• lastweakness@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    I have no idea why you would assume that. You need to stop thinking in binaries and be pragmatic. All my stuff is already on self-hosted Forgejo. So personally, I’m fine for now.

    But genuinely, where am I supposed to tell people to host their stuff? When a college student tells me they want to host their first project somewhere, what is an actually viable answer at this point? My answer would have been Codeberg if not for the 504s, but I’m a bit lost now since that became a daily occurrence, so tell me yours.

    • onlinepersona@programming.dev
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      53 minutes ago

      I use codeberg too and am not experiencing the problems you have, but it might be a location thing.

      Otherwise, Gitlab has been good to me. Despite their descent into AI and rejection of federation, they have are still a better than GitHub. The CI is still light years ahead of GitHub Actions. What’s your beef with Github?

      Why are you referencing students BTW? Are you a professor? Do you have any pull? Then you should get your university to setup a forgejo instance and CI so that students don’t have to even question it. Make them put their assignments on the forgejo instance on one semester, the next semester on gitlab, and the next on radicle or have a course where they get access to a VM and have to setup and host a soueceforge of their choosing. You can assign a subdomain of the uni to them and help them setup SSL certs via a DNS or HTTP challenge.

      Otherwise, the easiest thing to do is let them use radicle. They don’t have to host a thing and the repos will be distributed across the radicle network, accessible from nearly anywhere.