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Netscape The Internet

Netscape pulls Mozilla chat-client page 59

smu writes "Netscape, the contributor of the Instant Messaging API document, has requested that mozilla.org remove the page pending further review by Netscape. "We at mozilla.org regret this inconvenience, but respect the wishes of our contributors. Netscape solicits feedback on this decision". "I don't think I need to make any smartass comment.
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Netscape pulls Mozilla chat-client page

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    Unlike some I believe that code doesn't come with meaning attached to it's development. I don't have enough lack of class to snipe on him in particular, but that rambly good-bye letter of him has been nothing but irritation after the mainstream media has gotten ahold of the story of a few developers leaving for whatever reasons....

    ALL i see on C|net and TechWeb and shit is crappola like "From the ashes of Mozilla rises ...."

    and words like "failure" and "defunct"...

    I STILL have yet to find one criteria by which Mozilla has been a failure. My FAVorite line so far was "Although Mozilla was a commercial flop..."

    How entertaining... Not even in beta and a FREE, OPEN SOURCE, NONCOMMERCIAL, technically exceptional product is a "commercial flop". What clueless shits.

    This kind of emotional mentality (with an emphasis on the mental) unfortunately bleeds down to the IE5 kiddiez and others who are satisfied to fly in like harpies and rip on "Nutscrape 5 sux because it's slow and sh1t..." Or crap like "Their toolbars sux i'll never use it"...

    The horrid little turds just don't get it and neither do so many others. Mozilla is such a dream-come-true project it's not even funny, and it's here, and it's in rampant development, and all anyone can think to do is bitch about the soap opera that it was birthed in. WHO CARES that AOL owns NS? Who CARES that NS didn't GPL their billion-dollar-baby? What is wrong with these fools who would rather take jabs at a corporate entity rather than learn how to use a stunningly powerful tool like Gecko?


    Netscape 4.x sucks. Technically and user-wise, it sucks. The developers did a valiant job but they didn't have almost 3/4 of a billion dollars to spend on it, unlike Microsoft. The engine wore out and creaked and finally snapped, and they logically decided to redo the web browser from the GROUND UP.

    This is all froody new stuff folks, new layout engine, new data manipulations, new APIs supported, new modularity, even new networking code in a year or two or less. This is the browser/component set that will be in INDUSTRIAL STRENGTH USE in all walks of computing for a decade or more, so let's get cracking on making it the best, most stable, and least kludgy it can be.

    Let's have fun now, and make a last-ditch effort to bring sanity to the internet before we drown in controls, applets, tables, FONT, and javascript.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 21, 1999 @08:41AM (#1923532)
    Reality calling all whiners!

    Ever heard of Internet Explorer 4?
    Internet Explorere 5?
    Quicktime 4?

    They're all delivered using MODULAR pieces. Ring a bell? If you do not want a chat client in browser x.xx, do not request it for download.

    If you have some notion that they are somehow embedding a chat client into the layout engine, go to Mozilla.org and read a bit.

    If you have the notion that 150 engineers are dropping what they are doing to make IRCAIMAOLICQ on a salaried whim, get $0.35 and call Clue to chat for a while.

    If you have a complaint about the UI or behavior in M3 or M4, go to the dictionary and look up PRE-ALPHA, or DEBUGGING, or EARLY BUILD, or else if that's too much work, meditate on concepts such as "reading what is and is not implemented yet in the readme" or "there have been no beta releases of mozilla as of yet".

    If you are under the assumption that a Java machine can be pulled out of one's ass in a few days, think harder. The mechanics for interfacing Mozilla with the JVM of *YOUR CHOICE* are being implemented as we speak. NS5 will ship with someone's. Don't like it? Get a copy of Mozilla and plug in your own. Oh, and no-one is going to put up 10 megs of JVM per nightly debugging build just so one can save oneself the agony of not having scrolling newstickers.

    If you are under the assumption that snarky comments about the de facto ownership of a development initiative actually contributes to the project, learn about how software gets written.

    And finally, if you are under the assumption that a project as sophisticated and technically superior as Mozilla "sux" because it doesn't have a recursive name or themable XYZ, go ahead and write your own browser. Implement everything The 'Leet Way yourself, using Real Open Source by Hax0rs. Don't forget to write a new widget set!

    Either Mozilla or Netscape 5 will end up being the modular multipuropose ultraextensible browser you'll be using for the next five years, so get used to getting world-class best-of-breed cross platform ultra efficient useful innovative open source software for free, or go back to the land of paperclips and wizards.


    Fricking ingrates. Respect Mozilla.
  • Yesterday, everyone was clamoring that Mozilla shouldn't incorporate the messaging software. Today, since they've been asked to remove it, suddenly everyone takes the other side?

    I understand that it's a case of "if they can do this, what next?" -- and I don't disagree with the sentiment -- but it's still amusing


    --
  • ...that just because mozilla.org pulled it as a request of Netscape, that doesn't mean that mozilla.org has anything to do with Netscape. Netscape developed and (?incorporated?) the pluggable API, and then asked mozilla.org to remove it, for whatever reason. The same thing would happen if Adam Lock were to ask for the ActiveX control to be removed.

