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166 points

Yes, this exactly! I still cannot fathom how Discord took off. It offers literally no advantages over forums, and introduces some massive disadvantages.

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106 points

It took off because it was objectively the best catch-all communication option for gamers at the time. It’s still the best option for certain use cases like that, but I’ll never understand why people prefer it for projects, troubleshooting, updates, etc. It seems incredibly lazy and unserious to me. And the current Discord mobile layout is absolutely horrible, making for a totally miserable user experience.

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20 points
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I hated back in 2015 when people were leaving other communication platforms for the lesser option of Discord

Even today Discord still doesn’t have directional chat and you can’t be in multiple calls at once

At least mods help mask all the other missing features

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29 points

I left mumble, teamspeak, and Skype for Discord.

Discord is easily the better options among those choices.

I also can’t think of much use for being in more than one call at once. I dunno seems like you’re just looking for a different thing. And that’s okay.

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15 points

Discord didn’t, and still doesn’t, require a download. Easier for people to pick up and easier to use on locked down computers.

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4 points

I’m unfamiliar with Directional Chat outside of things like VRchat, how that work if you’re not manipulating your position in space relative to other users?

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9 points

RIP ventrilo and iirc 8(

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3 points
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My office has official chat (teams) and unofficial chat (Mattermost).

I don’t think there’s anything wrong with having a more casual discussion platform at work, which is what Mattermost had become.

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64 points
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At the beginning it originally had an appeal that anyone could create a voice chat server for free in a matter of seconds.

Teamspeak needed a hosted dedicated server. Skype was “calls” and not communities. Mumble was hardly known.

I completely accept why it took off but I hate where it has gone. it’s over complicated and feature creeped electron shite

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12 points

Poor ventrillo. Not even a mention.

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8 points

About as remembered these days as xfire

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2 points

I feel ashamed. Good call out

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56 points

tbf discord is good for organizing activities in games with online multiplayer. definitely shouldn’t be used for documentation in place of forums though.

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12 points

Yea, I don’t get the documentation stuff. It’s like saying you’ll use Google Chat history as your documentation.

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9 points

Also good for organizing D&D.

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21 points

well that is a multiplayer game and can be played online

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6 points

Also good for casual socializing

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3 points

I’m glad doujinstyle realized their mistakes and revived the website after some time as discord only.

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20 points

You can create a discord server instantly with a handful of clicks for free. That’s why.

Also, plenty of people use it for chat.

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17 points

IRC > Discord

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11 points
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Modern web IRC clients like The Lounge or Convos can now display images, play mp3 and mp4 formats, and they have upload options. It can still be excellent for real time support, but I’m not so sure about documentation though.

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8 points
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Of course an IRC chat won’t be used for documentation, I meant for general chatting and support. Also I didn’t know that, hopefully I’ll be able to replace the absolutely proprietary discord with it.

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9 points

Because it was easier to create a server in discord than ts3

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7 points

Discord is better than IRC in any way except available clients, while also doing voice/video chat rooms so it replaced Teamspeak/Mumble. With the additional (at first) paid streamers and being free it took off especially with younger audiences. I remember how terrible Skype was and Discord just worked.

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-1 points

You don’t see its incredible simplicity as an advantage? That’s crazy

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49 points

Simplicity? What fucking simplicity?

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21 points

Seriously. My only interactions with discord are in ways that its replaced a simple web forum or IRC channel.

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1 point
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Joining via server invites that guide you through sign up, no dedicated server to host (I know, major downside for people who don’t want all their stuff centralized to Discord’s servers), GUI server admin tools, etc.

I think devs tend to vastly overestimate how tech-savvy the average person is. Bring up hosting, DNS, port forwarding, terminal, etc. and they’re going to nope out pretty quick. Provide an option that lets you do everything from a single GUI and they’ll use it. Enough people use it and eventually the tech-savvy folks have to follow because that’s where everyone is.

That’s absolutely not to say that it’s a good medium for documentation. I will always prefer well-written and organized docs first and searchable forums/issue trackers/SO second. But that second group has a lot of tech elitism and devs who are (perhaps justifiably) short on patience, so Discord seems a lot more accessible to newbies who are asking the most basic questions.

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0 points

Skill issue

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37 points
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Notepad is simple

Doesn’t mean it’s the best thing for documentation.

Actually… a readme file is probably better for documentation if you’re really going for simple.

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7 points

Sometimes a readme is all a project needs

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31 points

I may be getting old, but I think D*scord (I’m all for cencoring it like a slur) isn’t any more simple than a phpBB or something similar was. Quite the opposite actually, at least for any user trying to navigate the the darn thing.

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1 point
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Having used both, if you can somehow navigate a phbb board then you can easily navigate discord. The only thing stopping you is you.

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21 points

Counterpoint

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-9 points

Counter-counterpoint: He did eat something off his foot in front of an audience.

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11 points

I don’t think “simplicity” is in a FOSS evangelist’s vocabulary.

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10 points

Using Discord to support code is like trying to teach sculpture over the telephone.

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8 points

you don’t see a tool being too simple for the problem at hand to be a problem in tool selection? that’s also crazy.

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6 points

simplicity is a double edged sword. convinence is nice, but the internet feels a lot more homogenous these days than in the past

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3 points

If Discord is simple, why does the Discord app have 149 MB?

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2 points

Of all the counterpoints you can give me against discord not being simple, you choose file size. Lmao. I’m not even gonna start

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linuxmemes

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I use Arch btw


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