TLDR; Thirty years after the advent of the first instant messaging services, we still haven't reached the stage where instant messaging platforms can freely communicate with each other, as is the case with email. In 1999, the Jabber/XMPP protocol was created and standardized for this purpose by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Since then,
What I’ve seen of the protocol, their business model, and what they say about their implementation, very tied to the Amazon infrastructure (an infrastructure managed by an American company, so much for sovereignty)
Does anyone know how Open Stack has been working out? It was supposed to challenge the supremacy of Amazon Web Services, but that doesn’t seem to have happened. Only a couple of large institutional users have successfully deployed Open Stack solutions, and since each deployment requires so much specialist knowledge and site-specific configuration, it seems very difficult for non-affiliated people and institutions to use the system. And it doesn’t seem like Cern, NASA, or other participants are doing a very good job of distributing knowledge of how their systems work outside of their closed institutions.
Does anyone know how Open Stack has been working out? It was supposed to challenge the supremacy of Amazon Web Services, but that doesn’t seem to have happened. Only a couple of large institutional users have successfully deployed Open Stack solutions, and since each deployment requires so much specialist knowledge and site-specific configuration, it seems very difficult for non-affiliated people and institutions to use the system. And it doesn’t seem like Cern, NASA, or other participants are doing a very good job of distributing knowledge of how their systems work outside of their closed institutions.
I didn’t know this even existed, thanks for the link! That list of challenges doesn’t seem that unsurmountable though