Visualizing codebases
Clean git histories and code review workflows
Happy the people whose annals are tiresome
The Twitch argument for GitHub Sponsors
Viewed through this lens, Sponsors can be understood as a first, important stepping stone towards company sponsorships, which seem inevitable for GitHub given the presence of Organization accounts. Their eyes light up when they talk about specific developers. If I ask why, I tend to hear a few common responses: 1) they’re learning a specific skill, and watching that person is helpful, or 2) they’re experienced developers who just love being able to see how “the best” do it. it struck me the other day that open source is a sort of “high-latency streaming”. the relationship between a prominent GitHub developer and their audience, and a prominent Twitch streamer and their audience, is similar: they gain followers because people enjoy watching them do something in public. an additional set of motivations, which is, “I want to watch and learn from you”. A graphic artist or a blogger who’s funded on Patreon doesn’t quite have that same relationship to their audience. In those cases, I think their output – the artifacts they create – takes center stage. there are probably others who just love watching the person who makes it. With companies, open source developers are selling a product. With individuals, they’re selling themselves.
matchai/bird-box: 🐦💬 Update a gist to contain your latest tweet
Update a gist to contain your latest tweet
“I will take a look later. Much much later. Because I'm Ukrainian and we have revolution right now. Sorry”
fixes #11
/ feature on GH PRs
This feature is a must-have if you ever share large amounts of text in GitHub comments, like a backtrace or 50+ lines of source code. 💯 https://t.co/Z37PKxCxjy— JP Simard (@simjp) February 27, 2019
computer tip: be your first reviewer
I’m an engineer at Stripe. I run Buttondown and Spoonbill. I love Python, cocktails, poetry, and you.
Filing issues with observed behavior or desired outcome
File issues about the problem you’ve observed or the outcome you want, not about the approach you think should be taken to resolve them.— Rob Rix (@rob_rix) January 31, 2019