<para>Start up &kopete; from the menu (it can normally be found in the
Internet folder) When it starts up you should see a window with &kopete;
at the top, menus and a tool bar below, and then your contacts below.
You should add some accounts by clicking on the
<guimenu>Settings</guimenu> menu and selecting the <guimenuitem>Configure
Kopete</guimenuitem> option. By selecting the <guilabel>Accounts</guilabel>
option you should see a list of your accounts (initially empty) and
options to add new accounts and to edit or remove existing accounts.
By clicking on the <guibutton>add new account</guibutton> button, you can
add a new account using the wizard. When you have added an account, you can
connect to this account by clicking on the relevant icon at the bottom of
your main &kopete; window. This should make your contacts appear in the
contacts window.</para>
</sect1>
<sect1 id="meta-contacts">
<title>Meta-contacts</title>
<para>Meta contacts are one of the features of &kopete; that make sense
once you figure out what they are. Until you do, they annoy you. They are
basically a way of taking a contact on one network (such as
<acronym>MSN</acronym>) and linking it to another contact on a different
network. This is useful for when people have accounts on different networks
as you can chat to them without needing to know which account they are
signed on to. This also lets you assign names to your meta-contacts that
don't change when people change their names on their account, this is useful
if you have contacts who insist upon setting their
<acronym>MSN</acronym> nick to something like
<quote>=EF=81=8A</quote>.</para>
<para>You can do other useful things with meta-contacts like link them to
entries in your address book. See <xref
linkend="integrated-messaging"/></para>
</sect1>
<sect1 id="irc">
<title><acronym>IRC</acronym></title>
<para>Internet Relay Chat (<acronym>IRC</acronym>) has been around far longer than most <acronym>IM</acronym>
systems, and is still widely used. It is mainly designed for group (many-to-many) communication in discussion forums called channels, but also allows one-to-one communication.</para>
<para>The #kde channel is under Freenode, the <acronym>IRC</acronym> server, which provides an interactive environment for coordination and support of peer-directed projects, including -- and placing particular stress upon -- those relating to free software and open source projects, such as &tde;.</para>