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Teamspeak 5 to be based on the Matrix protocol

541 points| circularfoyers | 5 years ago |community.teamspeak.com | reply

224 comments

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[+] ds|5 years ago|reply
Not to be negative, but teamspeak and ventrilo represent some of the biggest failures of 'getting stuck in your lane' ever. They got fat on hosted server revenue and never iterated. Both of them had years (decade?) on discord and never thought to make their product free, web based or have a better chat. Ventrilo still has no official ios/android app (lol). Both remind me of craigslist, actually- Except that craigslist is still going strong (for now).

Both still exist, granted- And many still use them. Its just that discord really shouldnt exist, it should have been one of these players. The head start they had should have been insurmountable.

Also, apologies for not really commenting on the subject at hand (TS supporting matrix) - Its just I so rarely hear about TS/Vent that I thought it worth me shouting into the ether my disappointment I am not talking to all my friends on vent/ts in 2021.

[+] unethical_ban|5 years ago|reply
I've met the owner of Ventrilo a few times at Quakecon a few years back. Super nice guy, pretty smart and nerdy in a good way. Seems to me the guy got pretty wealthy off Ventrilo in its heyday, and was happy with it. Because as people can go search, Ventrilo is essentially abandonware.

Discord's main benefits are the persistent chat with "slack-like" link embeds, emojis, and whatnot; as well as easier role management; and finally, federated identity.

If Mumble, for instance, could make their chat interface more appealing, and if someone had a lightweight user directory for it and friend management, it might have a chance of competing. But Discord has really taken over.

[+] Macha|5 years ago|reply
It remains to be seen if Discord has a long term viable business model or whether it will get dumped like Skype, AIM, etc. when they need to monetise it and users get put off by the attempts.

That said, the move will likely be to the next highly funded product in that case, not back to TS/Mumble.

[+] Justsignedup|5 years ago|reply
Teamspeak and those tools currently have cross-channel communication which is very useful for large squad games. They are definitely a minority as most games are like 5 players per team.

So they have their niche uses (mumble too). guilded.gg is trying to fix that issue.

Having said all that, TS is definitely not a freemium business model. And they did well for themselves. But they are certainly stuck in their old ways.

Craigslist had many attempts to modernize. Turns out... people like the minimalistic nature of it. There are like a billion competitors, and they all failed.

[+] Nuzzerino|5 years ago|reply
> They got fat on hosted server revenue and never iterated. Both of them had years (decade?) on discord and never thought to make their product free, web based or have a better chat.

> Also, apologies for not really commenting on the subject at hand (TS supporting matrix)

As a former developer of a chat app that used Matrix, I'm actually thinking that this is a good direction for Teamspeak and has the potential to make it a viable alternative to Discord. Matrix has some decentralization that should allow for censorship-resistant use cases.

And this is of course something the world badly needs right now.

[+] oauea|5 years ago|reply
Yes, let's all centralize and commercialize everything and stop making software that you can self host.
[+] baldfat|5 years ago|reply
Well they never were for a seamless purpose. We would mesh Ventrilo and IRC into a real awesome tool but I think we were the intended audience. There weren't millions of us there were tens of thousands of us.

It wasn't till there was millions of users that Discord started targeting them. First there was Curse that got bought out by Twitch and then Discord jumped in.

I still am the cranky guy who thinks IRC is the best communication tool out there and get mad looking at my Slacker screen.

[+] _n_b|5 years ago|reply
In both cases, I feel like they just stopped moving altogether. It wasn't even that they didn't innovate or add new features, they stopped even improving the features they had.

I feel like there's huge market space for an application like Ventrilo that just does a simple voice server really well, without all the frills and bulk that more fully-featured app like Discord has.

I know that we aren't entitled to software support from devs who get what they want out of their software and then move on... but I'm right there with you in being sad that vent/ts haven't stayed the test of time. Discord saw the stagnancy in the market and just ate it right up.

