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37 votes
-
Insomnia 8 forces users to login and use cloud storage
29 votes -
38TB of data accidentally exposed by Microsoft AI researchers
14 votes -
GitHub slated to mandate 2FA
48 votes -
github-less-social: Filter list to make GitHub less like a social media platform
16 votes -
Many temptations of an open-source browser extension developer
73 votes -
Evennia 2.20 released now with AI support
16 votes -
Google begins their push for WEI in Chromium
94 votes -
Textual Paint a TUI image editor inspired by MS Paint
5 votes -
Mozilla places chatbots inline in MDN documentation
22 votes -
Has anyone here actually had success with launching that reddit-master archive clone?
8 votes -
How to go about mirroring a repo to separate real identity from online identity?
I struggled to word this question. Let's say that I wish to work on a project to benefit Tildes (I don't currently have an idea, but just for example). Anything I did, I would like to keep...
I struggled to word this question.
Let's say that I wish to work on a project to benefit Tildes (I don't currently have an idea, but just for example). Anything I did, I would like to keep opensource and would encourage other users to contribute. But I would like to keep everything linked to my pseudonym as not to dox myself.
However, I would like to have a copy of everything on my personal GitHub as well, because I am a professional programmer and that is effectively my CV.
Is there a good way to mirror a repo in a way that any git history contributed by me, "John Smith", is changed to "bugsmith" on the mirrored repo? (or vice versa).
6 votes -
I made a thing to make Tildes look better!
80 votes -
bkt - Memoizing calls in shell scripts
2 votes -
It's not much, but I got an icon for Tildes added to the aegis-icon pack
19 votes -
How much are GitHub stars worth to you?
6 votes -
Shockolate - A minimalist and cross platform System Shock source port
7 votes -
Hundreds of millions of stars turned into a map of GitHub projects
12 votes -
freeciv21 (a civilization like strategy game and a fork of freeciv migrated to C++) releases first stable release 3.0
10 votes -
Your favourite Futurama opening line?
9 votes -
core-js: So, what's next?
15 votes -
GitHub Sponsors will stop supporting PayPal starting February 23rd
8 votes -
To use Disqus or Giscus (Github Discussions) for comments is the conundrum
I happen to host my blog https://prahladyeri.github.io/blog statically, built using Pelican and served on Github Pages. Plebs like us can't afford a backend server infrastructure, so we must rely...
I happen to host my blog https://prahladyeri.github.io/blog statically, built using Pelican and served on Github Pages. Plebs like us can't afford a backend server infrastructure, so we must rely on external services like Disqus for comment hosting.
So far, Disqus was the only fellow in town who allowed us to host comments on a free plan. Though there were some issues (bloat, adware, etc.), people seemed to be generally happy with it so far.
But now, a new fellow named giscus commenting system has entered the town, it's basically powered by github. Since I already host my blog on github pages, this should be a natural choice for me, right? Many bloggers seem to be migrating to this new system and I might too soon. The downsides however are as follows:
- It won't allow me to export existing comments from the old disqus system. Understandable to an extent as those exact author usernames may not be on the Github platform?
- Disqus interface seems to have improved all of a sudden in last few days! There no longer seem to be any ad and even the comment interface seems to be less heavy or cluttered now. It might sound a bit conspiratorial in nature but could this be the result of rising competition in the form of Giscus!
I'm a lazy status-quoist by nature and might well end up retaining disqus if they don't deviate too much from where they are now. But I'll keep an eye out on Giscus too and its progress. What do you guys suggest?
5 votes -
KmCaster – Screencasting software to display keyboard and mouse status
4 votes -
Evennia 1.0 released
6 votes -
Open source is democratizing video game development
9 votes -
Stable Dreamfusion: An open source implementation of Google's text-to-3D synthesis
9 votes -
Tildes Formatting Toolbar - Userscript adds text formatting buttons and keyboard shortcuts
14 votes -
An experiment to test GitHub Copilot's legality
11 votes -
OpenGOAL: Jak and Daxter decomposition port
2 votes -
Letter from Codeberg: We are now an employer! (Codeberg is a democratic open source github alternative)
7 votes -
Sunsetting the Atom text editor
6 votes -
HoloISO: SteamOS 3 on the desktop
11 votes -
GitHub will require two-factor authentication (2FA) for all users who contribute code by the end of 2023
14 votes -
Why I think "Sponsor Only" repositories introduced by Github is a terrible idea
9 votes -
Cockatrice: A cross-platform virtual tabletop for multiplayer card games
5 votes -
GitHub availability report: November 2021
5 votes -
3D printed mirror array
8 votes -
How long does it take ordinary people to "get good" at chess?
16 votes -
Looking for a GitHub cli tool
And no, I'm not talking about git. I'm looking for a tool that I can use in scripts to automate non-git tasks on GitHub such as creating new repositories, drafting releases, uploading assets to a...
And no, I'm not talking about
git
. I'm looking for a tool that I can use in scripts to automate non-git tasks on GitHub such as creating new repositories, drafting releases, uploading assets to a release, etc.I started dipping my toes into
gh
, GitHub's official cli tool, but when I created a repository it immediately cloned it, which is not what I want. I know I can justrm -rf
the repo but ideally the tool I use would do only what I tell it and nothing more.Reading the docs for
hub
, it might do what I want, although I have some reservations about the project after reading this post written by the developer: https://mislav.net/2020/01/github-cli/I've also come across git-hub, which doesn't support creating repos AFAICT, and git-spindle, which doesn't support uploading assets.
Are there any other command line GitHub clients I should consider?
Which one do you use? What's your experience with it been like?
5 votes -
FSF-funded call for white papers on philosophical and legal questions around Copilot
7 votes -
All Futurama opening quotes
23 votes -
GBA Remote Play - Video over the Link Cable from a Raspberry Pi
5 votes -
GitHub Copilot is not infringing your copyright
14 votes -
Cataclysm: Dark Days Ahead (a open source turn-based survival game set in a post-apocalyptic world) releases version 0.F
10 votes -
GitHub Copilot - Your AI pair programmer
20 votes -
The Freenode resignation FAQ
30 votes -
CP/M for OS X allows you to run CP/M-80 software on your Mac
3 votes -
Engineer reports data leak to nonprofit, hears from the police
11 votes -
Open letter to Richard M. Stallman
22 votes