Check out Colloquy, an excellent free IRC client

Mac OS X Add comments

Way back when I first started using the Internet (way, way back), everything was text-based. I dialed into a phone bank connected to a mux, which then opened a telnet session to a Sun server where I had an account. AIM and Yahoo didn’t exist; you used talk, ntalk, or ytalk to chat with your friends around the country, and you used finger @domain to find out if they were online. Java chat clients didn’t exist either. Instead, IRC was the way to participate in large-group chat chaos and file sharing.

IRC doesn’t seem to be as popular today as it was more than a decade ago, but IRC software has certainly progressed far beyond the text-based clients on the old Sun server. My friends at Your Mac Life have an IRC chat each week (irc.netmug.org, #yourmaclife), and because I enjoy participating, I have the need for an OS X IRC app. Most people seem to know about Snak, but I never wanted to try it because a single-user license is $29. Not that I’m dismissing Snak! If it suits your needs, then by all means, register and enjoy.

There is a very good free IRC app, however, that I almost never hear anything about, and that’s Colloquy. I like Colloquy a whole lot. It very much has the look and feel of an OS X app, and it’s featured enough to keep me happy. Rather than write a dry review of the software, I’d rather post some screenshots of the app in action and the preference panels. I dunno about you, but sometimes the preference panels are as revealing about an app’s function as anything a reviewer would write. At the very least, it should be enough to whet the appetite of anyone who uses IRC. Colloquy is a free download, so if the screenshots appeal to you, it costs nothing to try it.

Here’s an out-of-context capture from this week’s YML chat:

Picture 1.png

And here are the preference panels:

Picture 2.png

Picture 3.png

Picture 4.png

Picture 5.png

Picture 6.png

Picture 7.png

Picture 8.png

One Response to “Check out Colloquy, an excellent free IRC client”

  1. Fubar Says:

    I have been using Colloquy for quite some time, it’s a great application. Development is moving along at a decent speed too, which is nice.

    Speaking of “the old days”, there were some alternatives to IRC (not that you implied it was the only thing going). MUDs were real popular, the predecessor to today’s MMORPG. From there, a few folks starting developing small MUD like programs without all the RPG aspects that were called “talkers”. NUTS, rNUTS and a few others.

    The “talker” family tree can be viewed here:
    http://www.ewtoo.org/tree.txt

Leave a Reply

WP Theme & Icons by N.Design Studio
Entries RSS Comments RSS Log in