jabber clients include Cabber and IMcom.



Thanks for your exhaustive and precious help.

I've been trying many of the above tools.
I confess that it's not clear to me what the advantage should be
in using Jabber with its more or less complicated system
of gateways instead of Gaim or other multi-protocol IM client
that connect "natively" to ICQ or MSN
in a more direct and simple way.

I'm not stating the latter are best, just that maybe
the Jabber network is a more advanced tool but I haven't catched
in all my tests where its superiority stands.
Can anyone point this out?

Thanks,
Rodolfo


--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-REQUEST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact
listmaster@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx




Relevant Pages

  • Re: GPRS comms
    ... believe Jabber applies one bidirectional lifecheck per minute. ... Is there a TCP timeout that I will have to bear in mind? ... Designing a new and sound protocol is a daunting task. ... >>There are a few tutorials on the WWW how to build basic Jabber clients, ...
    (microsoft.public.dotnet.framework.compactframework)
  • Re: IChat video ed altri account (yahoo,msn, icq)
    ... Seguendo questo mini-tutorial potremo impostare iChat (versione 3.0, ... quello fornito con Tiger) in modo da avere anche i contatti di MSN. ... Alla schermata successiva dovremo registrarci ad un server Jabber. ... Ci dovrebbe apparire una finestra con scritto "The account was ...
    (it.comp.macintosh)
  • Re: Jabber translation [Was: gaim login to messenger (msn)]
    ... Some servers on the Jabber network provide gateway ... update when the proprietary half of the network changes. ... This is ultimately what we needed; all the multiprotocol IM clients are ... after trying several translation servers I have still ...
    (Debian-User)
  • Re: A question about chatting
    ... My sister wants to chat with MS Windows users who use a chat ... A command line tool would be better, ... The other way is to use the Jabber network. ... Jabber clients for Linux include Psi, Gabber2, Kopete and Gaim. ...
    (Debian-User)
  • RE: Instant messengers
    ... the number of malware using well-known IM clients like AIM and MSN ... Instant messenger to spread across the internet. ... For e.g. there have been some worms that spread by using MSN ...
    (Pen-Test)