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    What makes RocketChat appealing to you?

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    • KellyK
      Kelly @stacksofplates
      last edited by

      @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

      We use Mattermost at work. I can't say much for RocketChat, but I do really like Mattermost. I'm a fan of the IRC style chat apps and the ability to add them into automation and such.

      I ended up rolling out Mattermost at my last workplace. I didn't do any testing of Rocketchat because Mattermost checked all of our boxes. It was fast, clean, stable, had all of the clients that we needed (Windows, Mac, Linux), and the documentation was solid. I wished that 3rd party authentication (AD in our case) wasn't a pay feature, but that was a minimal consideration at our size.

      wirestyle22W scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • wirestyle22W
        wirestyle22 @stacksofplates
        last edited by wirestyle22

        @stacksofplates That's the next one I'm going to spin up. I really wish there were better options for referencing things in a chat setting--kind of like the way Nextcloud does tagging (testing star messages literally as we speak). If someone gives me an important piece of info I don't want to have to search for it. I'd also like subchannels. If I have a medical group that has more than one site, I'd like a channel for the medical group and a subchannel for each site. Can Mattermost do any of that?

        scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • wirestyle22W
          wirestyle22 @Kelly
          last edited by wirestyle22

          @kelly said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

          @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

          We use Mattermost at work. I can't say much for RocketChat, but I do really like Mattermost. I'm a fan of the IRC style chat apps and the ability to add them into automation and such.

          I ended up rolling out Mattermost at my last workplace. I didn't do any testing of Rocketchat because Mattermost checked all of our boxes. It was fast, clean, stable, had all of the clients that we needed (Windows, Mac, Linux), and the documentation was solid. I wished that 3rd party authentication (AD in our case) wasn't a pay feature, but that was a minimal consideration at our size.

          RocketChat has LDAP functionality for free

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
          • scottalanmillerS
            scottalanmiller @Kelly
            last edited by

            @kelly said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

            @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

            We use Mattermost at work. I can't say much for RocketChat, but I do really like Mattermost. I'm a fan of the IRC style chat apps and the ability to add them into automation and such.

            I ended up rolling out Mattermost at my last workplace. I didn't do any testing of Rocketchat because Mattermost checked all of our boxes. It was fast, clean, stable, had all of the clients that we needed (Windows, Mac, Linux), and the documentation was solid. I wished that 3rd party authentication (AD in our case) wasn't a pay feature, but that was a minimal consideration at our size.

            We get that all with Rocket.Chat, all of it, for free. I didn't realize Mattermost had "pay only" features, that's a huge reason I'm glad that we didn't go with them. Overall, they were so close it was hard to tell which one to prefer. Rocket seems to have pulled ahead of Mattermost in popularity and being completely free makes a bit difference.

            stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • scottalanmillerS
              scottalanmiller @wirestyle22
              last edited by

              @wirestyle22 said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

              @stacksofplates That's the next one I'm going to spin up. I really wish there were better options for referencing things in a chat setting--kind of like the way Nextcloud does tagging (testing star messages literally as we speak). If someone gives me an important piece of info I don't want to have to search for it. I'd also like subchannels. If I have a medical group that has more than one site, I'd like a channel for the medical group and a subchannel for each site. Can Mattermost do any of that?

              You mean groups under groups?

              wirestyle22W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • wirestyle22W
                wirestyle22 @scottalanmiller
                last edited by wirestyle22

                @scottalanmiller said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                @wirestyle22 said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                @stacksofplates That's the next one I'm going to spin up. I really wish there were better options for referencing things in a chat setting--kind of like the way Nextcloud does tagging (testing star messages literally as we speak). If someone gives me an important piece of info I don't want to have to search for it. I'd also like subchannels. If I have a medical group that has more than one site, I'd like a channel for the medical group and a subchannel for each site. Can Mattermost do any of that?

                You mean groups under groups?

                Yeah. Sometimes they are channels. Sometimes they are groups

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • stacksofplatesS
                  stacksofplates @scottalanmiller
                  last edited by stacksofplates

                  @scottalanmiller said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                  @kelly said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                  @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                  We use Mattermost at work. I can't say much for RocketChat, but I do really like Mattermost. I'm a fan of the IRC style chat apps and the ability to add them into automation and such.

