Zensical has been a solid replacement for us so far. In general everything "just works" out of the box and is way quicker to build/reload. It is still in fairly early stages, but is actively being worked on https://zensical.org/spark/proposals/zap-005-navigation-auth...
I hope they are able to monetize in a way the keeps the core project open while making it a sustainable venture going forward.
Two open source dramas in one week? Get the popcorn. From one of the links[0]:
> I do not see him as qualified to keep this project maintainership and if I had the choice, would I remove him.
…where “him” is Tom Christie, aka lovelydinosaur, the original author from what I can tell, and the copyright holder from the license file.
I don’t know what’s going on, but if someone contributing to one of my projects, that I wrote, started a public conversation about how to remove me, my public response might appear as that person disappearing from the project.
Sure, feel free to follow the license and fork the project. Make it clear that it’s a fork, though. It feels misleading to describe it as a continuation of the existing project.
This is a timely discussion for me. I've been dealing with several open source packages that aren't moving nearly as fast I need to get work done. I fork them, creating feature branches to upstream and merge them into a vendored dev branch I can use myself. But when I can push a dozen PRs a day and the maintainers barely merge a few a month, the math does not add up. I bet many AI-powered developers are facing this problem. I tested the waters with some PRs and regretfully came to the conclusion that I have to work on my fork.
Also, this MkDocs maintainer sounds crazy. Nobody is discouraging women from contributing.
Zensical has been a solid replacement for us so far. In general everything "just works" out of the box and is way quicker to build/reload. It is still in fairly early stages, but is actively being worked on https://zensical.org/spark/proposals/zap-005-navigation-auth...
I hope they are able to monetize in a way the keeps the core project open while making it a sustainable venture going forward.
Two open source dramas in one week? Get the popcorn. From one of the links[0]:
> I do not see him as qualified to keep this project maintainership and if I had the choice, would I remove him.
…where “him” is Tom Christie, aka lovelydinosaur, the original author from what I can tell, and the copyright holder from the license file.
I don’t know what’s going on, but if someone contributing to one of my projects, that I wrote, started a public conversation about how to remove me, my public response might appear as that person disappearing from the project.
Sure, feel free to follow the license and fork the project. Make it clear that it’s a fork, though. It feels misleading to describe it as a continuation of the existing project.
[0] https://github.com/mkdocs/mkdocs/discussions/4088
See recent discussion in [0]
[0]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47482185
Yeah that’s a better link for the overall situation. Personally I’m betting on Zensical.
Good to point out -- Zensical is the project by MkDocs author to supersedes the latter.
Did something change? cause this was published back in March.
This is a timely discussion for me. I've been dealing with several open source packages that aren't moving nearly as fast I need to get work done. I fork them, creating feature branches to upstream and merge them into a vendored dev branch I can use myself. But when I can push a dozen PRs a day and the maintainers barely merge a few a month, the math does not add up. I bet many AI-powered developers are facing this problem. I tested the waters with some PRs and regretfully came to the conclusion that I have to work on my fork.
Also, this MkDocs maintainer sounds crazy. Nobody is discouraging women from contributing.