From today, I'm starting a small series of daily devlogs where I'll be describing the changes being implemented before the official release of the first version of /kbin. As I mentioned earlier, I had some minor turbulence in my private life from which I'm slowly emerging. I have partially stabilized my life situation in various aspects. I hope this will help me smoothly return to old habits, maintain consistency, and keep you updated on what specifically is happening in the project.
There's a lot of mess I need to sort out, starting from overdue tasks that failed in queues, improving the infrastructure, and ending with going through pending emails and private messages. The first report will be out either today or tomorrow evening, as I am just about to start working on it.
@ernest, please. All they need is commits, PRs and comments that add something. True, dev work is full of cool updates and reporting, but it crosses roads with other mundane activities. Devlog is probably going to drain you more than it's worth, so I hope you'll build your priorities straight.
Let's be open: I'm only making a press-kit for Mbin recently (and nothing much) just after being introduced to the fork as a result of @melroy migrating. It's a crazy amount of reviewed and merged pull requests, which I couldn't dream of committing nor reviewing in detail. There is simply a lot that can be done with community harnessing the project. No way this fork would be considered serious if it were to feed everyone with blog updates. At this point, your words set up a head start. It's a matter of whether it will start: will these old habits offer something that was not served already? (Big downtimes happen to be one of those things...)
No idea if any competition will take place - again, introduction to a fork was ever so sudden, making me wonder if it didn't have to come to this. In any case, whatever we continue doing I hope remains healthy for the wider community of contributors and users. Thank you for returning! 🤝
I just wanted to say good job on maintaining a healthy work-life balance. I know you're going through tough times right now, and it can be pretty easy to try to distract yourself by overworking until you burn out completely, so I'm glad that you took the time to focus on yourself in a healthy manner before returning to development. Hoping things are going more smoothly for you!
I started web dev in 1999. It can be one of the most progressive branches of development. I’m using a completely different stack today than I was two years ago. Every day I use a whole suite of different tools and languages. It can be a lot of fun if you enjoy the whole process of learning new technologies.
@ernest a jaka planujesz przyszlosc dla karab.in-a? ostatnio usluga zaliczyla kilka downtime'ow w krotkim odstepie czasu, gdzies tez chyba widzialem, ze chyba usunales karab.in z listy swoich projektow (ale to moglo byc jakies inne, stare konto, generalnie informacja na ktora nie powinienem zwracac uwagi :P )
Generalnie w pelni rozumiem natlok pracy i nie mam z tym problemu, po prostu jesli jedna usluga bedzie w jakis sposob porzucona to chcialbym o tym wiedziec, to znajde sobie inne miejsce ;p
karab.in planuję ogarnąć w najbliższym czasie, w przyszłym tygodniu. Jest chyba jakiś problem z aktualizacji dockerowych zależności, których nie mogę szybko ogarnąć. Mam wszystkie backupy w razie gdyby stała się jakaś tragedia, ale w najbliższych dniach będę próbował z tym walczyć, być może nawet postawić go z najnowszym kodem co będzie dobrym testem przed kbin.social. Na pewno nie zamierzam rezygnować z tej instancji.