Nick Thomas is a user on voe.social. You can follow them or interact with them if you have an account anywhere in the fediverse. If you don't, you can sign up here.

> make a forge
> close the forge
> want to buy github

:blobhyperthink:

@dashie

FLOSS community:
> hey let's put all our eggs in this one GitHub basket
> what could possibly go wrong
> GitHub is so convenient

Microsoft:

@rysiek @dashie Well, we also seem to be putting several eggs in the GitLab basket, and larger projects host their own GitLab instance.

@codewiz @dashie comparing a solution you can self-host with a fully centralized solution is, I feel, disingenuous.

Of course we should have *more* implementations (and we do, actually), but these are problems on two different levels.

I'd like to see federated issues/pull requests between git-hosting instances thouhg.

@rysiek @codewiz @dashie I wrote up gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-e some time ago. I think it's viable, and quite possibly fun to do.

@lupine @rysiek @dashie Awesome proposal, and it seems feasible too!

Some time ago, an old friend of mine implemented a more radical approach to distributed git hosting: blog.printf.net/articles/2015/

I'm not saying we should do it this way, but I love how he combined three existing technologies to produce fully-distributed version control.

@codewiz @lupine @dashie I am aware of GitTorrent and I do think this is where we should be going, long-term. However, I was under the impression it's not actively developed/supported anymore?

I'd love to learn otherwise!

@rysiek @lupine @dashie It works, but it was always intended as a proof of concept, I guess?

The hard problem, IMHO, is re-creating the full GitLab experience on top of all this. Designing a nice workflow was already very hard without throwing torrents and blockchains in the mix.

@codewiz
@dashie @lupine @rysiek
Anytime I see people thinking of building a thing in Torrents I immediately feel compelled to recommend ipfs instead. It's basically the new Bittorrent, developing into something much more dynamic and wholesome than Bittorrent.

Nick Thomas @lupine

@cathal @rysiek @dashie @codewiz I'm pretty skeptical about both ipfs and bittorrent for this kind of thing. Medium-term, enhancements to/replacement of git with something fossil-like would be awesome. Git notes for MR comments is one example (not implemented so far)