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Openfire (previously known as Wildfire, and Jive Messenger) is an instant messaging (IM) and groupchat server for the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP). It is written in Java and licensed under the Apache License 2.0.
A: "That's difficult to answer, there are many good applications. Possibly Ejabberd which is an open-source Jabber/XMPP instant messaging server. Ejabberd appears to be the market leading XMPP server and things like Google Wave which runs on top of XMPP will probably attract a lot of people into building applications on XMPP servers."
A simple XMPP network with the servers jabber.org and draugr.de. Green clients are online, yellow clients are writing each other and small green subclients are the resources of one user. The brown network is not connected to the internet. The server draugr.de is connected to other IM services (ICQ, AIM and other) via XMPP transports.
Spark is an open-source instant messaging program (based on the XMPP protocol) that allows users to communicate in real time. [4]It can be integrated with the Openfire server to provide additional features [5] such as controlling the various Spark functionalities from a central management console or integrating with a proprietary customer support service known as Fastpath which allows its ...
The landscape for instant messaging involves cross-platform instant messaging clients that can handle one or multiple protocols. [1] Clients that use the same protocol can typically federate and talk to one another.
Tigase is an open source (GNU AGPL-3.0-only) project started by Artur Hefczyc in October 2004 to develop an XMPP server implementation in Java.. Initially the goal was to develop a fully compliant XMPP server with backward compatibility with an informal XMPP specification.
Issabel is based upon open-source versions of Elastix, Asterisk, FreePBX, HylaFAX, Openfire and Postfix and provides PBX, fax, instant messaging and e-mail server functionality. Issabel is open-source software licensed under the GNU General Public License.
His work contributed to the standardization of the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) by the Internet Engineering Task Force in 2004, and variations of XMPP have since been implemented on WhatsApp, Kik Messenger, and Zoom. In 2007, Miller became the technical lead for Wikia Search, an open-source search engine initiative.