GitHub not only provides a centralized service for automated patch creation and merging, bug and feature tracking via tagged threads, and organizational permission management (which are the main draw)…
It also provides:
- A free* and robust CI automation service that integrates smoothly with the aforementioned patch creation, merging, and feature tracking
- Within reasonable limits. I’ve never had an issue with the limits set for free users, even with constant testing on large projects.
- A helpful combination of kanban (board), table, and timeline trackers for the aforementioned tagged threads, or simpler ideas
- A host for static websites that can be redirected to your own registered domain, completely free of charge
- Social features that help users find new projects to contribute to and keep up-to-date on projects they already use and contribute to
GitHub may seem simple, but it really provides a ton of functionality to power-users and organization managers that cannot afford to foot the bill themselves. People like me could not continue to do what we do without GitHub at this point in time.
They’re gonna do the same thing to this that they did to Clone High, aren’t they?