IRC network

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An IRC network is technically a network of one or more IRC servers linked together[1] that allows people to chat together on it independently from the chosen server.[2]

More than 50.000 simultaneously connected users (including automated clients like bots) may be found on some of the biggest networks[3][4] and there are more than 700 networks known to the IRC search engine netsplit[5] and assumingly many others not known to the search engine.

IRC networks are often run by a loose group of people and, in case of bigger networks, also by foundations or organizations which have sometimes been created just for the purpose of running and funding an IRC Network (e.g. [1]).[Source?]

What defines an IRC network

A network has often a specific theme or a specific purpose. It might be a place to meet for people of a specific country, a specific age or a specific group, e.g. gamers or IT freaks. Today's small networks sometimes even consist of one server, but are an own, seperated themed area to other networks.

The attributes of any long-term growing network that exceeds a short-time available fun or testing server are an own user subculture and availability close to 100%. If one of those two attributes is not met, it is unlikely to ever grow out of the 10 user stage.

Technical side of networks

Bigger networks are, as the word already implies, a union of multiple servers that work together. The benefit of this is a much better reliability of the network as a whole. When a server drops out, others still offer a place to chat and apart from the affected users on the server that dropped out (and the additional disruption caused by net splits), other users can simply continue chatting. Affected users would simply connect to another server which can be done in a few seconds.

Basically, many networks would only rarely need to grow as many servers as they actually have, considering the powerful hardware available, but separating the users over different machines just lowers the chance of an overall dropout which can cost a network many users.

Apart from that, other users can more easily contribute as admins to the network and have more ways to change the network and to participate if they're allowed to link an additional server. Servers spread across the world can also offer a better connectivity to users in a specific country than a server that is very far away.

References

External links

See also