Github alternative ?

https://lemmy.ml/post/583281

Let's do em all!:

  • GitHub: most mature/reliable
  • GitLab: the most popular and mature GitHub alternative
  • Bitbucket: the "third party" of the bunch that's no better than the first
  • GitTea: the "fourth party" that's actually cool but kinda not quite there yet
  • Gogs: great, but you need to self-host. GitTea is just a community hosted fork of Gogs
  • SourceForge: wow, they're still around?
  • Codeberg: centered around open-source projects only. Managed by a non-profit org
  • Launchpad: run by Canonical (Ubuntu), has a lot of other features/goals than just hosting code
  • GitBucket: a self-hostable GitHub clone written in Scala
  • NotABug: another "liberated" version of Gogs
  • Radicle: imo, the only other one worth looking at in this list besides GitHub and GitLab. It's unique in that it's build on p2p technologies and is censorship resistant

Would love to see other people's one-liner blurbs on these as well

I've been looking for a p2p alternative, which would allow a simple workflow. So I had some hope when noticing radicle. But it builds on top of the blockchain hype, I'm afraid. This cryptopedia post shows things I really don't like.

It's true git itself is sort of distributed, but trying to develop a workflow on top of pure git is not as easy. Email ones have been worked on, but not everyone is comfortable with them.

A p2p using openDHT would have been my preferred approach. But any ways, I thought radicle could be it. But so far I don't like what I'm reading, even less with whom they are partnering:

Radicle has already partnered with numerous projects that share its vision via its network-promoting Seeders Program (a Radicle fund), including: Aave, Uniswap, Synthetix, The Graph, Gitcoin, and the Web3 Foundation. The Radicle crypto roadmap includes plans to implement decentralized finance (DeFi) tools and offer support for non-fungible tokens (NFTs). With over a thousand Radicle coding projects completed, this RAD crypto platform has shown that it’s a viable P2P code collaboration platform, one that has the ability to integrate with blockchain-based protocols.

Perhaps I'm just too biased. But if there's another p2p, hopefully free/libre SW, and non blockchain, then I'd be pretty interested on it...