| ▲ | Lammy 8 hours ago | |
> In the past few years, GitHub has absorbed both a fundamental paradigm shift (agentic coding) AND several different hockey sticks of growth. It's messy. I'm not always proud of the results or the product choices we are forced into. Excellent example of why centralization is a bad thing. A Git “hub” is not a thing that should have ever existed for a self-described “distributed” version control system. | ||
| ▲ | block_dagger 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
Decentralized networks benefit from hubs if they benefit a subset of the network, which GitHub has for a long time. A hub is a focal point and there can (and should be) many of them in the git "network." | ||
| ▲ | idan 8 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
Shrug Nothing prevents usage of GH in a decentralized fashion. There's nothing magical about git remotes. Just add some more, figure out a process that works for you, have fun! In reality: when I want to send a letter I don't want to figure out a process from scratch. I want to go to the local post office, buy a stamp, and post a letter. Convenience is a spectrum and different people land in different spots. What irks me is when I lack the choice. And that's not the case here. | ||