uoyrwish is granted, see https://jami.net/
E2EE, P2P (fully distributed), runs on computers of various form factors and operating systems
uoyrwish is granted, see https://jami.net/
E2EE, P2P (fully distributed), runs on computers of various form factors and operating systems
uoyrwish is granted, see https://jami.net/
E2EE, P2P (fully distributed), runs on computers of various form factors and operating systems
@lxo sadly i don't see nor #xmpp nor #jami grow.
We need a #signal kind of decentralized.
both XMPP and JAMI work with IT people but not grandma kind of one.
and @delta where too hostile, when i pointed out some of shortfall of their UX (people that do not accept constructive critisism deserve the worst).
So go to case one.
signal won't go decentralized, it really doesn't want to
xmpp has worked with non-IT people back when gmail offered it as a built-in service, when facebook based its messenger on it. so there's something amiss in your assessment. maybe you're speaking of the apps rather than of xmpp itself?
Jami works with non-IT people in my experience, but I don't want to invalidate yours. I'm sure its developers would love to know what difficulties the non-IT grandmas in your life find in it, so that they (or you) can address them.
in my experience, wishing and hoping doesn't make great software appear out of thin air; when software does appear out of thin air, it's usually as part of an exploitation plan that doesn't make it very appealing to me. the way I've learned to get software that does what we wish is to help make it so; starting from something that does part of what we want usually makes for a shorter path than starting from scratch. does this match your experience?