- Textual 7 0 7 – Lightweight Irc Client Access Point
- Textual 7 0 7 – Lightweight Irc Client Access Web
- Textual 7 0 7 – Lightweight Irc Client Access Portal
August 27th marks five years since diaspora*, the open, privacy-oriented social network, was placed into the hands of its community by its founders. One year ago the community released diaspora* version 0.6, the result of a huge effort of refactoring the old code to make it perform better, as well as redesigning diaspora*'s interface and introducing new features. One year later, we are proud to announce the release of diaspora* version 0.7. Since the last major release, 28 contributors have added 28675 lines of code and removed 20019 lines, which marks the release of diaspora* version 0.7 as one of the biggest versions diaspora*’s community has ever released.
Our latest release contains some important changes, particularly ‘under the hood’.
FortiOS 7.0 enables organizations to tackle some of the biggest security challenges they currently face, such as providing advanced cloud-based security and zero trust network access to remote workers and the new home office. Here is an overview of the key services and functions now included in FortiOS 7.0: 1. Zero Trust Network Access (ZTNA). Operation RFC 4533 - The Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) Content Synchronization Operation RFC 4534 - Group Security Policy Token v1 RFC 4535 - GSAKMP: Group Secure Association Key Management Protocol RFC 4536 - The application/smil and application/smil+xml Media Types RFC 4537 - Kerberos Cryptosystem Negotiation Extension RFC 4538.
- It is now possible to mention people in comments as well as in posts – a long-awaited feature.
- The markdown editor, with previews, is available on comments and conversations, bringing them into line with the publisher and making it a lot easier to add formatting, links and images to comments and conversations.
- This markdown editor is now also available on the mobile version of diaspora*, for posts, comments and conversations!
- It includes Federation v0.2.0, which is amazing enough that it got its own blog post.
- And, last but certainly not least, this new release will include the first of the two steps towards a full account migration feature!
Version 0.2.0 of our federation protocol, created by Benjamin Neff (SuperTux88) with help from Senya (cmrd-senya), has started the process of including new functionality. It also provides underlying support for secure and reliable account migration.
Important reminder to podmins: This new federation protocol is incompatible with versions of diaspora* older than 0.6.3.0. If you are still running an earlier version, your server will no longer be able to fully communicate with servers running the latest software.
Senya has also been hard at work creating the first stages of the much-needed account migration feature! With the release of this version, it will be possible to fully export your account data which will become importable in a future diaspora* release. Intaglio 3 5 3 – drawing and illustration application. We also started working on implementing federation methods to enable pods to correctly handle account migrations. The next step will be to create this secure account importing, which can be introduced once the majority of pods in our network have updated to version 0.7. These steps cannot be introduced in the same release as the network first needs to upgrade so when the first users start to import their archives, a maximum of pods will be able to understand the migration message.
Since last year's launch of version 0.6.0.0, we achieved a pretty impressive list of changes!
Additions and enhancements since version 0.6.0.0:
- Automatically pull new notifications every 5 minutes
- Add a user setting for default post visibility
- Use
guid
instead ofid
in permalinks and in single-post view - Links to streams of posts I have liked or commented on
- Access to “My aspects” and “Followed tags” pages on mobile
- Improve color themes and add a “Dark” color theme
- Enable collapsing of notification threads in your mail client
- OpenGraph video support
- Improve error handling on mobile
- Admin pages for mobile users
- NodeInfo 2.0
- Stop communication with pods that have been offline for an extended period of time
- Support for an optional
Content-Security-Policy
header - Support for Liberapay donations
- Links to our Discourse forum
Here’s a quick round-up of the major changes coming your way in version 0.7:
Interface
- Mentions in comments
- Improve Mentions: display @ before mentions; simplify mentions in the publisher
- Internationalization for color themes
- Refactoring single-post view interactions
- Update help pages
- Simplified publisher preview
- Add markdown editor for comments and conversations
- Support cmd+enter to submit posts, comments and conversations
Account migration
- Update the user data export archive format
- Reset stuck exports and handle errors
- Add support for receiving account migrations
Federation
- Switch to new federation protocol
- Fix order of comments across pods
Mobile
- Always link comment count text on mobile
- Include count in mobile post action links
- Support direct links to comments on mobile
- Improve responsive header in desktop version
- Add markdown editor for posts, comments and conversations on mobile
- Mark as 'Mobile Web App Capable' on Android
Internals
- Upgrade to jQuery 3 and Rails 5.1
- Send public profiles publicly
- Change sender for mails
- Add some missing indexes and clean up the data base if needed
- Improve stream when ignoring a person who posts a lot of tagged posts
Updating
Update instructions are available as usual in the wiki. For those of you who have been testing the release candidate, run
git checkout master
before the update to get back to the stable release branch.Developer(s) | Mirco Bauer |
---|---|
Initial release | July 19, 2008 |
Stable release | 1.0.7 (June 18, 2017; 3 years ago) [±] |
Repository | |
Written in | C# |
Operating system | FreeBSD, Linux, OS X, Windows |
Available in | British English, Chinese Simplified, Czech, Catalan, Danish, English, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Russian (partial), Slovak, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish (partial), Urdu (partial) |
Type | IRC client |
License | GNU General Public License |
Website | smuxi.im |
Smuxi is a cross-platformIRC client for the GNOME desktop inspired by Irssi. It pioneered the concept of separating the frontend client from the backend engine which manages connections to IRC servers inside a single graphical application.[1][2][3]
Architecture[edit]
Smuxi is based on the client–server model: The core application exists in the Smuxi back-end server which is connected to the Internet around-the-clock. The user interacts with one or more Smuxi front-endclients which are connected to the Smuxi back-end server.[4] This way, the Smuxi back-end server can maintain connections to IRC servers even when all Smuxi front-end clients have been closed.[5]
The combination of screen and Irssi served as an example of this architecture. The Quassel IRC client has a similar design.