[+] deelowe|5 years ago|reply
Where I live, craigslist has all but been replaced by facebook marketplace. There are too many scammers and too much spam on craigslist.
[+] gsich|5 years ago|reply
I disagree. WebRTC is utter nonsense. You neither want to implement nor use it. You never know if it's working. With Mumble (TCP and UDP, both can be used for voice) and Teamspeak you know that when you connect to a server, your connection is working. With WebRTC you only have a vague idea, since HTTP is working, but that doesn't mean much.
[+] benbristow|5 years ago|reply
Teamspeak Server seems to be free for 32 players now.

No idea why you wouldn't just use Discord though.

[+] MayeulC|5 years ago|reply
Here is a more official-looking statement: https://community.teamspeak.com/t/beta-signup/13749/50

> We use the Matrix protocol only for the messenger part. The rest does not require a different TeamSpeak server.

[+] GekkePrutser|5 years ago|reply
Ah so it's only for the chat.. So they don't use Jitsi for voice by the sounds of it (which is what Matrix uses for voice).

Makes sense but it would have been nice to have been fully open source-based.

[+] kitkat_new|5 years ago|reply
interesting, I am speechless

This is rather unusual for a commercial service

[+] orliesaurus|5 years ago|reply
I'm glad to see TeamSpeak is still out there. I totally dropped it as soon as Discord became popular, not because I didn't like it - but literally everyone moved over, I didn't want to be left behind.

Totally can see how some folks out here value their data a lot more and want to keep things private! That's where TeamSpeak will always thrive!

Here's a little bit of a story-time anecdote: Back when I was in school, we used TeamSpeak to talk after hours, it was like the equivalent of people double (or 1.5x) my age spending hours and hours on the phone and their parents yelling "GET OFF THE PHONE". It was a win win situation because with ADSL (3mbps lol) I could be connected all day and not hog the phone line, additionally the in-built chat to whisper things was good enough that we could exchange links for funny images/flash games etc.

The voice quality was never bad, it took a little server configuration to get it just right, and the ability to record your voice and the conversation made for some hilarious clips compilation throughout the years, sometimes we still share some of those clips to remember what it was like to have a squeaky teenage voice.

I spent thousands of hours on TeamSpeak and also tried Ventrilo/Mumble - but I was defo a team TeamSpeak kid...Also I really liked the fact that TeamSpeak had a public servers list that we could just join when someone forgot to pay the bill for our own server. Yep we rotated...so it wouldn't be the burden of 1 person paying for everyone!

Speaking of paying the bill, it was always just a couple of dollars PayPal'd over to someone who had a larger servers, basically sub-renting a whole room and subrooms...made us feel like adults paying our own bills :)

Thanks for allowing me to drive down memory lane!

[+] danr4|5 years ago|reply
I have a personal TeamSpeak server for my friend group since forever. I don't know if it's nostalgia, or I'm just old (31) but I can't imagine replacing it ever. Initially for gaming sessions, it became a place to hangout when you're on the computer, whatever you are doing.

It's light weight, usable on my phone, self-hosted, no emoji-fiesta, can send the one-off chat message that I NEVER need history of. It just works and it's OURS. Once in a while when it's down all of my friends panic.

I always thought there was a missing consumer app for my use case. There was/is Houseparty but I thought that video is too much. Clubhouse seems like it's doing something right but still not on point re. dropping in to a "familiar" place and hanging.

Discord on the other hand just feels so alienating to me.

[+] 0x004C|5 years ago|reply
This is great news for Matrix also. With a widely known project like Teamspeak adopting it as a protocol, others might follow.

Speaking of Teamspeak 5 - I hope the new client doesn't hog multiple gigabytes of RAM. Being lightweight is one of the reasons I prefer Teamspeak over Discord.

[+] Nican|5 years ago|reply
That is a name I have not seen in a long time. I remember when I use to game with Ventrilo/Teamspeak/Mumble about a decade ago.

For anyone who still uses Teamspeak today, what do you use it for?

