On Fri, Nov 7, 2008 at 5:54 PM, Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> wrote:
Here's my thoughts on some of these talks.
It was a good intro, but I was expecting a few more non-GitTogether
people. We had quite a large room, but there was only about a dozen
other people who came along. I don't know whether that was the fault
of the timing, lack of advertising, or a lack of interest.
This was really interesting. It would be great to put this on a
general web page instead of in a PDF.
One thing I didn't get around to bringing up: one of the benefits of
diff-time rename detection that is often touted is that algorithms can
improve over time. Do folk here know whether that has actually
happened recently, in a general way? Do people actually expect major
improvements in the future?
The demo of iGitHub (an iPhone app that can act as a clone/push
target) looked really cool, if it can get further development. It
could potentially be really handy for travellers who could push to
their iPhone, and then push from there to an internet server.
It's good to see this starting to get wider traction. I think we
discussed that there could be benefits to git itself, beyond just
helping other programs access git repositories faster than fork/exec.
It was very cool to see old-school email addresses like <isis!aburt>
in git, handled just fine.
This has kicked off some mailing list discussion; I think this can be
a major weak point for git, since checking out only a subtree (and
only the latest revision) is the common SVN way, which copes with
media repositories and the like just fine.
Yes, how are the t-shirts going? I seem to remember JH had volunteered
to do the logistics there.
Dave.
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