- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.ml
The author’s profile says this:
“Have taken up farming.”
Finally it’s official. I think it’s a good move to make it an archived repository, so everyone knows for a fact this is not developed anymore. That means bugs or security issues are no longer actively searched and corrected. I wonder if this program will be taken out from distribution repositories now. My personal alternative is
fastfetch
.Edit: … oh, I didn’t realize all of his repositories are now archived. Not only neofetch: https://github.com/dylanaraps?tab=repositories
Hopefully the dev is doing well, and has luck with whatever he’s doing now
Looking at the readme edit history: https://github.com/dylanaraps/dylanaraps/commits/master/
- First edit 3 years ago:
Away till the New Year. Merry Christmas.
- Then next edit 10 month ago replacing that line with:
On hiatus.
- Then next edit 4 days ago replacing that line with:
Have taken up farming.
English is not my native language, and I don’t understand what “Have taken up farming.”, but I have my guesses. means. Normally I don’t interpret such a situation, but it doesn’t look good. Most contributions of the software is 3 years old, and only a few readme and link updates recently are made alongside making everything archived.
English is not my native language, and I don’t understand what “Have taken up farming.”
It means they aren’t developing software anymore because they are growing vegetables instead
Stardew update hitting the dev world hard
Hmm, maybe it really means it literally. I mean it would not surprise me if the person really started or taken over by farming and giving up programming. Be it having too much pressure from all sites, for writing software that many people use. Or be it financial. Who knows. I wish him best luck.
It’s not unheard of in folks who are in software dev because they love the repetition and routine. Farming is pretty similar to programming a computer, just with tons more manual labor.
deleted by creator
- First edit 3 years ago:
Impressive,
fastfetch
even displays the battery%.deleted by creator
there should be some kind of notification system whenever something goes unmaintained. ive used unmaintained software for way too long before finding out theres some fork.
As long as it works perfectly and it makes no security related headlines, i’m fine with running abandoned ware.
If something stops working it’s time to find out the alternatives.
Not every little tool needs weekly updates
the finding out alternatives is the annoying part for me, you always have to be on some niche place online (eg lemmy) to discover them. that and ive used a lot of security sensitive abandonware i really wouldnt otherwise.
Hackernews is usually reliable to see what the new hotness is. But yeah this is a frequent problem.
This
On arch’s user repository, packages can get marked as out of date, unmaintained, and sometimes removed entirely.
i didnt know that, is the user notified somehow?
When you run pacman or one of the aur helpers, it’ll tell you.
My AUR helper trizen tells me, yes.
Where’s the new rust version?
https://crates.io/search?q=neofetch brings up 21 versions to choose from (21 are actual neofetch clones). There is also a library to help you write even more of them.
Farming what though?
He now runs a beet farm/B&B with his cousin.
Sounds like a nice life? I don’t have much idea what beet farming is like…
Lead
Better than bitcoin I suppose
Software which achieved no actual purpose discontinued. Open source community in tears.
deleted by creator
Why would this little bash script that does nothing extraordinary need constant updates? Some pieces of software might just be complete as they are.