Mancala Online is a Java based Implementation of the ancient african board game mancala. For its Online-capability Mancala uses the Jabber Instant Messaging System and JabberBeans.
The goal of this project is to develop a network protocol (Peer Instant Messenger Protocol, PIMP) that creates a distributed, peer-to-peer network for the transmission of instant messages, along with a graphical client that will allow users to access the
TiK is an open source AOL IM client written in tcl and very portable. It was originally developed as an alternative to java AIM for UNIX users. Sadly, this project seems to have been abandoned by AOL. This site will be used for further development of Tik.
[discontinued, who wants me?] A bouncer for connections to the p2p network Filetopias server. Hiding
your IP, it grant even more anonymity then filetopia does already.
JChat is a kind of IRC-like chat service entirely developed in Java 2. The project aims the creation of a chat Server which supports channels and various types of chat clients (applets, standalone apps).
Auth0 Token Vault handles secure token storage, exchange, and refresh for external providers so you don't have to build it yourself.
Rolling your own OAuth token storage can be a security liability. Token Vault securely stores access and refresh tokens from federated providers and handles exchange and renewal automatically. Connected accounts, refresh exchange, and privileged worker flows included.
Simple, pure Java-based IRC automaton, with many nice built-in functionality and features, including usr lists, permisions, protection, colour-control, multiple channels, simple bot-net facilities.
The goal of the Relay IRC project is to create an easy-to-use, multi-platform and scriptable Internet Relay Chat (IRC) chat client and a set of Java classes for adding IRC capabilities to other Java programs.
Net IM is trying to be comparable with the most popular chat clients out there today for windows such as AOL IM, ICQ, MSN Messenger, etc. This program is written completely in Java with the hopes that it will be portable across platforms. The client-ser
This web service developped in Java provides WebForum services on the IMAP4/POP3 protocol : you don't need database, and common messaging tool like Netscape Messenger or Outlook permits to create/delete new forum and to moderate messages.
Novus Ordo Seclorum (Ordo for short) is a pathologically secured, invitation only secure communications framework. It is built on top of the Freenet
crypto libraries.
The goal of YAJII is to create the first *usable* IRC protocol implementation and client, comparable to popular clients such as BitchX, ircII and mIRC.
Everybuddy Java (EBJava) is a messaging system written in Java. It consists of an applet and a server, and is used to log in to existing messaging services (AIM, ICQ, etc) through a unified interface. User settings are also stored on the server.
JabberApplet is a Chat Applet using the Jabber protocol. The goals are: 1) keep it small 2) easy to use 3) support as many operating systems/browser combinations as possible.
Combine Jabber, Java, Java Servlets, JavaScript, Stylesheets, XSL, and Xerces XML Parser for starters and you get JabberHTTPServlets. JabberServlets is a concept (ala Jer) to come that will allow interaction with the Jabber Server through Java.
Messy is a collaboration tool for distributed teams. It provides for instant messaging between members of the collaborating groups, a basic group management framework over which additional capabilities can be layered, and a sample concurrent editor.