IRC

From BakaBT Wiki
Revision as of 04:54, 16 March 2020 by Theworm4002 (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

IRC (Internet Relay Chat) is something that, if you stay online long enough, you will have to fool around with. It's a real-time internet chat where users chat with each other in channels which are located on a server (which house hundreds if not thousands of different channels). It's often the fastest way to get in touch with another person on BakaBT since many idle the IRC, which is not the case with the forum.

There are two official BakaBT IRC channels on the Rizon IRC network: #BakaBT and #bakabt-support.

If you're new to IRC

If you've read the FAQ and your question isn't in there, or you have an account issue you need help with (i.e. something you can't solve by yourself even if you know how to), the support channel is a relatively quick way to get the help you need.

Make sure you read the IRC Rules before joining the channels.

4-Step Guide to getting on #bakabt-support

  1. Go to our webchat page.
  2. Type your BakaBT username in the first field (makes things easier for us; the easier it is for us to help you, the more likely we are to do so).
  3. Click 'Chat'. You will automatically be connected to our main channel (#bakabt).
  4. To get to the support channel (#bakabt-support), type /join bakabt-support and press 'Enter'. You will now be in the support channel (check to make sure).

Alternative 4-Step Guide to getting on #bakabt-support

If the above method doesn't work for you (because your browser doesn't support iframes, maybe), this might work.

  1. Go to Rizon QChat page.
  2. Type your BakaBT username in the first field (makes things easier for us; the easier it is for us to help you, the more likely we are to do so).
  3. Type #bakabt-support in the second field. Leave Auth as 'None'.
  4. Click 'Connect'. You will automatically be connected to the support channel (#bakabt-support).

What you need to know about #bakabt-support

In Rizon webchat interface:

  1. The typing area is at the bottom of the page.
  2. Users with % beside their name are channel half-operators (a.k.a. half-ops, hops, etc). Usually bots with special privileges (BBT).
  3. Users with &, @ or ~ beside their name are channel admin, operators and owner respectively. They are usually also members of the site staff, unless they're bots (BakaBT bot).
  4. Users with + beside their name are "voiced" users. Voice is a status given to users by half-operators or admins. Users voiced on #bakabt-support are users recognised by BakaBT staff to be helpful in the support channel. They may also be other VIPs, e.g. Rizon staff, so be nice :)
  5. Users with no symbol beside their names are (most likely) normal users.
  6. Normal users may offer help and advice with regards to fixing your ratio or finding good torrents to seed. However, only staff will be able to do anything about your account.
  7. Use !help to view a list of available commands. Commonly used ones include !help commands (available commands), !help rules (channel rules), !help FAQ (link to FAQ) and !help Wiki (link to Wiki), as well as any other commands that may have been added.

What to do once you're in #bakabt-support

  1. Describe your problem in detail. The more you tell us about the problem, the more we are able to help.
  2. Staff may not reply immediately (we're not always at immediate disposal so have some patience), but someone will talk to you in a while.
  3. If no staff replies within 15 minutes, you probably caught us at a bad time (wait around, or come back again in 1-2 hours).

What not to do in #bakabt-support

  1. Do not PM (private message) any staff members, unless they ask you to (usually to ask for more sensitive information, e.g. email address, that we need to help resolve your issue). If you do not know how to send a private message you can ignore this.
  2. Do not try to help other users (unless you know what you're talking about) or try to impersonate staff. Annoying users will be banned from the support channel.
  3. Do not yell at us like we're some customer service rep. We do not get paid for providing support, and will not tolerate verbal abuse.
  4. Idling and lurking is not allowed. Users left idling or lurking will be kicked or banned from the support channel.

Connecting to BakaBT

Most guides here were made with ChatZilla in mind!

BakaBT uses the IRC server:

irc.rizon.net

The main chatroom is:

#BakaBT (not case sensitive)

And the support room is:

#bakabt-support

How to connect to #BakaBT

  • Start your IRC client
  • Enter the Nickname you want into the bottom left button, beside the input bar.<
  • Now, to join the server. Type (or copy/paste) into the input bar:
/server irc.rizon.net
  • If your nickname hasn't been used yet (by you or another person), it will tell you the nickname needs to be registered.
To do this, type (or copy/paste) into the input bar:
/msg nickserv register your_password your_email
Where "your_password" is the password you want, and "your_email" is your e-mail address.
  • An activation code will be sent to your email address (used for registration). Read the email, type the command into IRC and your nickname will be registered (one nickname/group of nicknames per email address).
    • Registration is not usually required to join a channel, but some channels explicitly require one (such as #BakaBT).
  • The battle is done at this point! To connect to a channel, so you can talk to people, type (or copy/paste) into the input bar:
/join #BakaBT