                  I ended up rolling out Mattermost at my last workplace. I didn't do any testing of Rocketchat because Mattermost checked all of our boxes. It was fast, clean, stable, had all of the clients that we needed (Windows, Mac, Linux), and the documentation was solid. I wished that 3rd party authentication (AD in our case) wasn't a pay feature, but that was a minimal consideration at our size.

                  We get that all with Rocket.Chat, all of it, for free. I didn't realize Mattermost had "pay only" features, that's a huge reason I'm glad that we didn't go with them. Overall, they were so close it was hard to tell which one to prefer. Rocket seems to have pulled ahead of Mattermost in popularity and being completely free makes a bit difference.

                  It looks like it's just "AD/LDAP". GitLab has Mattermost integrated natively and you can use it as an OAUTH provider. So OAUTH is definitely free (which is the better way to go anyway).

                  scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller @stacksofplates
                    last edited by

                    @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                    @scottalanmiller said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                    @kelly said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                    @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                    We use Mattermost at work. I can't say much for RocketChat, but I do really like Mattermost. I'm a fan of the IRC style chat apps and the ability to add them into automation and such.

                    I ended up rolling out Mattermost at my last workplace. I didn't do any testing of Rocketchat because Mattermost checked all of our boxes. It was fast, clean, stable, had all of the clients that we needed (Windows, Mac, Linux), and the documentation was solid. I wished that 3rd party authentication (AD in our case) wasn't a pay feature, but that was a minimal consideration at our size.

                    We get that all with Rocket.Chat, all of it, for free. I didn't realize Mattermost had "pay only" features, that's a huge reason I'm glad that we didn't go with them. Overall, they were so close it was hard to tell which one to prefer. Rocket seems to have pulled ahead of Mattermost in popularity and being completely free makes a bit difference.

                    It looks like it's just "AD/LDAP". GitLab has Mattermost integrated natively and you can use it as an OAUTH provider. So OAUTH is definitely free (which is the better way to go anyway).

                    Oh, OAUTH is really nice.

                    wirestyle22W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • wirestyle22W
                      wirestyle22 @scottalanmiller
                      last edited by wirestyle22

                      @scottalanmiller said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                      @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                      @scottalanmiller said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                      @kelly said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                      @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                      We use Mattermost at work. I can't say much for RocketChat, but I do really like Mattermost. I'm a fan of the IRC style chat apps and the ability to add them into automation and such.

                      I ended up rolling out Mattermost at my last workplace. I didn't do any testing of Rocketchat because Mattermost checked all of our boxes. It was fast, clean, stable, had all of the clients that we needed (Windows, Mac, Linux), and the documentation was solid. I wished that 3rd party authentication (AD in our case) wasn't a pay feature, but that was a minimal consideration at our size.

                      We get that all with Rocket.Chat, all of it, for free. I didn't realize Mattermost had "pay only" features, that's a huge reason I'm glad that we didn't go with them. Overall, they were so close it was hard to tell which one to prefer. Rocket seems to have pulled ahead of Mattermost in popularity and being completely free makes a bit difference.

                      It looks like it's just "AD/LDAP". GitLab has Mattermost integrated natively and you can use it as an OAUTH provider. So OAUTH is definitely free (which is the better way to go anyway).

                      Oh, OAUTH is really nice.

                      RocketChat supports OAUTH as well I believe. I doubt my company would allow it though. They are in love with AD

                      stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • stacksofplatesS
                        stacksofplates @wirestyle22
                        last edited by

                        @wirestyle22 said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                        @scottalanmiller said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                        @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                        @scottalanmiller said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                        @kelly said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                        @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                        We use Mattermost at work. I can't say much for RocketChat, but I do really like Mattermost. I'm a fan of the IRC style chat apps and the ability to add them into automation and such.

                        I ended up rolling out Mattermost at my last workplace. I didn't do any testing of Rocketchat because Mattermost checked all of our boxes. It was fast, clean, stable, had all of the clients that we needed (Windows, Mac, Linux), and the documentation was solid. I wished that 3rd party authentication (AD in our case) wasn't a pay feature, but that was a minimal consideration at our size.

