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Have you added the output-options
configuration item for it? (https://github.com/deepmap/oapi-codegen/?tab=readme-ov-file#generating-nullable-types)
Between and I took 4571 steps.
Joseph Jacks joins me to share his enthusiasm for Open Source and what he calls Commercial Open Source Companies, how the idea of Open Source is changing with new technologies, and what that means for the definition of Open Source.
Between and I took 4851 steps.
tmux has been my IDE for... most of the existence of tmux, and i reaallly, really, don't want to be forced to switch back to GUI IDEs, esp now they're kinda all web browsers :/
Dan Moore is the head of developer relations at FusionAuth, a startup simplifying authentication and user management for developers, as well as the author of Letters to a New Developer. Dive into topics such as what is developer relations, how to grow a tech community, how does one even publish a book, what should you say to a new developer and much more. Hosted by Perry Tiu.
In this episode Justin and Autumn are joined by Mandi Walls to take you back to a time before the cloud. Before Kubernetes. When a/s/l was common and servers were made of metal. Back to the days of AOL to discuss how chat rooms worked.
Between and I took 6067 steps.
Really really love this: The Millennial Captcha (make sure you try it out) https://www.mcsweeneys.net/articles/the-millennial-captcha
Catching up on my notes: 📰 Lifenotes #35: October 2023 https://carol.gg/blog/lifenotes-35/
Attached: 1 image holy shit. they actually called it "reply guy". seeing the Torment Nexus and copying it for profit is one thing, but seeing a reply guy and being like "I can monetize that" is a whole new type of evil.
Week Notes 24#17 (3 mins read).
What happened in the week of 2024-04-22?
Has anyone else started getting spam from a Substack they definitely didn't subscribe to? It's for with an email I wouldn't have signed up to, and it's a language I don't know (Spanish)
I've now unsubscribed and marked it as spam - I didn't seem to get a "are you sure you want to sign up", but I did get a "thanks for subscribing" post (in Spanish)
This episode features Anil Dash, VP of Developer Experience at Fastly, who returns to the podcast to share the integration of Glitch within Fastly post-acquisition. Anil shares how Glitch has continued flourishing under Fastly's umbrella, highlighting both platforms’ seamless acquisition and...
Friends and folks working with #SBOMs - how do you conceptually think about them in terms of ingesting them into tools?
I.e. I like to think of an SBOM having a source repository or component it relates to, but sometimes you don't know that up front, and all you have is the result of a scan, which could be the source repo, a container image, or a built binary.
Considering whether:
Trying to tweak how Dependency Management Data works with SBOMs and trying to find how other folks do it and consider them
I've also raised this upstream
Master the art of efficient text navigation and editing in Vim with this comprehensive command workflow tutorial. Explore key commands and practical examples to enhance your productivity in Vim.
Between and I took 8052 steps.
Does anyone know if there's a good way of getting a historical storage of queries that users put into #Datasette? Trying to get some stats around common queries and usage, couldn't see a plugin for it, but not sure if my searching just missed it
Bruce Perens created the definition of open source and co-founded the Open Source Initiative in 1998. He has said in recent public interviews, however, that open source has failed, and called for its overhaul under his Post-Open project. In this episode, Beth caught up with him to hear more about his ideas for the world after open source.
In this episode of CHAOSScast, host Dawn Foster brings together Matt Germonprez, Brian Proffitt, and Ashley Wolf to discuss the implications of Artificial Intelligence (AI) on Open Source Program Offices (OSPOs), including policy considerations, the potential for AI-driven contributions to create workload for maintainers, and the quality of contributions. They also touch on the use of AI internally within companies versus contributing back to the open source community, the importance of distinguishing between human and AI contributions, and the potential benefits and challenges AI introduces to open source project health and community metrics. The conversation strikes a balance between optimism for AI’s benefits and caution for its governance, leaving us to ponder the future of open source in an AI-integrated world.