How to reconnect to #BakaBT

  • Start your IRC client
  • Your Nickname should still be in your client, so leave that part alone.
  • To join the server again, type (or copy/paste) into the input bar:
/server irc.rizon.net
  • Instead of asking you to register this time though, it will ask for your password. To do that, just type (or copy/paste) into the input bar:
/msg NickServ IDENTIFY password
Just replace "password" with the password you gave when registering.
  • Now, you can reconnect to the chat room by typing (or copy/paste) into the input bar:
/join #BakaBT

How to auto-connect, auto-join and auto-identify

To auto-connect a server, select the tab of the server you wish to auto-connect to in the future (you must have a window open assigned to that server in the first place!). Right click within the window, and select 'Open this network on startup'.

To auto-join a channel, select the tab of the channel you wish to auto-join in the future. Right click within the window and select 'Open this channel on startup'.

To auto-identify, go to the toolbar at the top, click ChatZilla -> Preferences -> Select the server in the panel on the left (in this case irc.rizon.net) -> click the 'Lists' tab -> Press 'Add...' in the Auto-perform section -> Fill in the following (remember to replace "password" with whatever your password is!):

/msg nickserv identify "password"

Connecting to different channels

To connect to another channel when first starting up, just replace #BakaBT with the channel you want (like #bakabt-support). If you're already connected, type (or copy/paste) into the input bar:

/join #channelname

Where "#channelname" is the channel-which-you-want-to-connect-to's name.

Channel statistics

The channel stats can be found at: http://chalamius.se/ircstats/bakabt.html

IRC Clients

This is a list of the best IRC clients available.

ChatZilla

One of the easiest clients to use, if you use Firefox. Since it's a Firefox plug-in, it should work on any operating system. If you want a simple, clean IRC client to get in and out, ChatZilla will work fine.

Installation

Follow this link. Then just hit the big green button that says "Add to Firefox". Give it permission to install, let Firefox restart, and it's installed. To use, just go to the "Tools" drop down menu in Firefox and select "ChatZilla".

mIRC

Another popular IRC client for Windows. While free to use, a donation nag window pops up at startup after the 30th day.

Irssi

Irssi is a terminal-based IRC client for UNIX systems, with multi-server and plugin support. The learning curve is slightly steep, but it is highly flexible.

Colloquy

Colloquy is a full-featured open source IRC client for the Macintosh, iPhone, and iPod Touch.

Pidgin

Pidgin is a multi-protocol instant messaging program. It supports many common IM protocols out of the box (such as Messenger, AIM, Yahoo, ICQ, etc.), and it also supports the IRC protocol.

Miranda

Similar to Pidgin is Miranda, also a multi-protocol instant messaging program for Windows.

Opera

The Opera browser comes with an inbuilt IRC chat client. It's fairly similar to ChatZilla.

Trillian

Trillian is another multi-protocol instant messaging program, coming with IRC support as well. There are currently two available versions of Trillian: Basic and Pro. Both have IRC support, so there's no need to buy the Pro version.

XChat

XChat is an IRC client that rivals mIRC not only in power but also in popularity.

It was originally completely free and open-source, but now it only remains free for Linux.

The Windows version is available to try at the homepage, while there is a version compiled by someone else (for free) called HexChat. Keep in mind that the latest official windows version is still many months behind the latest free release, and that the free windows version is compiled from enhanced Linux source (freely available), rather than the source used in official Windows releases, meaning that free compiled versions may function better than the official releases.

HexChat

HexChat is an IRC client that rivals the payed XChat as its open-source counterpart.

HexChat is a rename of the former XChat-WDK because its developers decided to include support for Linux and it's former name, WDK (which stands for the Windows Driver Kit), isn't appropriate for such task.

Both Windows and Linux versions are available on the download page of HexChat website http://www.hexchat.org/home/downloads.

KVIrc

Multisystem IRC Client with regular updates. QT instead of GTK as graphics library, so better visual integration on Windows compared to X-Chat.

Mibbit Webchat

For those who don't want to install more software on their computer, Mibbit is the solution. You can register an account to store all your servers and channels so you don't have to do it each time you go to the site, but you can always use it without an account.

Rizon Webchat

For even greater convenience, you can use Rizon's Webchat client. It only allows access to channels on irc.rizon.net, but if you're just looking for a quick way to get onto #BakaBT or #bakabt-support through a browser, this is your best bet.

Since the server is automatically set to irc.rizon.net, you can bypass the "/server" step in the instructions below.

Rizon WebChat