    However, this is a neat feature that, when Netscape brings it back in, will make Mozilla that much better. A pluggable chat API, so you can write .so:s for AIM, ICQ, or even IRC - and optional, to boot. Yes, Mozilla will kick some serious ass.

  • Posted by BradF:

    So you don't like the AOL influence, or you don't like that Netscape always had a little too much influence on the proceedure. Take the source, start up a freemozilla.org site, and bypass AOL entirely.
    --
    Brad Felmey
  • Posted by shaver@netscape.com:

    There's an important distinction here:
    • Netscape contributed a document, and wanted it taken down. As with any other contributor (Adam Lock, port owners, etc.), we honour their right to withdraw their content, even if we'd rather have them keep it up.
    • If Netscape had asked us to take down someone else's content for reasons other than violations of the law (posting crypto source, unreleased source code, whatever), I've have laughed at them. And if ``The Mozilla Organisation'' had decided to take it down anyway, I'd have been out of here faster than you could say ``jay double-you zee''.
    So Netscape, a Mozilla contributor, put some stuff up and then took it down. Not what I would have done, and I think it makes them look embarrassingly dumb, but that's their call. We'd have been doing the wrong thing to not take their content down when they asked us to.

    As far as we at mozilla.org are concerned, anyone who wants to start a chat API project is welcome to. We've been advocating it through blue-sky and intertwingle editorialization for months. If you'd like to contribute your own chat API -- I think the Netscape guys were on the right track with abstracting the various protocols under a common interface -- I'd love to help you get started. You shouldn't derive your work from the stillborn API docs that Netscape posted, to avoid complaints of taint, but that shouldn't set you back too far.

  • "We're not part of netscape! We're a separate entity!"

    ..three days later..

    "Netscape told us to jump this high, so we gotta."

    It would sure be nice if mozilla could take a stand as either still being run by netscape or being their own deal. Every time they go one way, they contradict themselves and go the other not long after. Sheesh.
  • I think its a good idea to pull it. Mozilla's got quite a bit of feature bloat for a product that doesn't even really work yet. Seems silly to add yet another thing to take the focus off turning it into a real product. That's probably not *why* they did it, but its a good reason, IMHO.

    Although M4 does render pages nicely. Too bad the UI is still broken, and its rendering fonts so small as to be unreadable most of the time.

  • Intracorporational Communications
    (I know mozilla.org is separate now though)
  • I, too, spend time on IRC, and am constantly frustrated by splits, variances in service or access, and being unable to stay connected. It would be nice to be able to somehow integrate the IRC protocol into the browser, if for no other reason than convenience.
    And it's a damn sight better than either AIM or ICQ. Bleah.
  • Maybe they did it because they misread all the idiot posters who felt that it would delay the project, etc. I don't know. But I will say that they solicited feedback and I gave them feedback-that it smelled bad. And I hope others do likewise. Look, mozilla is the first commercial app that turned opened source and there are some roadblocks that need to be fixed and mistakes to learn from. But they have to try harder to do the right thing
  • check out www.doczilla.com www.neoplanet.com http://jazilla.org/
  • hmm remember that Netscape invested in Redhat. So now AOL owns a part of Redhat
  • This isn't the first time I've heard someone plug Jabber.. I think what they have there are a lot of good ideas, but as for the implementation and effort to produce an actual client or server.... well, I haven't seen that yet..

    So basically what this seems to me is a whole lot of hot air, snake oil and inevitable, just another vaporware product

    Although I hope I'm wrong
  • The two most popular IM-programs (AFAIK) are ICQ and AOL IM; Mirabilas is owned by AOL anyway, so why should they worry about Mozilla supporting IM? It means that their two IM products have the opportunity to gain greater integration with the browser.

    Admittedly I feel that IM should belong in a seperate generic client, so that I don't need some large monolithic generic client when I'm not actually viewing HTML, but I doubt that this would be Netscape's reasoning for pulling the document.
  • by don.g ( 6394 )
    I meant that IM should belong in a generic IM client. I don't see how IM fits into the general W3 browsing model; instant messaging could be shoehorned into the email module, but you're probably looking at a seperate IM module entirely; why not make the whole thing seperate? Sticking it all in the browser is bad; it's like MS's "OS integration" with various bits of software (like the GUI, IE, etc) that should remain seperate.
  • Even if it'sgoing to be a "modular" piece, it still doesn't make sense. Maybe they should also make Netrek, wordprocessor, CAD, and StarCraft modules? After all, if you don't want 'em, you don't need to download 'em, right?

    It's great that Mozilla is finally becoming modular. But it should be somewhat restrictive about what kinds of modules it supports. A unified interface makes sense for similar tasks. Chatting is in no way similar to web browsing though, so I can't see a good reason for Mozilla to have any support for chatting whatsoever.

    This chat module thing: is it going to require *any* code changes to Mozilla itself, or are they just going to use interfaces Mozilla already had? If it's the latter, then I don't see an real harm, but then it may as well be a separate project. If it's the former however, they're just going to delay the release of Mozilla, and overcomplicate it for a feature that shouldn't be there in the first place.

    Mozilla should be made as simple as possible. Essentially just a container with a few programming interfaces for hooking up things like protocols and rendering engines. An interface for other applications to be able to communicate with Mozilla would be good too. Much more than that is pushing it.
  • Since when has telnet been built into Netscape? Never. Yes, it supports telnet: URL's, but it does that using a separate application. This would also make sense for mail, news, irc, and many other protocols.