Smuxi also supports the regular single application mode. This behaves like a typical IRC client with no separation of back-end and front-end. It utilizes a local IRC engine that is used by the local front-end client.[1][4]
Features[edit]
Smuxi supports nick colors which are identical across channels and networks, a Caret Mode as seen in Firefox that allows users to navigate through the messages using the keyboard, theming with colors and fonts, configurable tray-icon support, optional stripping of colours and formattings and convenience features like CTCP support, channel search and nickname completion.[6] It has a tabbed document interface, tabbed user interface, and support for multiple servers. Smuxi can attach to a local backend engine or a remote engine utilizing the Engine drop down menu (similar to screen used with irssi).[1] It also includes, in client-server operation, a visual marker showing the user's last activity in an open session, and ignore filtering.[7]
Distribution[edit]
Textual 7 0 7 – Lightweight Irc Client Access Point
Smuxi can be found in many major free operating systems such as:Debian GNU/Linux (including Debian GNU/kFreeBSD),[8]Ubuntu,[9]Gentoo Linux,[10]Arch Linux,[11]openSUSE Community Repository,[12]Frugalware Linux,[13]Slackware,[14] andFreeBSD.[15]
Smuxi is also available for Microsoft Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8.x and 10 (32-bit and 64-bitarchitectures).[16] Portable pc usb.
Smuxi is available for Mac OS X starting with the 0.8.9 release.[17]
Textual 7 0 7 – Lightweight Irc Client Access Web
Reception[edit]
Smuxi was selected in 'Hot Picks' by Linux Format Magazine in March 2009.[18]TuxRadar wrote:
If you're looking for IRC clients you're spoilt for choice with many distributions, as there are plenty to choose from. Some are text-based (IRSSI), some integrate well with instant messenger applications (Pidgin) while others are simply IRC clients through and through.Smuxi falls into the latter category, and we're glad it does, because it's a good little IRC client.[19]
In Tom's Hardware, Adam Overa wrote:
smuxi is a lightweight client with a slim, yet fully customizable interface. [..] smuxi allows the user to completely change the default interface, moving or removing just about any aspect.[20]
In LinuxToday, Joe Brockmeier wrote:
If you spend much time with any open source project, you're probably going to be spending time in IRC. If you want to make sure you don't miss a minute of your project's conversations, you'll want to check out Smuxi.[21]
See also[edit]
Textual 7 0 7 – Lightweight Irc Client Access Portal
References[edit]
- ^ abc'Smuxi: About'. Retrieved 2009-04-24.
- ^'Detachable Frontend (Core Rewrite)'. Smuxi.org. Retrieved 2010-07-25.
- ^Mirco Bauer. 'Commit 295b37c8ac4939829a3c7f9150943dba8fff07f0 to meebey/smuxi'. github.com. Retrieved 2012-01-08.
src/Server/Server.cs src/Frontend-GtkGnome/Frontend.cs
- ^ abBrockmeier, Joe (October 15, 2010). 'Advanced IRC with Smuxi - Smuxification'. Tutorials. LinuxPlanet.com.
- ^'Smuxi 0.7.0 released – now with Twitter functionality'Archived 2013-04-15 at Archive.today. IRC-Junkie.org.(rationale) January 14, 2010.
- ^'Features'. Smuxi.org. Retrieved 2009-11-05.
- ^'Smuxi 0.7.2.1 is out, extends CTCP support & adds ignore filters'Archived 2011-11-18 at the Wayback Machine. IRC-Junkie.org.(rationale) July 25, 2010.
- ^'Smuxi in Debian'. Debian.org. Retrieved 2009-11-22.
- ^'Smuxi in Ubuntu'. Ubuntu.org. Retrieved 2009-11-22.
- ^'Smuxi in Gentoo'. Gentoo.org. Archived from the original on 2010-02-23. Retrieved 2009-11-22.
- ^'Smuxi in Arch Linux'. ArchLinux.org. Retrieved 2009-11-22.
- ^'Smuxi in OpenSUSE'. OpenSuse.org. Retrieved 2009-11-22.
- ^'Smuxi in Frugalware'. Frugalware.org. Retrieved 2010-07-11.
- ^'Smuxi in Slackware'. Slackbuilds.org. Retrieved 2010-07-11.
- ^'Smuxi in FreeBSD'. Freshports.org. Retrieved 2010-06-05.
- ^'Smuxi for Microsoft Windows'. Smuxi.org. Retrieved 2018-01-06.
- ^''Smuxi 0.8.9 'One Giant Leap' Release''. Smuxi project. www.smuxi.org. Retrieved 2012-01-06.
- ^Andy Hudson (March 2009). 'Hot Picks - Smuxi'. Linux Format (116): 78. ISSN1470-4234.(subscription required)
- ^'100 open source gems - Part 2'. TuxRadar. Linux Format Future Publishing Limited. May 21, 2009. Retrieved 2011-12-25.
- ^Overa, Adam (October 19, 2009). 'Tom's Definitive Linux Software Roundup: Communications Apps - Lightweight IRC Clients'. Tom's Hardware. Retrieved 2009-11-19.
- ^'Advanced IRC with Smuxi'. LinuxToday. LinuxToday. Oct 15, 2010. Retrieved 2011-12-26.
External links[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Smuxi. |
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Smuxi&oldid=997590994'