

In Europe and Canada a separate new network was being worked on and in December the French servers connected to the Canadian ones, and by the end of the month, the French and Canadian network was connected to the US one, forming the network that later came to be called "The Undernet". It was meant to be just a test network to develop bots on but it quickly grew to a network "for friends and their friends". (It forked off the EFnet ircd version 2.8.10). Undernet fork Īnother fork effort, the first that made a lasting difference, was initiated by "Wildthang" in the United States in October 1992. Chat logs of these and other events are kept in the ibiblio archive. It was previously used in a similar fashion during the Gulf War. Īround that time IRC was used to report on the 1991 Soviet coup d'état attempt throughout a media blackout. Once A-net disbanded, the name EFnet became meaningless, and once again it was the one and only IRC network. History showed most servers and users went with EFnet. It wasn't much of a fight I got all the hubs to join, and almost everyone else got carried along." A-net was formed with the eris servers, while EFnet was formed with the non-eris servers. In wumpus' words again : "Eris refused to remove that line, so I formed EFnet.
#Irc rss bot free#
The "Eris Free Network", EFnet, made the eris machine the first to be Q-lined (Q for quarantine) from IRC.

As Greg "wumpus" Lindahl explains : "it had a wildcard server line, so people were hooking up servers and nick-colliding everyone". It was all open, required no passwords and had no limit on the number of connects. The "A-net" (Anarchy net) included a server named. In August 1990, the first major disagreement took place in the IRC world. In November 1988, IRC had spread across the Internet and in the middle of 1989, there were some 40 servers worldwide. IRC then grew larger and got used on the entire Finnish national network- FUNET-and then connected to Nordunet, the Scandinavian branch of the Internet.

They had obtained the program from one of Oikarinen's friends, Vijay Subramaniam-the first non-Finnish person to use IRC. They had their own IRC network running and wanted to connect to the Finnish network. Oikarinen got in touch with people at the University of Denver and Oregon State University. At this time Oikarinen realized that the rest of the BBS features probably wouldn't fit in his program. Oikarinen got some friends at the Helsinki University and Tampere University to start running IRC servers when his number of users increased and other universities soon followed.
#Irc rss bot code#
Jyrki Kuoppala pushed Oikarinen to ask Oulu University to free the IRC code so that it also could be run outside of Oulu, and after they finally got it released, Jyrki Kuoppala immediately installed another server. Oikarinen found inspiration in a chat system known as Bitnet Relay, which operated on the BITNET.

The first IRC network was running on a single server named. The first part he implemented was the chat part, which he did with borrowed parts written by his friends Jyrki Kuoppala and Jukka Pihl.
#Irc rss bot software#
Jarkko intended to extend the BBS software he administered, to allow news in the Usenet style, real time discussions and similar BBS features. IRC was created by Jarkko Oikarinen in August 1988 to replace a program called MUT (MultiUser Talk) on a BBS called OuluBox at the University of Oulu in Finland, where he was working at the Department of Information Processing Science. In April 2011, the top 100 IRC networks served more than half a million users at a time. IRC usage has been declining steadily since 2003, losing 60 percent of its users. Examples of programs used to connect include Mibbit, IRCCloud, KiwiIRC, and mIRC. Users connect, using a client-which may be a web app, a standalone desktop program, or embedded into part of a larger program-to an IRC server, which may be part of a larger IRC network. The chat process works on a client–server networking model. Internet Relay Chat is implemented as an application layer protocol to facilitate communication in the form of text. IRC is designed for group communication in discussion forums, called channels, but also allows one-on-one communication via private messages as well as chat and data transfer, including file sharing. Internet Relay Chat ( IRC) is a text-based chat system for instant messaging. The first IRC server,, a Sun-3 server on display near the University of Oulu computer centre
