Queries the homeserver for PSTN protocol support, and if found,
the add-room button on the DM rooms list section opens a context
menu instead with a 'dial pad' option as well as the current 'start chat'
dialog. Entering a number into this and pressing dial performs
a thirdparty user query for the given string and starts a DM with that
user.
TypeScript helpfully pointed me towards this dead code, which has been floating
around unused for a while. If we want to bring back ILAG in the future, we can
always revive it from history.
I've seen Chromium constantly refresh the title in the developer tools.
To be honest, I'm not sure if this means Chromium wastes CPU
time changing a title, but this may introduce better performance.
Signed-off-by: Resynth <resynth1943@tutanota.com>
and remove the old conference call stuff while we're at it: enough
time should have passed since those mistakes that we can move on.
The old conference call rooms will still appear for anyone whose
account dates back to that time, but they've presumably been appearing
in any other matrix client they used too.
Prototype behaviour:
* If you can't create a room in the community, say so.
* The UX for this could probably be improved, but for now the intention is to not break muscle memory by hiding the create room option.
* If you can't change settings in the community, or can't invite people, don't show those respective options.
* Breaking muscle memory here is moderately okay.
With this change, Element now creates cross-signing keys during auth flows for
password login. For other auth flows like token / SSO, it will not happen until
a cross-signing / secret storage dialog flow as before.
This is a step towards https://github.com/vector-im/element-web/issues/13430
Since we've stored the invite, we can send the user to it once they reload the page or revisit Element. We currently only support one invite at a time, but this should be fine for most cases.
We only do this restoration if the next screen isn't set to avoid breaking the user out of an expected flow.
As an added touch, this also ensures that the email address is pre-filled on the registration page if needed, just in case the user refreshes before getting to the submit button.