    Like I said before, if this chat thing requires *no changes* to the Mozilla base code at all, then it's fine with me. But as soon as Mozilla needs even a special set of hooks for "chat plugins" then they've gone too far. Leave it out.

    I think it would be nice if I could click on a link to "netrek://mit.netrek.org" and have it bring up Netrek. I don't think they should add Netrek, or even "networked space game" support to Mozilla though.

    Mozilla should have support for adding new protocol identifiers in an easy way, and having several ways of handling them: seperate application, special type of plug-in, etc. Much like the existing mime-type stuff Netscape has had all along. This should be totally generic though. Explicit support for particular things like chatting or text editting or whatever just leads to bloat and bad design. A good metric would be this: if chatting is mentioned anywhere in the Mozilla source, then they're doing it wrong.
  • For those of you who missed the page while it was up: the proposal came from Netscape and AOL people, presumably from the instant messaging client product groups.

    The proposal did seem to be pretty narrow and a little wrongheaded in its approach, though, and for that deserved to be withdrawn. I suspect this will be coming back after some discussion on the relevant newsgroups. For one thing, there's no reason each IM client has to come bundled with its own UI shell. I might be mistaken, but my quick read of the spec called for each client to bring its own.

    AIM and ICQ (and things that present a siumilar UI, like private messages on IRC) could employ a shared UI, and clients that need a modified or different UI could instead subclass it and make use of the relevant bits (like the buddy list or the multiperson chat windows).

    Again, if this remains merely a removable module, and is created by people who aren't already working on core browser/editor/mail/news, it seems pleasant enough.
  • I know that most people are against feature bloat in Mozilla, but I think this was possibly a very good idea. A strong case was made for it in the early "Unity of interface" paper that was referenced from the page, when it was up.

    The reason I hated Netscape including AIM wasn't because of the bloat (apart from the truly stupid fact that everything else was an option in the installer, but AIM was compulsory), but because of the fact that it only spoke a single proprietary protocol. Having a generic client which speaks all protocols is IMO a great thing.

    As for whether it belongs in Mozilla, I think it does, to the same extent that Mail and News belong. So long as they are optional, it makes sense to share the *huge* amount of common code (UI, HTML rendering, networking protocols...). Although most people consider the mail and news module code bloat (personally I like it and use it everyday), it's a telling point that the "navigator standalone" edition of netscape is at least 2/3 the size of the full product - in other words, the vast majority of the code is shared (unless you really believe that the browser-specific code is FAR more complex, and bigger, than all the rest put together).

    As a final point, in response to the comments that "Mozilla should be concentrating on putting out a usable product" - exactly how many people do you think worked on this? The same applies to the Necko networking project, which has 5 people. A while ago everyone was following JWZ's lead in saying that the "30 or so" external contributors were "insignificant"... now it's a life-or-death matter if 5 or 10 internal developers work on something other than getting the first release ready?

    Stuart.
  • I wouldn't use such strong language, but...

    Me too!

    ;)
  • agreed --

    Adding any sort of chat client into mozilla undermine any effort to release a streamlined, fast browser, and of course, needlessly increase package size.

    The only one's I'd truly see benefiting from this would be the *nix users -- but even then, there are still plenty of AIMish implementations out there.

    ...and when's the last time you've seen a *nix geek complain that he wasn't getting a fully-packaged, pretty, bloated suite of utilities with his proprietary software? ;)
  • by ihxo ( 16767 )
    The contributor to the instant messaging API is NOT a netscape employee ??
    do you think netscape will have the right to tell him to pull it out ?
  • I thought the Instant Messaging stuff was just more unnecessary bloat, and as such, was a Bad Thing for Mozilla.

    I'd rather see them put some sort of Java (yeah, I hate Java, but there's so many sites that use it that it's almost a necessity) support in it instead... at least that would be "necessary" bloat.
  • Yes, but again, it's Web based, just like, oh, I dunno, 99% of Java programs out there.

    I thought we were going to see real applications that were platform-independent, thanks to the magic of Java?!
  • It's slow because it's interpreted. I'd hate to see how slow it ran _before_ there were JIT compilers.

    About the only thing that would make Java fast enough, given its compiled-then-interpreted nature, would be a chip whose native instruction set is Java bytecodes.

    As for the language being bad, here's my personal list:

    1. No assertions
    2. No preprocessor, making global constant declaration needlessly difficult
    3. Errors that IMHO should be warnings
    4. "ObjectInputStream constructor under certain conditions blocks program execution" is not a bug -- must be done in a particular order for server-client programs

    OK, so 3 is a _feature_ (strong typing).

    If you have a Java Developer Connection account, just look at the Bug Parade. There are far too many things to work around in Java.

    The one thing Java is useful for is making a decent GUI, though they're going to change that with Swing. Eventually AWT programs will break.
  • To the best of my knowledge, Mozilla is an independantly driven project. Ok, it just so happen that most of the coders are paid for by netscape corp.^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^HAOL...

    Now I guess we start to see the dark side of AOL. They dont like some competing component to be added to the product, and they "politely" request that it be taken out (politely == remove it, or lose your job.).
    I think it's really sad, but it will most likely serve to prove a point in the future... Make it clear in other projects that components submitted can not be unsubmitted. What if Linus decided to pull his code out of the kernel ? What if FSF decided to pull it's code out of GCC ?


