Zulip

Open source chat and collaboration software From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Zulip

Zulip is an open source chat and collaborative software created by Jeff Arnold, Waseem Daher, Jessica McKellar, and Tim Abbott in 2012.[3][4] Today, it is one of the free and open source alternatives to Slack,[5] with over 60,000 commits contributed by over 1000 people.[6]

Quick Facts Original author(s), Developer(s) ...
Zulip
Original author(s)Jeff Arnold, Waseem Daher, Jessica McKellar, and Tim Abbott
Developer(s)Kandra Labs, Inc.[1]
Initial release2012
Stable release
10.0 / March 20, 2025; 33 days ago (2025-03-20)[2]
Repository
Written inPython, JavaScript (web frontend), React Native (iOS and Android), Electron (desktop apps)
Operating systemWindows, macOS, Linux, iOS, Android
TypeCollaborative software
LicenseApache License 2.0
Websitezulip.com
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Overview

In Zulip, communication occurs in streams (which are like channels in IRC). Each stream can have several topics – Zulip features a unique threading model, in which each message also has a topic, along with the content. Zulip claims that this improves productivity by "making it easy to catch up after a day of meetings". Apart from this, Zulip offers standard features found in collaboration apps like message reactions, message search history, polls, private messaging, group messaging etc. Zulip streams can be private or public – only people invited to a private stream can view messages in it, while anyone within an organization can join a public stream. Messages in Zulip can be sent in plain-text or formatted using markdown, along with images, links, and file attachments.[7] Zulip also offers support for native integrations with hundreds of services, which can extend its functionality.[8]

How to use Zulip is documented in the Zulip help center.

Official client apps

Apart from the web interface, Zulip officially supports other clients, all of which are open sourced:

See also

References

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