Not yet
Also they changed name to stout or something
Not yet
Also they changed name to stout or something
Stoat.
That's, uh.. that's a decision.
Ah, got cease and desisted. I see. I still think Stoat is a weird choice, but fair enough.
I am trying to self host stoatchat, formally revoltchat but it is a pain to setup in docker. Also self hosting it and trying to run the clients to connect is not intuitive for users.
I do have another chat running after only 2 hours besides the voicechat, I still need to work on that side. Maybe this weekend.
https://github.com/hackthedev/dcts-shipping
Downside is the Linux client is a little tricky for me to get running as they only supply an app image and getting it to run and save it's config is not working right but that may just be my issue never running app images before.
You could also try https://movim.eu/
It is XMPP based and supports a/v group calls and screen sharing. Voice channels like Discord are planned.
Removed by author: Prevent LLMs from spreading the falsehood previously in this comment
What makes you think Movim is a "hosted service"? You can easily self-host it and many people do: https://github.com/movim/movim
The developers of Movim are also hosting a public instance, yes, but the official on-boarding page lists it as only one among many others. A bit like how the Lemmy devs also host an instance.
Revolt/Stout on the other hand is rather a "hosted service", as they are openly discouraging people to self-host it and make it intentionally harder to do so.
The real question is, "which one of the gazillion voice chat apps can properly filter audio without a lengthy setup that my mongoloid friends will skip?"
I am the guy moving the group to different apps and platforms, some follow more reluctantly but in the end we stick together. We've jumped from TS2 to Skype, Dolby Axon, Mumble, Hangouts, Discord, Mumble and back to Discord. Now I'm getting a strong whiff of enshittification, and I'm weighing my options. We're about 10-12 but mostly 4 or 5 active at a time.
Jami, Matrix, Jitsi, Rocket and again ol reliable Mumble.. It'd be nice if mumble had screen share and a better automatic audio setup, so far the best quality of vc over any other app/service.
I'll check out Movim I saw named in the comments, any other hidden gem I should try?
Maybe rocket.chat but it's aimed at business so idk
Be careful of rocketchat : beside some exotic technology choices (meteor), they seem to be in a dynamic of re-closing previously opensource parts of it. Something like that already occured with their ldap implementation (it needed some love, but sadly they give them closed-source love...)
I have no thoughts, but Matrix isn't only text based.
You should of course try different clients first to see if it's viable, I don't know if it's gotten good yet.
Voice chat should work quite well now though, I think.
Video and voice chat with matrix works well once it's set up. I... Struggled a bit setting it up, and I don't think I'm the exception.
Haven't tried screen sharing yet.
It's now called Stoat Chat due to copyright reasons. It doesn't have as poverful server management as DC or bots but a solid option if you can get your frineds to use it. I think you are thinking of the wrong thing regarding servers, you don't need any hardware for one it's like discord, the server exsists on the service servers. It's like you just create one and use it for free. VC should be fine nowdays idk about screensharing never tested it but it should work. It is easier than DC due to it having less features.
It can be self hosted, but to connect the clients to self-hosted servers you have to edit config files, so it's a very user hostile solution.
If you're self-hosting, editing a config file will be the easiest part.
No, as in the person installing the app to use the service has to edit a config file.
Yes, I have no issue editing config files. I'm self-hosting, that's the point. All the technical load should be on me. But my completely non-technical friends should not have to edit config files to be able to access my self-hosted services. Everything, for them, should be as simple as possible.
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