[+] ch0I9daAiO|5 years ago|reply
I host my own TS3 server. It uses significantly less resources than the Discord client, has better audio (at least my friends sound better) and data is not going to Discord for whatever they're using data for. In case there's an issues with my Teamspeak server, I can solve it, instead of waiting for Discord.
[+] Mo3|5 years ago|reply
I play games with my friends and girlfriend sometimes, I host a TS3 server to talk to each other for several reasons -

1) Voice data stays with us, not yet again some other company 2) The TS Client is slim, lightweight and uses little resources while the Discord client is absolutely horrid, sluggish and quite the memory hog 3) TS has far superior voice quality (subjectively) and latency (due to the server being close)

[+] raxxorrax|5 years ago|reply
My group of friends still uses Mumble for talking to each other. It is hosted on our own server. It has transports to all sorts of messengers.

I use discord for some things, but only from a browser. Wouldn't want to use it professionally, although it is relatively decent.

Speech quality is far better on mumble with less latency, because the server is in near proximity.

edit: Don't know about Mumbles text chat, it is rarely used.

[+] throwaway_ocr|5 years ago|reply
Same thing I've always used it for, talking to people I play games with.

Teamspeak never stopped working so there was never a reason to switch to anything else.

[+] jabroni_salad|5 years ago|reply
If you have complex communication needs then this generation of voice software is still the best you can get.

For example, I play a good amount of Eve Online and we have a lot of ACL shenanigans. First, you have your fleet's main channel where most of the membership is going to be. So far so good.

At the top of the list are leadership channels. These guys can talk to and hear their own fleet but with can also instantly page other people in leadership (corp leadership and also other fleet commanders).

Then at the bottom of the list are specific group sub-channels. For example, your scouts and your logistics players need a good amount of coordination with each other, so they will have a lil room where they can talk at each other without tying up comms for the main fleet or distracting leadership with stuff that isn't actionable to them.

Then you can add in a whole extra layer of complexity if you are part of an alliance with multiple corps in it.

You basically can't do that in discord unless you want to have to switch between different channels the entire time. It might sound overkill but if you have 90+ players in your fleet you cannot get away with 'just put everyone in a big room'.

[+] jjice|5 years ago|reply
Sorry Teamspeak, but you lost me already. Back about 7 years ago when I spent more time online with friends in school, we tried to use Teamspeak multiple times, but the audio quality was always awful. We didn't like Skype either, but the audio was still better, so we dealt with the bloat. Discord is king in my mind, without question. Being electron based makes it a bit heavy, but I can spare 200MB on my machine for some damn good chat and call.
[+] Mo3|5 years ago|reply
You probably had the audio codec configured improperly. Back then, TS used Speex in different bitrates. Today it is OPUS Voice (or OPUS Music), which has absolutely great audio quality. Combine this with very low latency if the server is in your proximity and you've got something that sounds and performs better than anything else - Slack, Discord, etc.

"Damn good" chat might be true, but call? Only if you appreciate mediocre voice quality, a suboptimal RTC protocol and a good big chunk of latency.

Discord feels sluggish, bloated and heavy compared to TS, and it's not just because it's Electron-based.

[+] momothereal|5 years ago|reply
Could've just been a network issue, or simply because it was 7 years ago. I've been using Teamspeak daily with my friends for 6 years, hosted on a 5$ digitalocean droplet and the audio is far superior compared to anything else.

Discord is pretty sweet too, with screensharing, videos, better chat etc. But once more than 2 people talk at once in a channel, even with Nitro/whatever, it starts cutting people up. We can really feel the difference when going back to TS after a Discord call.

[+] jagger27|5 years ago|reply
TeamSpeak supports Opus and I don't remember quality being an issue. I actually distinctly remember Discord's audio being worse than the best TeamSpeak settings when Discord launched and my friends switched over.
[+] Saris|5 years ago|reply
I think Teamspeak defaults to a fairly average codec bitrate choice, it's not great but not awful. You can easily change it to be significantly better than what Discord offers though.

And because it's not running in electron TS voice is a lot more stable under packet loss situations.

