Comment by shmerl

8 years ago

I guess it's time to move to Gitlab.

I am gonna wait and see. I know they messed up Skype really bad, but LinkedIN for example they havent touched and destroyed. I will wait and see..

  • Although I completely agree with you, pointing at LinkedIn as a success story is kind of weird.

    Microsoft's new future is to be a cross-platform vendor for developers. I see absolutely zero incompatibility between Github and Microsoft and a need to shut it down. I think the Satya's Microsoft is smart enough not to ruin it.

  • Microsoft screwed up Skype by trying to “make it more Microsoft” whereas LinkedIn is being left to operate as before (tough MSFT is using the data for something). My guess is that GitHub will continue as before with the main change being that MSDN subscribers will likely get private GitHub repos as part of their package.

    Now MSFT just needs something along the lines of Jira to replace the dog’s breakfast that is VSTS Agile project management tooling. I don’t suppose the folks in Redmond are looking to acquire Atlassian next...?

    • You dont pay 2 Billion, and leave it untouched, they see an earnings potential in the company given the right management and shareholders expect ROI that is higher then the average market return

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It's good that there is such an alternative as GitLab, because there is a slight but still not unsignificant risk that MS will not do the right thing. I think they will though since they are power users of their own product. I'm hoping they know this space.

MS has had an 180 degree turn in policy since Balmer left.

Lately they released amazing open-source projects with VSCode being the most prominent one.

  • Looking at Windows 10, with stuff like telemetry that's impossible to disable completely and hidden behind every dark pattern imaginable, or ads in Start menu?

    Microsoft of today is more Microsoft than ever.

    • Eh. Windows today might be more Microsoft than ever, but the rest of the org is spending lots of effort creating cross platform developer tools that's preparing Microsoft to remain relevant in a world that doesn't involve Windows PCs.

  • True, they went from Scroogled to mandatory telemetry, while focusing on renting out servers at ridiculous markups. Don't forget the new focus on the Windows Store either.

    Meanwhile, all their non-developer-focused products are still Windows-only and closed-source.

  • I simply have little trust in MS. They did improve in some areas, but not enough to gain overall trust. They are still not on the same page with many FOSS efforts.

    Company which actively pushes lock-in and patent aggression is not a good steward for FOSS projects.

    • particularly when most microsoft investors value microsoft stock for its earnings potential, as opposed to growth/revenue potential.

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  • Honest question: do the still threaten Linux-related companies with suing for violations of unspecified Microsoft patents?

    • Last time I've heard, MS is still shaking down many mobile manufactures who use Android, using patent protection racket.

  • As i know it started under Balmer, but he have to left because the failed phone OS.

I thought many people did after the infamous incident at Github.