@somegeek @jobbies This is a good read. I was rather amused by your "TODO: How to use Git offline? Offline merge requests?" section, though. Git was written by people who literally email each other patches. It's offline-first, with online stuff tacked on there. You can copy a cloned git repo to a usb stick and give it to someone, and now they have the entire history. Of course merge requests and bug tracking are separate (I understand what you meant w/ the TODO), but git itself is already there.
Comment on What's your contingency plan for the apocalypse?
somegeek@programming.dev 1 week ago
I actually wrote a blog about this a few months back. It was after a 12 day war (Israel+USA attacking Iran) and 40 day internet blackout, and then we got into another war (Israel+USA attacking Iran) and a 90-100 day(lost track) internet blackout.
It isn’t exactly “how to survive the apocalypse” guide but it was a really helpful guide for myself and my friends and helped me keep working in those blackout days.
Andres4NY@social.ridetrans.it 1 week ago somegeek@programming.dev 1 week ago
Thank you! I actually got that fogured at during the second war but didn’t got the time to update the post. I put what I learnt in my knowledge base linked below. I will uodate the post. Thank you for pointing that out!
I tried to push it at work but most of my team members didn’t felt like learning this whole new workflow (they’re “normies” you could say. Using windows, outlook, etc.)
patruelis@lemmy.world 1 week ago
Grate share, thank you!
somegeek@programming.dev 1 week ago
<3