I'd add a third point: record service usage.
https://github.blog/news-insights/company-news/an-update-on-...
We don't have a labeled y-axis so their record usage could be a 5% increase for all they're showing us.
I think it doesn't need to be a large X% increase, just needs to hit some critical infra threshold where various services start failing and cascade. Weakest link and everything.
It interestingly shows how a centralized system may just fail or become too flaky at unprecedented growth.
I suppose it's a bit too on the nose to point out that git is decentralized and itself doesn't really suffer from this, nor need it.
And yet GitHub has felt the most dead it ever did. Less quality contributions. Less feeling of community. All the open source projects are struggling.
They dont have a service usage problem they have a slop problem. Ban the slop and the platform will thrive
Is it September already?
Wake me up when...
Yeah if those graphs are even vaguely accurate there's really only one explanation: vibe coders pushing previously unimaginable amount of slop.
I would not be surprised if Github has to stop offering so many services for free.
> if those graphs are even vaguely accurate
They aren't, of course. The Y axis is missing. GitHub didn't have 0 daily commits at the start of 2023.
https://handsondataviz.org/how-to-lie-with-charts.html#exagg...
No, but commits are growing 14x YoY: https://x.com/kdaigle/status/2040164759836778878
Not even vibe coders, but autonomous agents/bots.
I‘ve noticed that some projects have „Claude“ as one of their top three contributors.
Claude code co-authors commits, that might account
We don't have a labeled y-axis so their record usage could be a 5% increase for all they're showing us.
I think it doesn't need to be a large X% increase, just needs to hit some critical infra threshold where various services start failing and cascade. Weakest link and everything.
It interestingly shows how a centralized system may just fail or become too flaky at unprecedented growth.
I suppose it's a bit too on the nose to point out that git is decentralized and itself doesn't really suffer from this, nor need it.
And yet GitHub has felt the most dead it ever did. Less quality contributions. Less feeling of community. All the open source projects are struggling.
They dont have a service usage problem they have a slop problem. Ban the slop and the platform will thrive
Is it September already?
Wake me up when...
Yeah if those graphs are even vaguely accurate there's really only one explanation: vibe coders pushing previously unimaginable amount of slop.
I would not be surprised if Github has to stop offering so many services for free.
> if those graphs are even vaguely accurate
They aren't, of course. The Y axis is missing. GitHub didn't have 0 daily commits at the start of 2023.
https://handsondataviz.org/how-to-lie-with-charts.html#exagg...
No, but commits are growing 14x YoY: https://x.com/kdaigle/status/2040164759836778878
Not even vibe coders, but autonomous agents/bots.
I‘ve noticed that some projects have „Claude“ as one of their top three contributors.
Claude code co-authors commits, that might account