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1313ed01 | 16 days ago

I think community development with repos out in the open and all that is increasingly a too high cost. I will migrate my little open source projects from GitHub as soon as I can decide on what site to post source code releases (tar.gz). Happy to share my code, but no need for everything to be out in the open.

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intrasight|16 days ago

I fail to see the difference between public on github or public elsewhere.

1313ed01|16 days ago

No public version control. No issues or pull requests or other social features. Like every project, more or less, before GitHub or Sourceforge.

LegionMammal978|16 days ago

IME, on GitHub (or the other major public repo services), it's far more likely than not that I can pull up an old version of a project from 10 years ago if I want to experiment with it. (In case other old things used it as a dependency, I really want to reproduce an old result, etc.)

On the vast majority of other distribution platforms, it's at best a 50/50 as to whether (a) the platform still exists with any of its contents, and (b) the authors haven't wiped all the old versions to clear up space or whatever. The former typically fails on academic personal websites (which generally get dumped within 5-15 years), and the latter typically fails on SourceForge-style sites.

That is to say, I am not a big fan of the popular alternatives to Git repos as a distribution method.

blibble|16 days ago

codeberg is run as a foundation with the explicit aim to help open source projects prosper

github is run by microsoft to sell tools to your CEO with the ultimate aim of making you redundant