will this sure is gonna go well :sarcmark:
it almost feels like when Google+ got shoved into every google product because someone had a bee in their bonnet
flipside, I guess, is that we’ll soon (at scale!) get to start seeing just how far those ideas can and can’t scale
Since I’m using D for most of my coding projects, Copilot is mostly useless. I can do boilerplate stuff with metaprograming way easier and at a way more consistent pace, not to mention it’s easier to modify. And at least ChatGPT, does not know what to do with D attributes, and just randomly puts them everywhere for functions, since it’s way less of an AI than how tech people try to sell it (statistical probability based on Markov chains and some small context windows rather than actually understanding what it does).
I keep reading the headline as “copulating” and giggling. Sorry.
I’d still like to start an awful.systems sub for folks to discuss their own open source projects (and in the, what, month or so since I proposed it I’m still stuck on finding a good name), but alongside that it’s becoming very clear that our projects will need a home that isn’t github. I’m having a hell of a time finding an alternative that:
- doesn’t suck for reading code and docs (everything, even GitHub itself lately, fails here, even though it’s what I spend 90% of my non-work time in github doing)
- supports pull requests
there are some nice to haves that so far nothing seems to have:
- if we need to host it as part of awful.systems, setting it up and administrating it shouldn’t fucking suck. it feels like a decentralized app that comes with the repo and supports local hosting would be a good complement for git, but everything I’ve seen that tries this is fucking awful to use (hello
fossil
) - federation would be amazing. there’s actually a protocol some folks are developing to federate across code forges (aka github clones), but it seems like it’s far from done
- maybe it also shouldn’t be ugly as fuck? like I’m not expecting much but it’s not charming how many of these look like some shit from the 90s nobody’s nostalgic for
Have you heard of https://forgefed.org/ yet? It’s an activitypub extension for developing git forges. Forgejo (from the codeberg people) is currently implementing federation with it.
I think I saw a mastodon post about an early version of it, but it’s exciting that it seems to be progressing quickly! that might make Forgejo (and codeberg for a hosted version) a contender — I’ll dig a bit deeper and see how it works. in the worst case, forgefed might be the enabling technology for the kind of software I’d like to use
I’ve been on-and-off trying to get gittorrent packaged for Nix. I don’t really care about Web-oriented forge workflows; I fully acknowledge that I’m something of a curmudgeon in that respect.
that actually seems fantastic and at least somewhat amenable to the establishment of a web UI (akin to how torrent trackers extract metadata about torrents, but more focused on the content of the repo). is it a nightmare to make a nix package for?
It’s not a nightmare, but I’ve yet to succeed. npm2nix and node2nix struggle. napalm puts up a good effort, but doesn’t quite work either. The biggest sticking point right now is that cjb used a custom DHT implementation with some patches, and I’ve gotta integrate that somehow.
I will be overjoyed if somebody else writes a working Nix flake. I’ve tried three times so far, and I bet it’ll take five total.
the strange thing about copilot is that it is about writing code but github isn’t a code-writing product (besides that text editor they made), it’s a version-control & repository product.
through my deeply-rabbit-holed-product-design-theoretical-perspective lens this translates as another manifestation of trying to make something that is concrete in purpose, which gives concrete accountability to the company behind it, into something general in purpose, which dilutes the concrete acocuntability over time.
“This is a public/private version-controlled repository product”
vs
“This is a collaboration and productivity product”
For your team of developers to deploy at the speed and scale that you need to lead in the market, your developers must be empowered with AI at every step of the software development life cycle, customized and fine-tuned to your codebase.
I feel like I know who the target audience for this post is, and it’s not programmers