Foreword
The last 20 years have introduced us to new ways of communicating
with other people. One of the most interactive new communication
techniques is keyboard-based chatting, in which the text typed on the
keyboard of one person is shown straightaway on the screen of another
person, or a group of people, located far away, perhaps on the other
side of the world.
Internet Relay Chat (IRC) is an open source distributed chat
environment used widely around the Internet. There are thousands of
chat programs, and there were at least hundreds of chat programs
before IRC saw the first light in August 1988. What made IRC
different from these other chat programs? It was and still is the
possibility to network individual chat programs (IRC servers) to one
another, thus forming a worldwide, distributed, and decentralized
chat network.
The ability to network, without maintaining a central location of
control, has been the key for success for IRC, WWW, USENET News, and
many other systems. Similarly, the inability to distribute control
has been the reason for failure for many occasions. Giving out
control and empowering others with the power to work, learn, and
develop software allows for new innovations. Keeping control to
yourself is often much easier to do, but it slows down progress by
making it difficult, sometimes impossible, to innovate.
IRC started as one summer trainee's programming
exercise. A hack grew into a software development project that
hundreds of people participated in and became a worldwide environment
where tens of thousands of people now spend time with one another. I
have found many of my present friends through IRC and learned a
significant part of my present software engineering knowledge while
using and working with IRC. That would not have been possible without
learning from code examples and hacks from others.
I believe this book presents excellent tools and techniques for both
IRC newcomers and old-timers. The hacks will help the readers to dig
in the inner workings of IRC, learn from that, and enable them to
further develop their own ideas into better software and new hacks
for themselves and others.
-
Jarkko Oikarinen, Helsinki, April 5, 2004
- Head of R&D, Capricode Oy
- CTO, Numeric Garden Oy
Jarkko Oikarinen wrote the original IRC program at the University of
Oulu, Finland, in 1988. He was granted a Dvorak Award in 1997 for
personal achievement as a result of developing IRC.
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