{"id":434,"date":"2013-11-27T03:05:46","date_gmt":"2013-11-27T10:05:46","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/10.43.101.63:24469\/?p=434"},"modified":"2014-12-18T11:57:54","modified_gmt":"2014-12-18T19:57:54","slug":"open-source-project-of-the-month-kiwiirc","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/aarontc.com\/archive\/2013\/11\/open-source-project-of-the-month-kiwiirc\/","title":{"rendered":"Open Source Project of the Month: KiwiIRC"},"content":{"rendered":"

I think I’ll start writing about some of my favorite open source projects. If time permits, this’ll be a monthly thing. Not only to get some exposure for great projects, but to have a nice list of great projects I can refer to others easily.<\/p>\n

KiwiIRC<\/h2>\n

As the very first project of the month, I’d like to recognize KiwiIRC<\/a>. I’ve gotten back into IRC<\/a> recently, and I find KiwiIRC indispensable for keeping in communication on the go. If you want a flexible and location-independent IRC client, definitely consider giving KiwiIRC a try.<\/p>\n

\"KiwiIRC\"<\/a><\/p>\n

The best part of the experience so far has been the author’s response to pull requests on GitHub<\/a>. I found a typo in the sample configuration file, committed a fix, submitted a pull request, and the author responded in less than 5 minutes. They wanted the change in a different branch, so I re-submitted and the change is merged in under 10 minutes! That’s a great testament to the power of open source. Sure, my change was small, but it was so incredibly easy!<\/p>\n

Features<\/h3>\n

(As stated on the KiwiIRC home page.)<\/p>\n