IRC Clients for Linux Part 1: List of 6 GUI Clients

    IRC plays a major role in the Linux development and the community itself, and most distributions and software projects usually have one or more IRC channels (usually on Freenode or, in Debian's case, on OFTC) for discussing issues related to the project or just helping users.

    I decided to put up this list which contains no less than 6 graphical IRC clients for Linux, powerful or user-friendly. I also provided several screenshots where I considered necessary and a brief description for each of them.

    The GUI (Graphical User Interface) clients

    XChat
    XChat is built in GTK and it is one of the most powerful graphical clients for Linux, including scripting (Perl, Python, Tcl) and plugin interface, high configurability via the /set variables (like the conference mode, for example), support for connections to multiple networks (a must-have for any IRC client in my opinion) and much more. The forum and the #xchat @ Freenode channel are very helpful, and the documentation on the official site is abundant too. For GNOME users, a project called xchat-gnome is also available.
    Homepage

    XChat 2.8.4

    Konversation
    Being well-known for the fact that it's one of the most user-friendly clients for Linux, Konversation is also very popular among KDE users. It doesn't have event-based scripting yet, but it provides options for each and every need a user would need. Comes bundled with several default scripts like a media player announcer or a weather script to mention two of them. It integrates in the system tray, includes alerts and is very fast.
    Homepage

    Konversation 1.0.1

    KVirc
    Another user-friendly client for KDE, KVirc provides a scripting interface similar to the one of mIRC for Windows, many configuration options, themes, support for multiple network connections, and much, much more. The only minus it has is that it's a little bloated and slow. Each new release is accompanied by a concept picture and codename, and documentation is abundant and included in the Help menu.
    Homepage

    KVirc 3.2.4 'Anomalies'

    KSirc
    In my opinion KSirc is the weakest client compared to Konversation or KVirc, but it comes by default with the KDE 3.5.x distribution, being included in the kdenetwork package. It supports scripting in Perl.
    Homepage

    KSirc running in Kubuntu 8.04

    Pidgin
    Pidgin is formerly known as Gaim, the GNOME instant messaging client, also including a basic IRC client.
    Homepage

    Pidgin 2.4.1

    Kopete
    The official KDE IM client, Kopete includes a basic IRC client. Although they don't have powerful and fully-featured IRC clients, both Pidgin and Kopete can be used when you also use one or more IM protocols, like Yahoo! or MSN. This way, you can stay on IRC and IM using a single application.
    Homepage

    Creating an IRC account in Kopete

    Kopete 0.12.7 - #debian @ OFTC

    Update: Quassel
    Quassel is a basic KDE 4 IRC client which comes as default in Kubuntu. It does not support event-based scripting, but it offers several useful (and popular) configuration options.
    Homepage


    Installation in Ubuntu
    For every client, just use sudo apt-get install CLIENT_NAME with your user password. For example:

    sudo apt-get install xchat

    Or:

    sudo apt-get install konversation

    There are two versions for KVirc, 3.2.4 and 2.1.3. To install KVirc 3.2.4 use:

    sudo apt-get install kvirc

    And for 2.1.3:

    sudo apt-get install kvirc2

    Updated: March 29, 2009
    Source URL: https://ashesgarrett.blogspot.com/2008/09/irc-clients-for-linux-part-1-list-of-6.html
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