mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
148 lines
8.0 KiB
Markdown
148 lines
8.0 KiB
Markdown
> “Choosing Zulip over Slack as our group chat is one of the best
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> decisions we’ve ever made. Zulip makes it easy for our community of
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> 1000 Recursers around the world to stay involved, even years after
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> their batches finish. No other tool has a user experience that
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> [scales to a community of our
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> size](https://www.recurse.com/blog/112-how-rc-uses-zulip).”
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>
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> — Nick Bergson-Shilcock, founder and CEO, Recurse Center
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## Zulip: Designed with communities in mind
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Zulip is designed to help thoughtful people work on difficult problems
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together, whether they work from a shared office or from all over the
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world. Zulip offers an ideal platform for communities of all types,
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including open-source projects, research collaborations, volunteer
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organizations, and other groups of people who share a common pursuit.
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The Zulip core developers have decades of combined experience leading
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and growing open source communities, and we use Zulip to fashion the
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day-to-day experience of being a part of our project. No other chat
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product comes close to Zulip in facilitating contributor engagement and
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inclusion, and making efficient use of everyone’s time.
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">When we made the switch to <a href="https://twitter.com/zulip?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@zulip</a> a few months ago for chat, never in my wildest dreams did I imagine it was going to become the beating heart of the community, and so quickly. It's a game changer. 🧑💻🗨️👩💻</p>— Dan Allen (@mojavelinux) <a href="https://twitter.com/mojavelinux/status/1409702273400201217?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 29, 2021</a></blockquote>
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## Challenges with other communication tools
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Problems with the Slack/Discord/IRC model, discussed
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in detail [here](/why-zulip), are even more important for open communities:
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- Members of open communities may be scattered all over the world and
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in every time zone. Traditional communication tools like email
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lists, forums, and issue trackers work well in this context, because
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you can communicate effectively asynchronously. A Slack community is
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a bad experience if you’re rarely online at the same time as most
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other members, making it harder to be inclusive of all participants.
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- Many members of open communities have other fulltime obligations and
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can only spend a few hours a week on the community. Because Slack is
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very hard to skim, these part-time community members cannot
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efficiently use their time participating in an active Slack. So
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either they don’t participate in the Slack, or they do, and their
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other contributions to the community’s efforts suffer.
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> “Zulip helped the FHIR community grow from a tiny group of dreamers to 500 active users sending 6000 messages per month, all driving the creation of better healthcare standards. Zulip’s topic-based threading helps us manage simultaneous discussions with clarity, ensuring the right people can pay attention to the right messages. This makes our large-group discussion far more manageable than what we’ve experienced with Skype and Slack.”
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> — Grahame Grieve, founder, FHIR health care standards body
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- Many of us are busy people, who really wish we had more time to do
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focus work. Because active participation in Slack fundamentally
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requires constant interruptions, leaders of communities that use
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Slack end up making unpleasant choices between participating in the
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Slack community (limiting their ability to do focus work) or
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ignoring the Slack community (leaving it effectively without their
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input and potentially unmoderated).
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- Writing to a busy Slack channel often means interrupting another
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existing conversation. This makes it harder for newer and shyer
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members to jump into the community. Often this disproportionately
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affects groups that are already underrepresented.
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- The lack of organization in Slack message history (and its 10K
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message history limit) mean that users asking for help cannot
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effectively do self-service support. This results in the community
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answering a lot of duplicate questions.
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The overall effect is that Slack is a poor communication tool for
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communities that want to have an inclusive, global, community and that
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many busy individuals can happily participate in.
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-cards="hidden"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">We just moved the Lichess team (~100 persons) to <a href="https://twitter.com/zulip?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@zulip</a>, and I'm loving it. The topics in particular make it vastly superior to slack & discord, when it comes to dealing with many conversations.<br>Zulip is also open-source! <a href="https://t.co/lxHjf3YPMe">https://t.co/lxHjf3YPMe</a></p>— Thibault D (@ornicar) <a href="https://twitter.com/ornicar/status/1412672302601457664?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 7, 2021</a></blockquote>
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## Solution: Zulip’s topic-based threading
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Zulip’s topic-based threading model solves the problems described above:
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- Community members in any time zone can send messages and expect to
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get a reply and have an effective (potentially asynchronous)
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conversation with the rest of the community.
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- Zulip’s topic-based threading helps include part-time community
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members in two major ways. First, they can easily browse what
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conversations happened while they were away from the community, and
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prioritize which conversations to read now, skip, or read later
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(e.g. on the weekend). Second, Zulip makes it easy for them to have
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public conversations with participation from other community members
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(potentially split over hours, days, or weeks as needed), allowing
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them to fully participate in the work of the community.
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- Community leaders can effectively participate in a Zulip community
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without being continuously online. Using Zulip’s [keyboard
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shortcuts](/help/keyboard-shortcuts), it’s
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extremely efficient to inspect every potentially relevant thread and
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reply wherever one’s feedback is useful, and replying hours after a
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question was asked is still a good experience for community
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members. As a result, leaders can do multi-hour sessions of focus
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work while still being available to their community.
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- Topics make it easier to provide a safe, welcoming, online
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community. Asking a question never has to feel like an interruption
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of an ongoing conversation or like one's sticking one's neck out.
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> “Wikimedia uses Zulip for its participation in open source
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> mentoring programs. Zulip’s threaded discussions help busy
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> organization administrators and mentors stay in close communication
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> with students during all phases of the programs.”
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> — Srishti Sethi, Developer Advocate, Wikimedia Foundation
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## Try Zulip today!
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You can see Zulip in action in our own
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[Zulip development community](https://zulip.com/development-community/), which sends
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thousands of messages a week. We often get feedback from contributors
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around the world that they love how responsive Zulip’s project leaders
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are in public Zulip conversations. We are able to achieve this despite
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the project leaders collectively spending only a few hours a day
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managing the community and spending most of their time integrating
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improvements into Zulip.
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Many communities that migrated from
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[Slack](/help/import-from-slack),
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[Mattermost](/help/import-from-mattermost),
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[Gitter](/help/import-from-gitter), or
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[Rocket.Chat](/help/import-from-rocketchat) to Zulip tell us
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that Zulip helped them manage and grow an inclusive, healthy
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community. We hope Zulip can help your community succeed too!
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> “I highly recommend Zulip to other communities. We’re coming from
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> Freenode as our only real-time communication so the difference is
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> night and day. Slack is a no-go for many due to not being FLOSS,
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> and I’m concerned about vendor lock-in if they were to stop being
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> so generous. Slack’s threading model is much worse than Zulip’s
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> IMO. The streams/topics flow is an incredibly intuitive way to keep
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> track of everything that is going on.”
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> — RJ Ryan, Mixxx Developer
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<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js"></script>
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