    Sun Tzu must have been running Linux...
    - Hold out baits to entice the enemy. Feign disorder, and crush him. (Sun Tzu, The art of war)
  • ...and the current implementations are getting faster all the time (see IBM's new JVM for an example).

    As for bloat, Sun do appear to be doing their best. The latest release of the JDK is something in the region of 24457274 bytes. That's not small, IMHO. Especially when put up against earlier releases of the JDK.

    The current trend seems to be to load in as many new APIs as possible (Java3D, Java2D, Java telephony API, Java speech recognition API, Java chicken-breeding API) while leaving nasty nasty bugs in the core code (such as the fun and exciting one which prevents all apps/applications using a GUI from shutting down properly - number 4030718 in the bug parade, reported over two years ago, and still nothing more useful than 'Well, you can litter your code with calls to system.exit(), because we're too busy to fix this one'...)

    :erant.
  • now might be a nice time to plug jabber [jabber.org], a currently in-development project to develop an ICQ/AIM-like protocol with a distributed server architecture and plugin-able compatibility with existing protocols like AIM/toc, ICQ, Yahoo Pager (?), the new IETF/Microsoft protocol being worked on, etc.

    it's a pretty neat project, they've got a lot of ideas and not so much code (a sort-of functioning server, a windows client, a tcl client, and a gtk/gnome client are all in beta right now). especially interesting are the transport mechanisms to other protocols -- which will allow a user to use multiple services at the same time? check it out! [jabber.org]
  • But is that relly the case, If you alredy have contributed code under MPL/NPL isn't it too late to draw it back ?

    Or are just mozilla removing the page by pure politeness to netscape(AOL)

    If it get brought back in, with ICQ + AIM + IRC it will be a very good thing, but then again, why should they pull it in the first palce if they knew what they were doing???
  • If linux get another driver it is not bloat but what is different with mozilla getting another (optional!!!) feature ?, nothing!

    If we can get a cool implementation of ICQ and AIM and maybe even IRC under a fairly good lisense wouldn't that be a good thing ?
  • Why dont you tell the GNOME people to go and work with the linux kernel relly hard insted ???

    Its the same thing, the instant messaging people do what they want, not what might seem most impostant, the same thing goes with gnome, they dont work with the linux kernel because they think their project is important.

    Its good with lost and lost and even more different projects. Everybody is working hard on their specific tasks; what is important to them.

    Im perfectly happy with their efforts, Mozilla will be released then its ready. If you cant wait, help them!
  • Can't spell at all today,

    lots of projects is what a wanted to write ...

  • This seems like the thing we all thought the Instant Message project was about, but it seems like what netscape pulled was just documents, no code, and not even aimed at merging ICQ-AIM-IRC in a single client.

    But this project is a lot cooler and what at least what I would like to have in mozilla or as a stand alone client, I look forward to when I don't have to use a feature-less-ICQ-clone and another AIM-clone and instead can use this all-in-one, free, implementation of them all. If the mozilla project wants chat and instant messaging, this is what they should support.
  • IM-API -- Instant Messaging API

    Terry Weissman

    Travis Bogard

    Sudharshan Srinivasan

    Goals

    One of the fundamental strengths of the browser has always been the ability to hide the messy details of diverse network protocols
    under a simple user interface. The same client can go talk to servers speaking HTTP, FTP, Gopher, etc., and provide a fairly
    consistent interface to them all.

    We would like to make Mozilla be able to do chatting and "instant messaging". However, we don't want to limit ourselves to a single
    server, or a single protocol. People today are chatting using a variety of different protocols and servers. We would like Mozilla to be
    able to usefully talk to all of these protocols, and hide most of the differences from the user.

    On the other hand, we also don't want to hard-code knowledge of every known chat protocol into the code base. We would like to
    have a "pluggable" architecture, where it would be possible at any time to write up a new module for a new protocol, and Mozilla
    would just work with it.

    IM-API defines the API for people wanting to make Mozilla speak a new chat protocol.

    The big picture

    [Insert cool diagram here.]

    The whole IM/Chat module will be an separate module from the rest of the Mozilla client; it will be possible to build the client
    without any IM/Chat support at all.

    The IM/Chat module will include lots of UI code and stuff. But to actually speak a chat protocol, it will look in the registry for
    classes that provide the nsIMServer interface. Each of those classes represent a different protocol. When the client wishes to
    connect to a chat protocol, it will create an instance of the appropriate nsIMServer object, connect() to the service, and start calling
    getService() to get the Service objects it needs. The client will implement the corresponding Listener interfaces defined below for
    any Service objects it needs.

    So, for a new protocol, you need to define which of the below services make sense for your protocol. You will define an object that
    implements nsIMServer, and make its GetService() method return objects you define for the services you support. You do not have
    to define any of the Listener classes; those are generally defined by the client.

    As things get further flushed out, and actual UI code gets added, we plan to add stuff so that a particular protocol can add things to
    the UI to support protocol-specific stuff. The additional UI will probably end up calling additional interfaces provided by the
    protocol. We do not expect that all calls to the protocol module will go through this IM-API, but we do hope that most of them do.

