On Dec 18, 2012 6:33 AM, "Marc Joliet" wrote: > > Am Mon, 17 Dec 2012 18:04:46 -0800 > schrieb Grant : > > [...] > > > XMPP clients are a dime a dozen, take you pick: pidgin, kopete, > > > telepathy and a hots of others. > > > > > > Servers are another story. All of them that you can lay your hands on > > > seem to suck big eggs big time. ejabberd is the only one I found > > > stable enough to actually stay up for sane amounts of time, and not > > > DEPEND on java. > > > > > > But that info might be well out of date, I haven't looked at our > > > jabber server for ages. There's no need to - the techies all > > > gravitated by themselves over to GTalk and Skype, claiming that the > > > cloud services did everything they needed and more, and it was there, > > > and it worked. Our in-house jabber server - not so much. > > > > > > Can't say I blame them. It's true. > > > > Thanks Alan, this is just the kind of info I need. It sounds like I would > > be better off with a cloud solution for collaborative chat. > > Just out of curiosity: why couldn't you use a Jabber client with > Bonjour/Zeroconf support (all or most of them?) within the company (which is > what this is for IIUC)? With Zeroconf, the Jabber clients "find each other", > then you wouldn't need to bother with setting up a server. > > Or is Zeroconf problematic? I know Pidgin can do Zeroconf on Windows, even if > you need to manually install a separate package for it to work. That only works within the same mdns domain, which usually means being on the same Ethernet segment. > > -- > Marc Joliet > -- > "People who think they know everything really annoy those of us who know we > don't" - Bjarne Stroustrup