tl;dr download Element (or just visit their website on a desktop) and try it out. Unless you have a particular use case, even the default server should be fine. Element is to Discord* what Lemmy is to Reddit.
* it’s the best analogy I could come up with; other comparisons include IRC, Slack, etc.
People who own a server and know how to do administration tasks can install their own instance and attach it to the federation. You can use one of the Matrix server applications for self-hosting.
Think of it like email. You need a client (like Gmail or Outlook), which for Matrix is usually Element, Schildichat (a fork of Element), or Fluffychat. You also need a server (like gmail.com). The most popular one is matrix.org, though it doesn’t have any bridges. To get bridges, you either need to run your own server (much easier than it sounds with this) or use a server with bridges built in. Bridges are tied to the server. You also get an address, of the form @name:example.com, where example.com is the homeserver.
If you want to do it the easy (but slightly proprietary) way, Beeper is basically commercialized Matrix with preinstalled bridges and a slightly better UI. Some of their stuff is proprietary, but they contribute a lot to FOSS (several bridges I use are by them), and most of the internals are FOSS.
Makes setting up a Matrix server super simple. However, I’m not totally sold on Matrix. It has been pretty unreliable for me with messages not triggering alerts in the app, messages just not being delivered or delayed by multiple hours.
I’ve read about Matrix alot here on Lemmy, but I still can’t figure out how to get it.
How do I get Matrix, how do I create rooms and how do I bridge other chats into it (I’ve read you could do that)?
I’m probably stupid, but how do you do this?
tl;dr download Element (or just visit their website on a desktop) and try it out. Unless you have a particular use case, even the default server should be fine. Element is to Discord* what Lemmy is to Reddit.
* it’s the best analogy I could come up with; other comparisons include IRC, Slack, etc.
You just need a client like Element.io or other clients. If you don’t want to connect to the main server
matrix.org
which is quite slow, you choose one from the federation.People who own a server and know how to do administration tasks can install their own instance and attach it to the federation. You can use one of the Matrix server applications for self-hosting.
Think of it like email. You need a client (like Gmail or Outlook), which for Matrix is usually Element, Schildichat (a fork of Element), or Fluffychat. You also need a server (like gmail.com). The most popular one is matrix.org, though it doesn’t have any bridges. To get bridges, you either need to run your own server (much easier than it sounds with this) or use a server with bridges built in. Bridges are tied to the server. You also get an address, of the form @name:example.com, where example.com is the homeserver.
If you want to do it the easy (but slightly proprietary) way, Beeper is basically commercialized Matrix with preinstalled bridges and a slightly better UI. Some of their stuff is proprietary, but they contribute a lot to FOSS (several bridges I use are by them), and most of the internals are FOSS.
Check this out: https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy
Makes setting up a Matrix server super simple. However, I’m not totally sold on Matrix. It has been pretty unreliable for me with messages not triggering alerts in the app, messages just not being delivered or delayed by multiple hours.