    The API

    Random notes about the API:

    Any interface whose name ends with "Listener" is generally implemented by the main client code, not by a protocol module.
    The stuff in IM_APIExt.h is optional. This is the place for features that some implementations of a service will have, and some
    will not. The user of a service will be able to QueryInterface to determine if a given feature is supported.

    Details about this API that I know are wrong and need to be fixed:

    I need to #define the NS_IIM* constants properly. Where do these magic numbers come from?
    Do I need to port this to IDL?
    I don't talk about how objects get constructed. Factories, mumble, mumble. The unpickle() calls are pretty constructor-ish,
    though.
    The names are all currently prefixed with the string "nsIM". I'm not sure if that's a sufficiently unique prefix.
    There is no RDF in here. I think it likely that much of the pickle/unpickle awkwardness may get replaced with something
    RDFish. Appropriate experts need to be consulted.
    Some other questionable things are called out in green italic text.
    Everywhere we pass HTML text, we might also need to pass some other info (like, maybe, encoding information for proper
    i18n support)?

    ************************ IM_APIBase.h ************************

    /* -*- Mode: C++; tab-width: 4; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*- */
    /*
    The contents of this file are subject to the Mozilla Public License
    Version 1.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
    compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
    http://www.mozilla.org/MPL/

    Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
    basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
    License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
    under the License.

    The Original Code is IM-API.

    The Initial Developer of the Original Code is Netscape Communications
    Corporation. Portions created by Netscape are Copyright (C) 1999
    Netscape Communications Corporation. All Rights Reserved.

    Contributor(s):
    */

    // This file defines the core IM_API functionality: the main services
    // that a protocol module is likely to want to implement, and the
    // associated Listener and other interfaces.


    // This lists the different availability states a person can be in.
    // I'm not yet certain if this is the appropriate
    // generic list.

    enum nsIMAvailability {
    Present, // The person is alive and on-line
    Gone, // The person is not connected
    Away, // The person is on-line but is not at his
    // computer.
    Unknown, // The protocol is not actively tracking the
    // presence of this user, and so his state
    // is not known.
    };


    // The nsIMServer interface represents the main connection to a server.
    // One instantiation of it will be created for each connection to a
    // chat server. Thus, if the user wishes to speak to 3 different IRC
    // servers, there will be three instances of the IRC implementation of
    // nsIMServer.
    //
    // The nsIMServer interface only deals with things having to do with the entire
    // server connection; basically, whether it is actually connected or not. To
    // actually do something using the server, you must use the getService() method
    // to get a service object for the service you want.

    class nsIIMServer : public nsISupports {
    public:
    NS_DEFINE_STATIC_IID_ACCESSOR(NS_IIMSERVEROBJECT_I ID)

    // setServerListener() sets the object this server should use to
    // report asynchronous events and messages.
    PRStatus getServerListener(nsIIMServerListener*);

    // getServerListener() returns the listener object.
    nsIIMServerListener* getServerListener();

    // getShortDescription() returns a short name for this server, suitable for
    // use in a list of server names. If you can have multiple instantiations
    // of the same kind of server (for example, to do multiple IRC hosts, or to
    // allow people to have multiple AIM screennames for themselves), then the
    // string for each instantiation ought to be unique.
    const char* getShortDescription();

    // configure() causes this server instantiation to pop up a dialog box
    // allowing the user to configure all options about the server in general
    // (hostname, port number, screenname, password, etc.)
    // It is undefined whether this will return immediately or wait until the
    // user has finished the operation.
    PRStatus configure();

    // connect() causes a connection to be made to the server. This call
    // blocks until a connection is firmly established.
    PRStatus connect();

    // disconnect() causes any connection with the server to be dropped.
    // This call blocks until the connection has been dropped.
    PRStatus disconnect();

    // isConnected() returns whether there is a current connection to the
    // server.
    PRBool isConnected()

    // GetService() returns a pointer to the object that implements the
    // given service (which should be on of NS_IIMIMSERVICE_IID,
    // NS_IIMCHATSERVICE_IID, NS_IIMPRESENCESERVICE_IID, etc.) If the
    // given service can be found, the pointer is set; if the service
    // is not supported, an error code is returned and the pointer is
    // set to NULL.

    NS_IMETHOD GetService(REFNSIID iid, void** instancePtr);
    };


    // The nsIIMServerListener interface gets called with asynchronous events that
    // relate to the whole server (not particular to any service within it).

    class nsIIMServerListener : public nsISupports {
    public:
    NS_DEFINE_STATIC_IID_ACCESSOR(NS_IIMSERVERLISTENER _IID)

    // If we ever lose the connection to the server, then this function will
    // be called. "why" is an error message that can be displayed to the user,
    // explaining what happened. Is passing this as a
    // string the right I18N thing to do here?
    PRStatus lostConnection(const char* why);
    };


    // The nsIIMIMService interface (and I really *hate* that name, but
    // everything else is either too long or too inconsistant with other
    // names here) provides the instant messaging service.

    class nsIIMIMService : public nsISupports {
    public:
    NS_DEFINE_STATIC_IID_ACCESSOR(NS_IIMIMSERVICE_IID)

    // setIMListener() sets the object this server should use to
    // report asynchronous events and messages.
    PRStatus setIMListener(nsIIMIMListener*);

