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Revision as of 22:50, 26 April 2015 by Raucao (talk | contribs) (→‎Goals)
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Kosmos (ex Codename 67P)

Kosmos is a team communication application based exclusively on open protocols, standards, and APIs. All of its components are free software, published under open-source licenses. User-facing programs will be built upon the Web Platform, communicating with server components via HTTP and WebSockets.

Building blocks

Kosmos consists of several components, all of which can be configured separately, and thus be either hosted by a provider or self-hosted by the user/organization. These are:

  • Sockethub server for facilitating client/server communication between the Web client and the multiple protocols/backends/APIs it needs to talk to (e.g. IRC, SMTP, OStatus, Twitter, GitHub, SMS gateways, TURN etc.), as well handling incoming notifications like e.g. WebHooks from services that want to publish messages to Kosmos-handled IRC channels
  • RemoteStorage server for storing all user data in a user-defined/controlled storage backend
  • IRC server for private communication servers (not needed for personal usage on public servers)
  • TURN server for WebRTC networking enhancements/fallback for audio and audio/video calls (optional)
  • Web client, written in Ember.js, using sockethub.js and remotestorage.js, and making heavy use of Ember/Web components for implementing its functionality

Technical overview

Goals

  • Provide users/organizations/businesses with a modern, full-featured team communication solution, which is easy to set up and use
  • Eventually provide a fully hosted, one-click-setup solution for private team communication (keeping the possibility to exchange any component at will, e.g. storing all data on a user-controller remoteStorage server instead of the Kosmos company's own remoteStorage servers
  • Use common, open, documented data formats for storing all data, thus making it possible to use/manage/input stored data from other apps (no matter if new or existing). This is where the remoteStorage protocol is different than all other personal data storage protocols made for the Web.
  • Make it possible for users to be part of and use both public and private channels/spaces/servers at the same time (no more Campfire/Hipchat/Slack for work and clients, and IRC only for open-source and hobby, all in different apps)
  • Always keep the whole application in a state that can be deployed by anyone (with the necessary skills) who wishes to self-host the whole system. That explicitly includes excellent documentation for doing so.
  • Reversing the trend of declining IRC users on public servers by giving everyone a great Web IRC client, most importantly making it easy to connect, register nicks, auto-log and replay messages while away — all the nitty-gritty details that even software developers struggle with these days
  • Always be backwards-compatible to plain IRC. This will be achieved through smart client components, enhancing the rendering/fetching of messages on the client side, while messages transferred via servers are always plain-text and readable in IRC without spammy extra characters/lines
  • Have an excellent mobile client (or multiple)
  • Make use of the latest Web Platform standards, not caring about backwards-compatibility in Web runtimes (much). Kosmos is a modern Web application, and people not running modern Web runtimes can use plain IRC clients.

Features

Development Roadmap

See Roadmap.

Naming / Branding

67P is just a codename, because naming is hard. See Naming.

Team

See Team.

Company

See Company.

Kredits

See Kredits.

Notes

Similar projects / inspiration