why go from one corporate property to another when enshitification is the problem and libre options are available??
tomorrow's headline: "Teamspeak CEO excited to be working with Discord"
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why go from one corporate property to another when enshitification is the problem and libre options are available??
tomorrow's headline: "Teamspeak CEO excited to be working with Discord"
Matrix has the best architecture by far. The only feature it lacks is high fps screenshare with audio. Right now its only acceptable for like a powerpoint presentation.
When the update fixing that comes it will finally be ready to fully replace discord.
I often fall back to Molly for video chat, the quality is superior
Sticking with discord for slightly better video doesn't sound reasonable
Well convince my 22 friends to switch when a feature they consider critical is missing

Been on IRC for like 3-decades and is where I get my media content, mostly. Highly recommended if you give zero shits about fancy text!
how do you get media isnt it only plain text?
DCC transfers direct from bots. You can do transfers, just gotta trust the source of the content.
I’ll stick to Matrix thanks

whatever happened to meeting up with your mom's house on a bunch of folding tables in the living room
Those must be some big tables
did you just call me fat
This feels like it's happening way too soon. Sure, at the current pace I would expect an exodus from discord eventually, but I didn't believe that there was so many proactive people on the platform.
Anyway, TeamSpeak has always been great. Discord voice can be rather unstable as you add more people to a chat, or depending on the locations of the people in it.
VENT or nothing!
I said that the other day and I got back "noone is going to use that windows XP lookin shit."
:)
Iirc Ventrilo doesn't support Linux, or it's codecs don't. Someone please correct me if I'm wrong!
Is mumble still a thing? It was the best for low latency and automatic mic pickup/ nouse cancelling back in the day.
stoat.chat seems like a good alternative.
UK based, soon to implement identity verification, unfederated
Hey guys, stop moving on to the next commercial service who will do the exact same thing once they get up to critical mass.
Yes, commercial services are easier to setup. The cost you pay is all of your privacy and your loss of control over the service that you're building your communities on.
Stop making this same mistake OVER and OVER and OVER.
Take the time to find the IT workers or tech nerds in your community, take donations to rent server space and administer it yourself. Moving from Discord to Teamspeak isn't an improvement, you're just selecting the next group of people who will sell you out the moment that it becomes profitable.
Use Free and Open Source solutions, that your community hosts themselves. You have Mumble (https://www.mumble.info/) for voice, XMPP (https://xmpp.org/software/?category=servers) for text chat, Discourse (https://github.com/discourse/discourse) for forums, or even setup a Lemmy instance.
None of these things are difficult to use and the administrative side of things is simple (most are simply pre-made and hardened Docker containers). Even if you don't want to deal with that yourself, there are managed hosts available for all of these pieces of software. If you don't want to administer a Mumble server you can just rent one for less than the cost of a single Discord subscription. There are similar managed hosts for all of the other software.
Every game that I've ever played as part of a large community has had forum software and voice chat that we've hosted ourselves. Discord killed all of that because they offered the same service for free and made it easier.
Well, it wasn't free, they've been steadily enshittfying and profiting off of the users. The prices keep increasing and they're depending on the Network Effect ("I can't leave because everyone uses it!") to keep you trapped on their services.
XMPP can actually do everything, chat, group video calls, and even screen sharing with the Movim client. It's a one-stop shop.
@Tattorack@lemmy.world
The problem with decentralised alternatives to Discord isn't just the set up time.
Me and some of my friend group are pretty technical and we're willing to jump through all the hoops and difficulties to make our own little cluster of federated self-hosted servers.
The problems start occurring when we actually look at what these open source alternatives are actually capable of. And... Uh... It looks bad. Voice chatting and streaming and text channels on the same client are an absolute must.
Teamspeak is not a good replacement lol
it's what other people used to be familiar with though, so that's probably why. also - can't you download and host your own teamspeak server? I haven't used it in so long I can't remember how it works haha
We’re setting up our own Matrix/Element CE and mulling over the non-technical folks’ fumbling trying to figure it out. Going to have to test a lot. Stoat is promising since it has a familiar UI, but we have a large amount of mobile-only friends.
Not even looking at the non-free stuff. This is the shove we needed to finally move off that type of crap.
Forgot about XMPP until reading earlier comments. Will have to put that on the list.
We’re setting up our own Matrix/Element CE and mulling over the non-technical folks’ fumbling trying to figure it out.
Commet might be more helpful there than Element, as it tries to replicate Discord's UI and UX, making for an easier transition.
TeamSpeak only supports 32 simultaneous users, you must purchase a license to support more than that.
Yeah, this bit was all I needei to know:
Besides all of that, if you'd rather not chat to randoms who also happen to have an unhealthy obsession with Arc Raiders, you'll likely need to pay an admittedly small subscription fee to rent your own ten-person community voice server. By that point, you're handing over card details and essentially fulfilling an age assurance check anyway. If you'd rather limit how much info your chat platform of choice has about you, there are arguably better options out there.

I was wondering if it was really the software I was using for World of Warcraft in the 2000s.
I don't know what they're even doing. TeamSpeak/Mumble is not a replacement for Discord. There's no separate text channels in addition to the voice ones. It's just a VOIP program. If you move from Discord to one of those you're either in addition fundamentally changing your way of thinking or you're in for disappointment.
For one there's no "public communities" as with Discord. Here are the biggest servers from mumist.eu:

Discord was originally a replacement for teamspeak/mumble and it's how most people I actually know still use it. It was "nice" because you didn't need to set up your own server. Using it as a replacement for irc came later. Image support in chats is nice, but I really only use it for the voip chat rooms.
For-profit companies cannot be relied on for this kinda thing (for anything at all). TeamSpeak is good now, maybe, but there's nothing actually protecting it from turning to shit the very instant management changes.
True. However TS has been around for a very very long time and have a proven record of not shitting on users. The free server and client have remained free all this time.
That doesn't mean things will always be good though.