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  2. Comparison of cross-platform instant messaging clients

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_cross...

    Discord •Username & Discord Tag •Phonebook contacts scanning if enabled No Element •Username •Matrix ID Yes Fractal •Username •Matrix ID Gadu-Gadu: No Gajim: Yes Gitter: Google Chat •Email address Google Messages (RCS) •Phone number ICQ: Yes Jami: Yes No (not stored on servers) No (not stored on servers) No (not stored on ...

  3. Discord - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discord

    Users can create servers for free, manage their public visibility, and create voice channels, text channels, and categories to sort the channels into. [51] Most servers have a limit of 250,000 members, but this limit can be raised if the server owner contacts Discord. [53] Users can also create roles and assign them to server members.

  4. Wikipedia:Meetup/NYC/Discord - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Meetup/NYC/Discord

    Discord is messaging software you can access on the web or through a downloadable application.. Use our Discord server to talk with others in the Wikimedia NYC community, share NYC-related articles/photos, chat during edit-a-thons or other events, and plan activities.

  5. Comparison of user features of messaging platforms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_user...

    Discord communities are organized into discrete collections of channels called servers. A user can create servers for free, manage their public visibility and create one or more channels within that server. [411] Starting October 2017, Discord allows game developers and publishers to verify their servers.

  6. GGPO - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GGPO

    GGPO (Good Game Peace Out) is middleware designed to help create a near-lagless online experience for various emulated arcade games and fighting games. The program was created by Tony Cannon, co-founder of fighting game community site Shoryuken and the popular Evolution Championship Series.

  7. The All-Seeing Eye - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_All-Seeing_Eye

    The All-Seeing Eye, known to its community of users as ASE, was a game server browser designed by Finnish company UDP Soft. It was created to help online gamers find game servers. ASE took two years to develop and was introduced as shareware on June 15, 2001. [1] Despite UDP Soft lacking the marketing power of GameSpy, ASE's popularity grew.

  8. TERA (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TERA_(video_game)

    TERA was met with generally favorable reviews, [18] citing the action-based gameplay, huge and widely varied seamless world, the exciting and recurring Big Ass Monster (BAM) [27] fights, the ease of using the game's auction house (called the Trade Broker) and lush, detailed graphics as the game's high points. [28]

  9. XDCC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XDCC

    Unlike peer-to-peer transfers, XDCC servers are often hosted on connections with very high upstream bandwidth, sometimes in excess of 100 Mbit. [4] Often FTP servers are also running on the XDCC servers to facilitate uploading of materials to them. Many XDCC servers run on security compromised computers. [5]