I'm starting to conclude that git just doesn't fit my brain. Several months in, I'm still confused when things don't work the way they "should." My co-worker says I should start a wiki for weird-ass things to do with git: "You keep coming up with use cases that would never occur to me."
But, I have to give the git community credit: I've never gone in to #git on freenode and gotten less than fantastic help. Even with git-svn.
At my day job, I write code for a company called Berkeley Data Systems. (They found me through this blog, actually. It's been a good place to work.) Our first product is free online backup at mozy.com . Our second beta release was yesterday; the obvious problems have been fixed, so I feel reasonably good about blogging about it. Our back end, which is the most algorithmically complex part -- as opposed to fighting-Microsoft-APIs complex, as we have to in our desktop client -- is 90% in python with one C extension for speed. We (well, they, since I wasn't at the company at that point) initially chose Python for speed of development, and it's definitely fulfilled that expectation. (It's also lived up to its reputation for readability, in that the Python code has had 3 different developers -- in serial -- with very quick ramp-ups in each case. Python's succinctness and and one-obvious-way-to-do-it philosophy played a big part in this.) If you try it out, pleas
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