                        We get that all with Rocket.Chat, all of it, for free. I didn't realize Mattermost had "pay only" features, that's a huge reason I'm glad that we didn't go with them. Overall, they were so close it was hard to tell which one to prefer. Rocket seems to have pulled ahead of Mattermost in popularity and being completely free makes a bit difference.

                        It looks like it's just "AD/LDAP". GitLab has Mattermost integrated natively and you can use it as an OAUTH provider. So OAUTH is definitely free (which is the better way to go anyway).

                        Oh, OAUTH is really nice.

                        RocketChat supports OAUTH as well I believe. I doubt my company would allow it though. They are in love with AD

                        They aren't mutually exclusive.

                        wirestyle22W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • wirestyle22W
                          wirestyle22 @stacksofplates
                          last edited by wirestyle22

                          @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                          @wirestyle22 said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                          @scottalanmiller said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                          @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                          @scottalanmiller said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                          @kelly said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                          @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                          We use Mattermost at work. I can't say much for RocketChat, but I do really like Mattermost. I'm a fan of the IRC style chat apps and the ability to add them into automation and such.

                          I ended up rolling out Mattermost at my last workplace. I didn't do any testing of Rocketchat because Mattermost checked all of our boxes. It was fast, clean, stable, had all of the clients that we needed (Windows, Mac, Linux), and the documentation was solid. I wished that 3rd party authentication (AD in our case) wasn't a pay feature, but that was a minimal consideration at our size.

                          We get that all with Rocket.Chat, all of it, for free. I didn't realize Mattermost had "pay only" features, that's a huge reason I'm glad that we didn't go with them. Overall, they were so close it was hard to tell which one to prefer. Rocket seems to have pulled ahead of Mattermost in popularity and being completely free makes a bit difference.

                          It looks like it's just "AD/LDAP". GitLab has Mattermost integrated natively and you can use it as an OAUTH provider. So OAUTH is definitely free (which is the better way to go anyway).

                          Oh, OAUTH is really nice.

                          RocketChat supports OAUTH as well I believe. I doubt my company would allow it though. They are in love with AD

                          They aren't mutually exclusive.

                          I just mean they wouldn't allow OAUTH even though you're saying its superior. Can't use AD for free with Mattermost, so kind of counts it out unfortunately. At least for now.

                          stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • stacksofplatesS
                            stacksofplates @wirestyle22
                            last edited by

                            @wirestyle22 said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                            @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                            @wirestyle22 said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                            @scottalanmiller said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                            @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                            @scottalanmiller said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                            @kelly said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                            @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                            We use Mattermost at work. I can't say much for RocketChat, but I do really like Mattermost. I'm a fan of the IRC style chat apps and the ability to add them into automation and such.

                            I ended up rolling out Mattermost at my last workplace. I didn't do any testing of Rocketchat because Mattermost checked all of our boxes. It was fast, clean, stable, had all of the clients that we needed (Windows, Mac, Linux), and the documentation was solid. I wished that 3rd party authentication (AD in our case) wasn't a pay feature, but that was a minimal consideration at our size.

                            We get that all with Rocket.Chat, all of it, for free. I didn't realize Mattermost had "pay only" features, that's a huge reason I'm glad that we didn't go with them. Overall, they were so close it was hard to tell which one to prefer. Rocket seems to have pulled ahead of Mattermost in popularity and being completely free makes a bit difference.

                            It looks like it's just "AD/LDAP". GitLab has Mattermost integrated natively and you can use it as an OAUTH provider. So OAUTH is definitely free (which is the better way to go anyway).

                            Oh, OAUTH is really nice.

                            RocketChat supports OAUTH as well I believe. I doubt my company would allow it though. They are in love with AD

                            They aren't mutually exclusive.

                            I just mean they wouldn't allow OAUTH even though you're saying its superior. Can't use AD for free with Mattermost, so kind of counts it out unfortunately. At least for now.

                            I'm saying you can use OAUTH with AD.

