The nice thing about sourcehut: API is exposed to me to the full extent and I can easily integrate things how I want.
https://man.sr.ht/lists.sr.ht/api.md
https://man.sr.ht/todo.sr.ht/api.md
The nice thing about sourcehut: API is exposed to me to the full extent and I can easily integrate things how I want. https://man.sr.ht/lists.sr.ht/api.md You know what, a good part of the projects I was looking at cause they use bugzilla, trac or whatever are actually migrated to GitLab or GitHub recently. Gnome, OpenVPN, OpenStreetMaps, GHC, I2P, Tor, OpenWRT, VLC, wxWidgets, Alpine Linux and probably a bunch more. https://trac.edgewall.org/wiki/TracUsers @abcdw Wow that's unfortunate. I was literally not too long ago looking at projects that used bugzilla as a ticketing system to contribute to, and a few in the list were still using it not too long ago :( Trying and learning different bug tracking and project management tools for the last few weeks (bugzilla, debbugs, track, redmine, gitlab, taiga, plane, forgejo, phabricator, gitea, sourcehut and a couple more) I have to admit that the most convinient, visually pleasant and functional enough is GitHub Projects :/ @abcdw not totally surprising that the one that the majority of users use today and has full-time teams on it is the most convenient and visually pleasant. Bugzilla and Debbugs both come from a time when (a) email was the main interface, (b) where you're looking at bugs at a scale most FOSS projects won't see. Launchpad is another that tried to solve 'bugs at scale' - it's a hard problem. I've never used it but some people love Fossil for the integration of code+bugs. Bug tracker for RDE. RDE is already quite big project with a few subprojects and it's hard to track feature requests, reports, milestones, their dependencies and to collocate and organize them properly and share publicly. That's why for last few weeks I was looking at different project management/bug tracking solutions. From what I found so far it seems that Bugzilla is the best option at the moment. Thoughts?
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@abcdw I like my bug trackers integrated with my central repository as in self hosted GitLab but I can also appreciate a de-tangled approach. Have a look at https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/user/project/issues/ the header every page states if it's available in self-managed & free = available in open source community edition. @abcdw Bugzilla is a good option, even though I personally prefer redmine (https://www.redmine.org), probably out of mere convenience (can’t imagine Bugzilla not being on par with it); it supports creating issues by email, organising issues in projects, has a “good enough” VCS integration, following issues via RSS and so on. There are a few cool commits landed on guix master today: - chez-scheme: Update to 10.0.0. I got a reject on Turkey residence permit application. I'll lodge an appeal, but chances are very low, so my plan B is to go to Georgia than to Armenia to apply for Spain Schengen visa. If somebody knows any conferences, summer schools or other events I can contribute to and get an invite to support my visa application with, let me know, please. P.S. Spain Schengen in Armenia is an only option to apply for Schengen visa available without residence permit I know at the moment.
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Anther place to ask is CoTech. :D While CoTech and it's member co-op's are based in the UK, those co-op's have members living and working in the EU. :D @abcdw It's also worth looking at the E-Residency in Estonia. https://www.e-resident.gov.ee/become-an-e-resident/ Working via this route would qualify you as an EU-based contractor, so remote work would become available. In theory, you could parlay that work into being resident in an EU country, as you could show that were already working within the EU. Though I don't know anyone who has tried this method, but it's another potential route towards EU residency. The guix itself is not reproducible. Keep exploring the problems of guix pull, channels and checkouts, but I wouldn't say that it's the most exciting thing to do, especially annoying part is a huge feedback loop: almost an hour for initial guix pull on debian system to finish. A few weeks ago I was talking with @pjotrprins about PhD in Bio Informatics in Netherlands and today in Turkey I met a german guy, who does PhD in Bio Informatics in Amsterdam :) Coincidence?) @abcdw @pjotrprins No, just pattern recognition working in perpetual overdrive :-) Old sound setup (full-size dynamic mic) and new one (lavalier mic + tiny dongle audio interface), thanks to my friend for such a great and travel friendly present! You can check out the sound quality in the latest video: We have enough funds on RDE's opencollective, so we can setup a CI and substitute server and maybe some other infrastructure/project-related services in foreseable future. Thank you very much everyone for help and support! <3 Let me know what else you miss. Haven't open laptop for the whole week and don't regret it for a minute. We spent a quality time with a friend from university, who came in Turkey to visit me, we didn't see each other for almost 2 years, but running, climbing, swimming, visiting and meeting people and filming flips and whippers was a pure fun. Posted couple photos on pixelfed: @abcdw@pixelfed.social @abcdw@fosstodon.org буквально эта картинка только "разработчик проприетарного софта" vs "free software hacker" Arei Guile IDE with go to definition functionality is available in Guix: Learn how to use it in the README: @krevedkokun implemented go to definition for Arei Guile IDE. It will be available in new release. "Backend" code is provided in Ares project, so other code editors can also benifit from it. This is how I sometimes test patches sent to guix-patches mailing list using @cbaines's service: guix time-machine --url='https://git.guix-patches.cbaines.net/git/guix-patches'--branch=issue-67260 --disable-authentication -- shell emacs-pgtk emacs-magit --pure -E '.*GTK.*|.*XDG.*|.*DISPLAY.*' -- emacs -Q I jokingly told the girl that I would program a countdown showing number of days before we meet again in a status bar. After that I realized that it will take just a couple minutes to do so and actually did it. Happiness tip #1: Run in the morning. What could happen worse in your day than 15km through the forest full of rocks, sticks and bushes of all shapes and size? Properly set baseline is a key (: |