I see so many "famous" programmers commenting on the situation, and talking about how *they* would have done things differently. Take responsibility (?), archive a repo, etc. I don't think they don't understand that their own experiences aren't comparable here.
-
-
Show this thread
-
Like: we're talking about a human that's been giving away their work away for free for the better part of a decade. Write access to 423 modules means that's been ~90 modules a year for 5 yrs. Or about a new module published every ~4 days. That's a scale most people don't know.
Show this thread -
For people to come in, and make claims how "they had a popular project once, and did X" is completely missing the point. Imagine not having "a popular project once". But having written a bunch of projects 5 years ago that now have ~a million downloads a month each.
Show this thread -
Do you still care about some random code you wrote 5 years ago? Probably not. Would you unpublish that code / archive that code if it's being used? Probably not. If someone stepped up and offered to maintain that code, would that be welcome? Most likely, yes.
Show this thread -
In an ideal world there'd companies throwing people at these problems, and ensuring that their foundations are secured. So we could create a process in which we vet the people who are best suited for the job. In practice we tend to accept the help that's available. And gladly so
Show this thread
End of conversation
New conversation -
-
-
It's also close to me too, as I identify with the tiny modules school of thought, but I tend to encourage forks in these situations. The difference between foo@2.0.0 => foo@3.0.0 and foo@2.0.0 => staltz-foo@2.0.0 is mostly superficial, but latter has less risks.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
-
-
-
yeah, you should probably change your modus operandi
-
Lol. That's absolutely the wrong takeaway from all this.
End of conversation
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.