this post was submitted on 01 Jul 2024
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[–] [email protected] 13 points 4 months ago (2 children)

We see these things differently. I would argue that Matrix clients are better organized than Discord. That said, not only is Discord a privacy nightmare, but ilthe interface is only pseudo-organized at best.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 4 months ago

I find the Discord interface to be utter chaos.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 months ago (1 children)

All the Matrix clients are buggy using far too many resources & the protocol is slow as balls about joining new rooms while being wasteful about data duplication for throwaway bits of text/multimedia. I don’t think eventual consistency is the right model for chat & following Slack & Discord’s model is the way.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (1 children)

Slack & Discord both use eventual consistency?

Btw I agree with you that Discord is better UX than Matrix, but your comment doesn't make much sense

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

Sorry for clarity. The eventual consistency model is a result of wanting decentralization for Slack/Telegram/Discord’s design of thinking the entire history needs to be saved for chat rather than seen as ephemeral (which allows for better search & resilience, but at a major cost to storage, but also a knock-on effect of folks treating chat as permanent which is why we have huge, cut-off information silos on these chat platforms that the rest of the net can’t index & often trawling the search is difficult so the repeated questions/answers are common since a simple web search doesn’t yield good results). When you take away the concept that all text & attachments need to be seen from origin til the end of time, you would never bother in all the work of cloning the entire history & reassembling it on every server listening to the conversation. …Which is why many chat protocols forgo the more then enough history to keep you up to speed with a conversation & structured forums + feeds used to be the primary way to ask questions & make announcements (where simple programs could parse the data instead of needing gobs of natural language processing for chat soup when it is pulling multiple duties).