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“Be transparent. Share your work constantly. Solicit feedback. Appreciate critiques. Let other people point out your mistakes. You are not your code. Do not be afraid of day-to-day failures — learn from them.”
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“I probably sound like Mr. Anti-Distributed-Version-Control, but I’m really not. It’s definitely cool, and definitely convenient. I just think it’s something that needs to be used very carefully, because the very conveniences it provides also promot
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Post to the Subversion dev list on decentralized version control, Subversion, and user-centric design of the Subversion tool. Very well written and informative.
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I agree with Karl’s assessment, especially in our current workplace. Even more so if there is corporate wide adoption to a single source control system. Think about the users. GIT may be very cool, and may fix a number of issues, but I think it would actually cause much more confusion. You’re one of the very few who ‘gets’ distributed source control. Most of the current set of developers, even in your own area, won’t get it, and to be honest, most of them won’t/don’t care to.