    // getIMListener() returns the listener object.
    nsIIMIMListener* getIMListener();

    // sendMessage() causes an instant message to be delievered to the given
    // user. This call blocks until the message has been delivered.
    PRStatus sendMessage(nsIIMIndividual* dest, const char* html);
    };


    // The nsIIMIMListener interface gets called with asynchronous events that
    // relate to the instant messaging service.

    class nsIIMIMListener : public nsISupports {
    public:
    NS_DEFINE_STATIC_IID_ACCESSOR(NS_IIMIMLISTENER_IID )

    // receiveMessage() gets called whenever someone out on the network sends
    // us an instant message.
    PRStatus receiveMessage(nsIIMIndividual* source, const char* html);
    };


    // The nsIIMChatService interface provides support for the chat service.

    class nsIIMChatService : public nsISupports {
    public:
    NS_DEFINE_STATIC_IID_ACCESSOR(NS_IIMCHATSERVICE_II D)

    // setChatListener() sets the object this server should use to
    // report asynchronous events and messages.
    PRStatus setChatListener(nsIIMChatListener*);

    // getChatListener() returns the listener object.
    nsIIMChatListener* getChatListener();

    // listKnownRooms() returns a list of room names that are known to exist
    // with this chat service. It does not necessarily return every room that
    // is actually out there, just the ones that are currently known to exist.
    // This ListOfStrings return type is just a
    // placeholder; I hope such a class does exist.
    ListOfStrings* listKnownRooms();

    // getRoom() returns the room object corresponding to the given name, or
    // NULL if no such room exists and can't it can't created.
    nsIIMChatRoom* getRoom(const char* name);
    };

    // The nsIIMChatListener interface gets called with asynchronous events that
    // relate to the chat service.

    class nsIIMChatListener : public nsISupports {
    NS_DEFINE_STATIC_IID_ACCESSOR(NS_IIMCHATLISTENER_I ID)

    // roomChanged() gets called whenever a room appears or disappears from
    // the list of known rooms. It is legal for listKnownRooms() to return
    // a different list on two successive calls without any intervening calls
    // to roomChanged() happening; that is, some protocols may only support
    // polling on the list of rooms and will not provide asynchronous
    // updates.
    PRStatus roomChanged(const char* name,
    PRBool added // True if added, False if removed.
    );

    // receiveInvitation() gets called when the user has received an invitation
    // to join a room.
    PRStatus receiveInvitation(nsIIMIndividual* who, // Who sent the invitation
    const char* roomname, // What room we're
    // invited to
    const char* extratext // Any extra text to
    // display as part of the
    // invitation. This is
    // HTML.
    );
    };

    // The nsIIMPresenceService intervening provides support for the presence
    // indication service, the service that lets you track a list of individuals
    // on the network and report whether they are currently on-line.

    class nsIIMPresenceService : public nsISupports {
    public:
    NS_DEFINE_STATIC_IID_ACCESSOR(NS_IIMPRESENCESERVIC E_IID)

    // setPresenceListener() sets the object this server should use to
    // report asynchronous events and messages.
    PRStatus setPresenceListener(nsIIMPresenceListener*);

    // getPresenceListener() returns the listener object.
    nsIIMPresenceListener* getPresenceListener();

    // addUser() causes us to start watching for presence of the given user.
    PRStatus addUser(nsIIMIndividual*);

    // removeUser() causes us to stop watching for the given user.
    PRStatus removeUser(nsIIMIndividual*);

    // removeAll() clears the list of all users that we are watching.
    PRStatus removeAll();

    // getWatchList() returns the list of all users that we are watching.
    // The nsIIMIndividualList class is a placeholder;
    // I hope we have a standard easy way of doing this.
    nsIIMIndividualList* getWatchList();
    };

    // The nsIIMPresenceListener interface gets called with asynchronous events
    // that relate to the presence service.

    class nsIIMPresenceListener : public nsISupports {
    public:
    NS_DEFINE_STATIC_IID_ACCESSOR(NS_IIMPRESENCELISTEN ER_IID)

    // userAvailabilityChange() gets called whenever the given user goes
    // online, offline, or otherwise changes.

    PRStatus userAvailabilityChange(nsIIMIndividual* who);
    };


    // The nsIIMIndividual interface represents a person out on the network.

    class nsIIMIndividual : public nsISupports {
    public:
    NS_DEFINE_STATIC_IID_ACCESSOR(NS_IIMINDIVIDUAL_IID )

    // getAvailability() returns the current availability information for
    // the given user. If block is True, then the caller is willing to wait
    // in order to get the most accurate information; if False, then the
    // call should return immediately (which may very well lead to a result
    // of Unknown.) Actually, the caller should always be ready for a result
    // of Unknown; some protocols may not be able to determine availability
    // in some circumstances.
    nsIMAvailability getAvailability(PRBool block);

    // getIDString() returns a short identifying string used by the protocol
    // to identify this person. Note that some protocols may change this
    // string over time; it is best for callers to remember people by their
    // pointer, not by their idstring.
    const char* getIDString();
    };