I'd definitely be up for it if you fancy either https://github.com/deepmap/oapi-codegen (used in quite a few big name companies!) or https://dmd.tanna.dev (used by GitHub's OSPO)
Our book “GitHub Actions in Action” made it to the top 10 on MEAP last week! A lot of folks interested in learning more on #GitHub #Actions 🤩 Link: https://www.manning.com/books/github-actions-in-action
Frequent guest (and almost real-life-friend) Adam Jacob returns to share his spicy takes on all the recent “open source meets business” drama. We also take some time to catch up on the state of his open source-based business, System Initiative.
Automating the syncing of files between repos with GitHub Actions (2 mins read).
Creating a GitHub Action workflow to periodically update vendored files which are out-of-sync between GitHub repos.
Listening to Tulips - Minotaur Shock Remix is forever going to remind me of the last few chapters of Leviathan Falls. It happened to be what I was listening to at the time, and the lyrics seemed to fit so perfectly with the grand finale, and listening to it just now brought that all back, including all the feels around the events.
Deffo need to re-read #TheExpanse series, what a great series.
See also: previous thoughts on the way #music can remind you of things.
Between and I took 7581 steps.
you're welcomeMy 2nd channel (WEEKLY UPLOADS): https://www.youtube.com/eaziestspeezyWatch live at: https://twitch.tv/EazySpeezy▶ Twitter: https://twitter.com...
I will be attending
The Oxide Friends have talked about the Hashicorp license change, the emergence of an open source fork of Terraform in OpenTofu, and other topics in open source. A few weeks ago both InfoWorld and Hashicorp (independently?) accused OpenTofu of stealing Terraform code—a serious claim that turned...
The definition of “open source” in the most recent version (article 2(48)) of the Cyber Resilience Act (CRA) goes beyond the Open Source Definition (OSD) managed by OSI.
🔥 Feature-rich interactive Jira command line. Contribute to ankitpokhrel/jira-cli development by creating an account on GitHub.
Between and I took 8034 steps.
Meet Nate Smith, an experienced programmer who has been trading code for money since 2006. He has seen it all, from Flash applications to the cursed secrets of Javascript. Despite his experience, he has lost his ability to fake enthusiasm for corporate life and technocracy. Instead, Nate runs his...
Jordan Harband is a pillar in the open source community. He has gradually come to create several open source projects all while maintaining them all with maximal back compat, the strictest adherence to semver, and the greatest respect for users. Join in and hear the wisdom Jordan has to offer on...
Brian Douglas, CEO of OpenSauced, joins me to discuss insights - how they’ve been provided in the past, how OpenSauced is different, and how he hopes to contribute to the future of open source.
This week on The Business of Open Source I had Rod Johnson, founder/CEO of Spring Source and creator of the Spring Framework (as well as board member of many other open source companies) on to talk about Spring, monetizing open source and what’s changed in the open source ecosystem since...
This week we’re joined by Louis Pilfold, the creator of the Gleam programming language. For the uninitiated, Gleam is a functional programming language for building type-safe systems that compiles to Erlang and JavaScript and it’s written in Rust. We discuss the inspiration and development of Gleam, how it compares to ...
Felix Geisendörfer & Michael Knyszek join Natalie to discuss Go execution traces: why they’re awesome, common use cases, how they’ve gotten better of late & more.
Between and I took 5485 steps.
This week we’re joined by Sean Mcllroy from Slack’s Release Engineering team to learn about how they’ve fully automated their deployment process. This conversation covers Slack’s original release process, key changes Sean’s team has made, and the latest challenges they’re working on...
This episode of Screaming in the Cloud focuses on keeping critical data safe and organized, especially when there's a lot of it. Pranava Adduri, the CEO of Bedrock Security, shares the tools and methods Bedrock uses to help other businesses protect their essential information. They discuss how...
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The 3 Musketeers return! Filippo Valsorda, Roland Shoemaker & Nicola Murino continue their deep-dive conversation with Natalie about Go’s crypto libraries. Also listen to Part 1 and Part 2!