

- #OSX IRC CLIENT 2017 MAC OS X#
- #OSX IRC CLIENT 2017 MAC OSX#
- #OSX IRC CLIENT 2017 FULL#
- #OSX IRC CLIENT 2017 SOFTWARE#
- #OSX IRC CLIENT 2017 CODE#
There are at least a hundred other clients out there – clients that live inside Emacs, clients that run on your phone, clients that integrate with your email client, XMPP (Jabber) client, and more – just look around. If you have a preference to avoid ncurses, irssi may suit you better, but in all other cases I’d recommend trying weechat first, as it is more actively developed and slightly easier to ramp up on than irssi. However, the payoff is a very clean text-mode chat experience that is extremely configurable and handles complex filters, dozens of channels across multiple networks, and custom behaviors very very well. Both require considerably more configuration than Hexchat or Xchat to get started, and have more of a learning curve in general. Weechat and irssi are popular text-mode clients available for Linux, Mac, and UNIX.
#OSX IRC CLIENT 2017 MAC OSX#
Mac OSX and Windows users should download from. On Linux or UNIX you should get it from your package manager if possible. It is easy to use, and has most of the popular networks preconfigured. HexChat is a popular GUI client available for Windows 2, Mac OSX, Linux and UNIX. IRC lets live conversations happen as easily as it lets messages sit around for later, so it bends to your schedule instead of the other way around.

IRC clients come in many shapes and sizes, so it’s generally easy to find one that fits your workflow well, and is accessible to you regardless of operating system or disability. IRC chatter can easily be logged and searched to find that thing you forgot. IRC makes it equally easy to chat with someone down the hall and someone miles away.
#OSX IRC CLIENT 2017 SOFTWARE#
IRC, or Internet Relay Chat, has been the place to get hacking of the network and software engineering kinds done since the 1980s, with information security soon on its heels. Not all advice applies if you are only interested in non-hacker communities such as Nerdfitness or gamer stuff.
#OSX IRC CLIENT 2017 MAC OS X#
The update is free for registered users (available from the site or its built-in updating mechanism), while a license to run on Mac OS X 10.4 or 10.5 costs $20.N.B., this guide is specifically for new and future hackers interested in finding community via IRC. Linkinus' developers have promised that this feature will return in a minor update down the road.Īll in all, Linkinus 1.3 is a very, very welcome update to what I think is the leading GUI IRC client on Mac OS X (especially since it is in active, regular development). I don't usually need this sidebar visible, and collapsing it allows me to save a little more space on my busy desktop (yes, even though I'm an avid Spaces user). One casualty of Linkinus 1.3's UI refresh, however, is the ability to collapse the right sidebar of users in a channel.
#OSX IRC CLIENT 2017 CODE#
The team professes to have spent a considerable amount of time cleaning up code while adding new features, and it certainly shows. Performance across the entire app has also been vastly improved, which I can definitely tell on a MacBook Air. Linkinus has received a Leopard-ized UI refresh, ditching the Unified look of other apps like iTunes, and gaining new polish and even count badges for public/private messages and highlights.
#OSX IRC CLIENT 2017 FULL#
If you keep Linkinus in its own Space on Leopard, though, you could probably add even more channels if you run it full screen.Ī ton of other features have made their way into this release, including Spotlight integration for searching log files, a choice between plain or formatted log text, new autocompletion features (tab to cycle through nicks, hit spacebar to confirm a suggestion), a new style (Whisper) with embedded images, sounds, and YouTube videos, new and updated scripts like iTunes, Sysinfo, and Weather, an automatic away nick, and much more. This is a killer way to stay on top of what's being said in multiple channels without swapping between them, though I find that in the scaled-down window that I use, three channels is about the usable limit.

Linkinus still maintains a single input field at the bottom of the window, however, thereby maximizing your screen space while allowing you to hop between channel input focus with cmd-shift-up/down. Simply command-clicking a second channel will split your view between the two channels you want to keep track of. Most notable among 1.3's new features is the program's Combined View, which allows you to keep an eye on more than one channel at once, even across multiple servers. Notice the split channels with a new topic midway down the channel view, as well as the yellow channel highlight to denote where input will appear. Linkinus 1.3's new Combined View in full effect.