    // The nsIIMChatRoom interface represents a chat room. This acts much like
    // a service, in that it has a corresponding listening class. However, unlike
    // most services, there can be multiple instantiations of this for a single
    // protocol, one per chat room that we are connected to. The existance of
    // a nsIIMChatRoom object implies that the user is connected to it; to
    // disconnect from a chat room, the client should drop its references to
    // the nsIIMChatRoom object.

    class nsIIMChatRoom : public nsISupports {
    public:
    NS_DEFINE_STATIC_IID_ACCESSOR(NS_IIMCHATROOM_IID)

    // setChatRoomListener() sets the object this server should use to
    // report asynchronous events and messages.
    PRStatus setChatRoomListener(nsIIMChatRoomListener*);

    // getChatRoomListener() returns the listener object.
    nsIIMChatRoomListener* getChatRoomListener();

    // getDisplayName() returns a brief name for this room.
    const char* getDisplayName();

    // getDescription() returns a description or "topic" for this room.
    const char* getDescription();

    // sendMessage() sends a message to the chat room. It is assumed that the
    // listener's receiveMessage() will get called soon thereafter with this
    // same message. If that doesn't happen as a side effect of the network
    // protocol, then the protocol module must call receiveMessage() itself.
    PRStatus sendMessage(char* html);

    // sendInvitation() invites someone to join this chat room. extratext is
    // extra HTML text to explain the invitation. If the underlying protocol
    // doesn't support extra text with an invitation, then it should try to
    // get that text to the receiving user somehow (i.e., send an instant
    // message with that text just ahead of the invitation).
    PRStatus sendInvitation(nsIIMIndividual* who, const char* extratext);

    // listMembers() lists who is currently connected to this room.
    nsIIMIndividualList* listMembers();
    };


    // The nsIIMChatRoomListener interface gets calle with asynchronous events
    // that relate to a specific chat room.

    class nsIIMChatRoomListener : public nsISupports {
    public:
    NS_DEFINE_STATIC_IID_ACCESSOR(NS_IIMCHATROOMLISTEN ER_IID)

    // receiveMessage() gets called whenever a person sends a message to the
    // chat room.

    PRStatus receiveMessage(nsIIMIndividualList* who, const char* html);

    // memberChange() gets called whenever someone leaves or enters the room.
    PRStatus memberChange(nsIIMIndividual* who,
    PRBool added // True if entered, False if left
    );
    };



    ************************ IM_APIExt.h ************************

    /* -*- Mode: C++; tab-width: 4; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*- */
    /*
    The contents of this file are subject to the Mozilla Public License
    Version 1.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
    compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
    http://www.mozilla.org/MPL/

    Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
    basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
    License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
    under the License.

    The Original Code is IM-API.

    The Initial Developer of the Original Code is Netscape Communications
    Corporation. Portions created by Netscape are Copyright (C) 1999
    Netscape Communications Corporation. All Rights Reserved.

    Contributor(s):
    */


    // This file defines strictly optional interfaces for features that
    // are known to be supported only by some protocols.


    // ########## EMOTE SUPPORT Some protocols allow for messages that are
    // "emoted". ("emoting" refers to the ability to express emotions instead of
    // just sending text -- the ability to say in a chat room "terry feels sick",
    // rather than having to do "terry: I feel sick".) If a protocol supports
    // emoting in instant messages, then the objects supporting the nsIIMIMService
    // and nsIIMIMListener interfaces need to also support the nsIIMIMEmoteService
    // and nsIIMIMEmoteListener interfaces, respectively. Similarly, if the
    // protocol supports emoting in chat messages, then the objects supporting the
    // nsIIMChatRoom and nsIIMChatRoomListener interfaces need to also support
    // the nsIIMChatRoomEmote and nsIIMChatRoomEmoteListener interfaces,
    // respectively.
    //
    // This is an annoying number of extra interfaces to support a simple thing
    // like "emote". However, we don't have a better idea. It does give the
    // most flexibility, and makes things simple for the simpler protocols that
    // do not do emote.

    class nsIIMIMEmoteService : public nsISupports {
    NS_DEFINE_STATIC_IID_ACCESSOR(NS_IIMIMEMOTESERVICE _IID)

    // sendEmote() is just like sendMessage() in nsIIMIMService, but the
    // message is sent emote-style.
    PRStatus sendEmote(nsIIMIndividual* dest, const char* html);
    };

    class nsIIMIMEmoteListener : public nsISupports {
    NS_DEFINE_STATIC_IID_ACCESSOR(NS_IIMIMEMOTELISTENE R_IID)

    // receiveEmote() is just like receiveMessage() in nsIIMIMListener, but
    // the message is sent emote-style.

    PRStatus receiveEmote(nsIIMIMListener* source, const char* html);
    };

    class nsIIMChatRoomEmote : public nsISupports {
    NS_DEFINE_STATIC_IID_ACCESSOR(NS_IIMCHATROOMEMOTE_ IID)


    // sendEmote() is just like sendMessage() in nsIIMChatRoom, but the
    // message is sent emote-style.
    PRStatus sendEmote(const char* html);
    };

    class nsIIMChatRoomEmoteListener : public nsISupports {
    NS_DEFINE_STATIC_IID_ACCESSOR(NS_IIMCHATROOMEMOTEL ISTENER_IID)

    // receiveEmote() is just like receiveMessage() in nsIIMChatRoomListener,
    // but the message is sent emote-style.

