RedmineI was surprised to discover recently that good old Redmine not only still exists in 2023, but it thrives in various unexpected ways. Redmine is another one of those boring tech things that I love.
Memories of Centralized SCMsIt might sound incredible to younger developers out there, but there was a time when Git did not exist. In retrospect, the fact that Git has reigned supreme in its category for over 15 years was previously unheard of. SCM systems came and went in a steady succession since the early 1980s.
Git for Non Technical ReadersIf you are in the business of software, sooner or later you will hear people talking about Git, GitHub, or GitLab. What are they? To explain that, we must learn what Git is first.
GitIf you haven’t tried git, you should. Git is a “distributed version control” system, that is, similar to Subversion with the big difference that… you do not need a server. There are only clients, any of them, and you can pull and push changes to and from other repositories from your project colleagues. The git Wikipedia entry does a much better job than me to introduce the subject :)
Curso Acelerado De Subversion (Segunda Parte)antes que nada fijate que todo lo que te explique anteriormente anda.
Curso Acelerado De Subversion (Primera Parte)tenes que aprender subversion. por lo pronto tenes que instalarlo en tu mac, lo cual es facilisimo ya que hay un instalador que lo hace por vos, y que tenes que bajarte de aca:
Google Code Search vs. Koders.comLast year I’ve written about Koders.com, a search engine that crawled open source code repositories and allowed developers to search for code; an extremely interesting and valuable tool indeed. When I first saw Koders.com I thought (and I wrote that down as well) that they would be soon bought by Google, because everything in Koders.com looks at first glance like a Google application. But actually, something different happened: Google came up with Google Code Search, its own code search engine. Here’s a quick comparison of both.