@feliks I like how the railroad switch (the tracks to be more precise) are still there. Making it ambiguous if the trolly will hit nobody and derail or all of them.
@agowa338 @feliks I feel like the guy's frown should be turned upside down too because he uses git
@agowa338 @feliks (to quote my uncle, ‘git, or more specifically github, usage tends to exacerbate psychopathic tendencies’)

@mia @feliks

git != github

git > github

@agowa338 honestly, I never really understood git's design approach and still prefer Mercurial and Subversion because they do not actively try to subvert my ideas about what consistent command-line interfaces are like

@mia @agowa338 Also, git is simple in the same way quantum mechanics is simple.

It is the simplest solution to a complex problem. The complex problem being: a distributed version control system that you can adapt to a lot of different situations.

I can use git without ever configuring a server, I can make a repo, I can clone it to a USB or CD. I can give it to a friend. In fact, I included the whole source repo of my thesis on a CD when I handed in my thesis.