                            wirestyle22W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • wirestyle22W
                              wirestyle22 @stacksofplates
                              last edited by

                              @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                              @wirestyle22 said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                              @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                              @wirestyle22 said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                              @scottalanmiller said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                              @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                              @scottalanmiller said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                              @kelly said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                              @stacksofplates said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                              We use Mattermost at work. I can't say much for RocketChat, but I do really like Mattermost. I'm a fan of the IRC style chat apps and the ability to add them into automation and such.

                              I ended up rolling out Mattermost at my last workplace. I didn't do any testing of Rocketchat because Mattermost checked all of our boxes. It was fast, clean, stable, had all of the clients that we needed (Windows, Mac, Linux), and the documentation was solid. I wished that 3rd party authentication (AD in our case) wasn't a pay feature, but that was a minimal consideration at our size.

                              We get that all with Rocket.Chat, all of it, for free. I didn't realize Mattermost had "pay only" features, that's a huge reason I'm glad that we didn't go with them. Overall, they were so close it was hard to tell which one to prefer. Rocket seems to have pulled ahead of Mattermost in popularity and being completely free makes a bit difference.

                              It looks like it's just "AD/LDAP". GitLab has Mattermost integrated natively and you can use it as an OAUTH provider. So OAUTH is definitely free (which is the better way to go anyway).

                              Oh, OAUTH is really nice.

                              RocketChat supports OAUTH as well I believe. I doubt my company would allow it though. They are in love with AD

                              They aren't mutually exclusive.

                              I just mean they wouldn't allow OAUTH even though you're saying its superior. Can't use AD for free with Mattermost, so kind of counts it out unfortunately. At least for now.

                              I'm saying you can use OAUTH with AD.

                              Right. I'm not arguing, I understand

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • Emad RE
                                Emad R @wirestyle22
                                last edited by Emad R

                                @wirestyle22

                                Nothing, it is very slow. I mean last time I used it, i figured also their marketing recommends it for less than 100 users.

                                That said I support sites with slow bandwidth, so Pidgin/OpenFire usually works best but it is very basic.

                                It is good cause of being an easy snap install, but if I were you I would steer away from the DB engine that RC uses and use Zulip or Mattermost

                                wirestyle22W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • NashBrydgesN
                                  NashBrydges
                                  last edited by

                                  Has anyone looked at this yet?

                                  https://nextcloud.com/blog/rocket.chat-and-nextcloud-announce-partnership-and-integration/

                                  Things that bugged me about Mattermost...

                                  • Limit on the number of characters in a channel name. Last I had it running, it was too short to be useful...like 20 characters only.
                                  • Deleted channels did not also delete files so any files you had uploaded would permanently remain on the server. I think that's still the case. Have not tested whether that also exists with RocketChat.
                                  wirestyle22W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • wirestyle22W
                                    wirestyle22 @NashBrydges
                                    last edited by

                                    @nashbrydges said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                                    Deleted channels did not also delete files so any files you had uploaded would permanently remain on the server. I think that's still the case. Have not tested whether that also exists with RocketChat.

                                    It doesn't.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • wirestyle22W
                                      wirestyle22 @Emad R
                                      last edited by

                                      @emad-r said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                                      @wirestyle22

                                      Nothing, it is very slow. I mean last time I used it, i figured also their marketing recommends it for less than 100 users.

                                      That said I support sites with slow bandwidth, so Pidgin/OpenFire usually works best but it is very basic.

                                      It is good cause of being an easy snap install, but if I were you I would steer away from the DB engine that RC uses and use Zulip or Mattermost

                                      ?

                                      The test server rocket chat uses has over 200k users on it

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • wirestyle22W
                                        wirestyle22
                                        last edited by wirestyle22

                                        Zulip actually does have subchannels too. Gotta test

                                        scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • scottalanmillerS
                                          scottalanmiller @wirestyle22
                                          last edited by

                                          @wirestyle22 said in What makes RocketChat appealing to you?:

                                          Zulip actually does have subchannels too. Gotta test

                                          Don't know that one, should check it out.

                                          What's the goal of sub channels? What does that gain that normal channels does not?

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • scottalanmillerS
                                            scottalanmiller
                                            last edited by

                                            Zulip has conversation threading, like that weird thing Google tried years ago, Wave maybe? That didn't work well in the real world.

                                            wirestyle22W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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