I'm thinking again about moving from #github to #sourcehut. I firmly believe in paying fair prices for services that don't invade my privacy. My private repos stay inside my home network on a #gitolite server. I don't use GitHub Actions. Issues and projects are handy but I can use other task tracking systems. I'd probably keep my GitHub account to follow other projects/discussions and for single sign-on needs.
If you've moved your personal code from GitHub to sourcehut, is there anything you regret or would warn others about?
Have people tried to link the output of #llms to devices that take actions in the real world? What if one creates a way for an #llm to make pull requests on #github or #gitlab ? The #ai could spend day and night browsing through #foss to improve them. That would be as much exciting as creepy!
I'm about to start using #Git for the first time, to make the development of my new #11ty site a bit easier. Learning both #Nunjucks and modern #CSS leads to a lot of manual rollbacks I hope will become easier.
I've read a lot about Git, but one question lingers still: I’m building my site based on #Eleventy Base Blog, in a repo I cloned using #Github Desktop.
How do I disconnect (or whatever the technical term is) from the original Github repo and turns it into a private of my own?
Achievement unlocked, #GitHub? I mean I always have 2FA on, but still it feels like a little bit of recognition. Though, what have I really contribute?
TIL #GitHub is limiting statistics/graphs for repos with more than 10,000 commits... Considering ~99% of those in https://thi.ng/umbrella are my own, it seems I've been rather busy... 😇
Thinking about going deeper into #security soon.
I'm quite interested in malware and development side of it. Reversing not so much... but one can never say no 😉
Looking through #github at the moment finding some nice little projects to learn with.
I don't like that #github encourages people to fork(!) repos although they only want to download/clone it. If you never plan to contribute to that repo, why not just star and clone it?
Where would you share code (R/quarto) underlying analyses in a research manuscript?
I was thinking Zenodo as I planned to host the non-sequencing data there. I saw that Zenodo interfaces with GitHub, which many papers use to host their code and which the publisher guide lists first. Any benefit to also putting the code on GitHub (I didn’t use git for version control & the code is only useful for reproducing the analyses, not itself innovative)?