https://wiki.xmpp.org/web/index.php?title=HackathonSummit2008&feed=atom&action=historyHackathonSummit2008 - Revision history2024-03-29T10:46:03ZRevision history for this page on the wikiMediaWiki 1.37.1https://wiki.xmpp.org/web/index.php?title=HackathonSummit2008&diff=2042&oldid=prevNeustradamus at 18:41, 24 July 20102010-07-24T18:41:31Z<p></p>
<p><b>New page</b></p><div>== Chatty.im ==<br />
* Contact: [[Aconbere|Anders Conbere]]<br />
<br />
A freenode like service to help get more MUCs out there. Allows for web based access via JSJac, but still provides full client support S2S etc.<br />
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== ejabberd - OpenID ==<br />
* Contact: [[Aconbere|Anders Conbere]]<br />
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An Ejabberd http_module that allows for people to use their jabber server as an openID endpoint.<br />
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Here's a module that's already much more advanced than what I've done, it would be interesting to me to see this implemented.<br />
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https://svn.process-one.net/ejabberd-modules/mod_openid/trunk/<br />
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== Ruby Jabber Component Framework ==<br />
* Contact: [[Apisoni|Adam Pisoni]]<br />
* http://github.com/wonko9/jabber_component_framework/tree/master<br />
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An xmpp4r based component framework that makes it trivial to create your own bots and/or xmpp services.<br />
This is currently being developed by Geni.com for a specific project and will require more work to make it truly generalized, though that is the short-term goal.<br />
Specifically, it currently relies on ActiveRecord as the Roster/subscription store, memcache as the presence cache, and starling as the message queue. Ideally these would be plugable adapters themselves.<br />
I'm looking for development help and design advice as to what pieces I'm missing as well as the best way to generalize the framework further.<br />
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== Rabbiter ==<br />
* Contact: [[Aconbere|Anders Conbere]] [[AlexisRichardson|Alexis Richardson]]<br />
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Rabbiter is a bot that works on top of [http://www.rabbitmq.com/ RabbitMQ] and the [http://hg.rabbitmq.com/rabbitmq-xmpp/raw-file/tip/doc/index.html XMPP Transport] they released for that which enables microblogging like behavior (see [http://twitter.com twitter]. They're all over in england and couldn't make it over, but can hack live with us over the interwebs.</div>Neustradamus