[+] 650REDHAIR|5 years ago|reply
TS has always had better audio than Discord. Did you change the codecs?
[+] Avamander|5 years ago|reply
I hope that Mumble does the same, to be honest. It's long overdue.
[+] LargoLasskhyfv|5 years ago|reply
Uhm, why exactly? It does what it is designed to do, with low latency and good quality. Speaking from "Desktop" perspective here.
[+] GekkePrutser|5 years ago|reply
At least Mumble is already open source.

By the way, Teamspeak is only changing the messenger (text chat) part to Matrix.

[+] MayeulC|5 years ago|reply
I saw that forum post earlier yesterday. What makes it credible?

It's a post by a very recent account, that didn't write that much to begin with.

With that said, screenshots look similar to the Element Matrix client: https://community.teamspeak.com/t/wishlist/1436/283

Even if TS5 was to be based on a Matrix client, that doesn't imply it supports the official Client-Server nor Server-Server APIs.

I've argued that Matrix was a good fit for integrating into Mumble, I am still of that opinion.

[+] sean_pedersen|5 years ago|reply
Would like to see more messaging services jump in on Matrix protocol. Signal would be huge.
[+] _-___________-_|5 years ago|reply
I would hate to see Signal replace the elegant, carefully designed protocol they use with the bloated, carelessly designed, "IM-over-HTTP" mess that is Matrix.
[+] hans1729|5 years ago|reply
Huge for matrix, yes. For signal to jump on the matrix train, matrix first needs to get their act together with respect to encryption.

Try getting non-techsavy folk to set up multiple devices, the process is nowhere near viable right now

[+] f1refly|5 years ago|reply
It would be more appropriate for signal to open up to the xmpp fediverse
[+] poisonborz|5 years ago|reply
Note that this is only for chat functionality, not voice transmission.
[+] nxoxn|5 years ago|reply
The new teamspeak application is clearly targeting Discord and I'll be happy to see some competition. I like the differences in the UI that are visible in their demo screenshots and the ability to host my own server would be nice.

The biggest difficulty teamspeak is going to face is that users are now firmly entrenched in discord, just as twitch users are firmly entrenched in that product. Why would users switch? I am certainly going to try out the new TS and see how it fares because I just like trying out all of my options before settling on one. Quite a few others that I know would largely prefer to just stay put though.

[+] nathias|5 years ago|reply
Nice! Increasing our reliance on open protocols instead of platforms is the best way towards a freer better internet.
[+] luos|5 years ago|reply
Teamspeak is still the best when it comes to chatting when gaming, it is usable with voice activation, push to talk and it has so good echo cancellation that it works when both of us are on speakers.

Though the current version uses almost a full core on my machine, it's still worth it in my opinion and you can find many free servers you can connect to.

[+] faeyanpiraat|5 years ago|reply
We switched to Mumble way back when I played Cod2 competitively. It was better in every way.

Ventrilo was "meh" (probably between the two).

Edit: Fixed product names.

[+] superkuh|5 years ago|reply
Teamspeak used to be the best. I used it for a decade. It's only within the last couple years as they've tried to become Discord that it's started going downhill. Teamspeak 3 was solid enough but soon they implemented the artificial lifetime, you had to re-authenticate your server every year (and sometimes more often). Then they got rid of the old forums and wiped everything clean. It hasn't been the same. I stopped using TS recently.

I do use matrix, but only because of the pandemic. And matrix itself only does 1-to-1 voice. For multiple it has a system to shunt you over to jitsi and autoconfigure the room. So I don't see how TS5 is going to use matrix.

[+] yakattak|5 years ago|reply
I haven’t seen groups in the games I play use Teamspeak or Ventrilo in probably 5-10 years. There was a push to Mumble a few years back and it seems like as soon as Discord hit the market it just took over.

Do certain games still lean towards these? Perhaps older MMOs? I’m curious to hear which games are using it.

[+] seanieb|5 years ago|reply
Will this be end-to-end-encrypted?
[+] physicsguy|5 years ago|reply
Didn't even realise Teamspeak was still running! Throw back to old MMO days
[+] hda111|5 years ago|reply
I would prefer TeamSpeak over Discord if they would bring back non profit licenses. I mean that I could host one myself but without making profit with enough slots.