    PRStatus receiveEmote(nsIIMIMListener* who, const char* html);
    };

    Threading

    There are no guarantees of what thread any call may be made in. If a particular protocol needs to have everything running in a single
  • Threading

    There are no guarantees of what thread any call may be made in. If a particular protocol needs to have everything running in a single
    thread, then it must provide the necessary messaging and synchronization stuff under the IM-API.

    In general, all of the calls are blocking. For example, it is expected that a call to connect() might take a long time. It is up to the user
    of IM-API to call create an extra thread if it can not afford to block on a call.
  • Browser do not just do 'web surfing' they were originally meant to be an all-in-one kinda pocketknife tool. Why do think you can do file:// gopher:// ftp:// http:// telnet:// ? Because it is bloody well supposed to do ALL kinds of things. Just because you dont think it's not a browsing kind of function doesn't mean it shouldn't be in there.

    Anyway, I think it would kind of cool to be able to browse chat groups, maybe have them all linked like an array of starbursts.... Quickly jumping from one to the next till you find one you think is perfect, with people adding links between related ones or at random... Kinda a nifty idea really...
  • the first thought that crossed my mind when they announced the Chat stuff was -- why aren't they just working REALLY hard to finish the main browser? Yes, I know there is a really cool M4 release of it... seen it, cool and all, but is it SO COOL?


    so now we get at the heart of my problem with the whole "opensource" mozilla project. there are people who's jobs it is to work on this. that should make for a great product because of the full-time workers, but I would feel a little wierd trying to push my way in from the outside to help steer the project. Some people have though in defense of the project as open source.


    I also think this retraction reinforces my feelings (substantiated or not to the rest of the world) that mozilla is a product of netscape. Period.


    Point me to all the propaganda you want, but I feel that this is a major reason why this project isn't as far along as it could be -- because there isn't the army of zealots that linux or apache has. There are mostly only the engineers up in Mountain View.

    flames to my work address, president@whitehouse.gov


    "With patience and plenty of saliva,
    the elephant deflowered the mosquito."

  • when the vast majority of your developers are on Netscape/AOL's payroll, and you do something to threaten two important and strategic AOL franchises (instant messenger & ICQ) you probably get an irate call from the dudes upstairs. protestations that one is "separate" from the corporate entity that pays your bills come out sounding pretty hollow...

    of course, AOL could allow mozilla to do what it wants to do, but is anybody willing to bet on it? and at what odds?

    mozilla may still produce good software, just like msoft produced the pretty good ie5, but i wouldn't say they're independent of AOL or really a part of the open source movement...

  • I don't know about AIM, since I don't use anything AOL branded, but I know that ICQ's lisence prohibts disassembling the protocol, so I would assume that adding ICQ support would breach the lisence for whatever ICQ client was used to develop it from.

    I also agree that this sort of thing should be a seperate program. Adding it to Mozilla seems silly.
  • by kcin ( 34043 )
    What exactly makes Java so bad? It's a nice Language, compared with C++ which is bloated. If you're talking about it being slow, it's not the language. It's the current implementations.
  • I was talking about the language, not all the junk Sun packages. There's a difference.
  • And what would you say if the ActiveX control WAS asked to be removed?

    Would you just nod your head and say.."It's legal..it's ok", or would you be up in arms about Microsoft's attempts to throttle competition and open-source? Netscape is just as guilty of that now.
  • by Zurk ( 37028 )
    Signed applets are not supported by netscape (at least not those singed by sun). Similarly applets signed for netscape are not supported by Sun. Applets signed for IE are not supported by netscape. The fact is that its difficult to sign a genuine applet and get it to work without the sandbox, let alone a malicious one. For netscape you have to pay $200+ to even get a developers digital signature and i know of no script kiddie who would go to that effort.
  • At the risk of digressing, I for one, would cackle with glee. As a security person, I couldn't believe that MS wanted to spray native binaries at people through a web browser, and I still can't.

    It's clear that some parties probably have an interest in AIM/ICQ being "standards" for chat mechanisms. I think the best thing anyone could do is write a Zephyr plug-in for Mozilla.
  • Stuart wrote:
    >
    > The reason I hated Netscape including AIM wasn't
    > because of the bloat [was] because of the fact
    > that it only spoke a single proprietary
    > protocol. Having a generic client which speaks
    > all protocols is IMO a great thing.

    Agreed. I'm a user of IRC (check out the mozilla
    channel), and it suffers from being split into
    a number of networks, each of which has its own
    set of servers, of varying reliability.

    If making Mozilla the standard interface to
    interchangable IRC modules would allow some
    unity, this would significantly increase the
    usability of the whole thing.

    In particular, it would be of benefit to be
    able to bookmark or email URLs for IRC such as:

    irc://-dalnet/
    irc://-effnet/#help
    irc://-alternet/#gnudiscuss?nick=Aristotle
    irc://irc.dal.net:7000/#foobar

    IE the network "-dalnet" could be looked up to
    find your preferred server. default nicks could
    be stored in the browser (possibly in a way that
    allow the nick to change with the irc network
    and channel name - especially useful given that
    the maximum nick length varies with network).

I THINK THEY SHOULD CONTINUE the policy of not giving a Nobel Prize for paneling. -- Jack Handley, The New Mexican, 1988.

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