Yeah that’s the thing. I can’t be dependent on such a thing that very well might stop functioning at any time. The fact that it’s not first-party does not fill me with confidence.
There is. It’s the original development team of the project.
The one that got discontinued, you mean? It didn’t matter that it was “first party” as it still got the axe. This fork has existed for multiple years now, and may end up having a longer life than the “first party” one had.
Sure. Is this viable long term? Why was it forked? Will it even work with 2.0?
With open source you never have a guarantee for long-term support. I guess it was forked because the original app was not maintained anymore?
Idk about 2.0, but I am using this app for a year now. It got 3 updates last month
Not like you have that with closed source …
It was forked before the previous one died funnily enough
Yeah that’s the thing. I can’t be dependent on such a thing that very well might stop functioning at any time. The fact that it’s not first-party does not fill me with confidence.
Well then you you need to pay for proprietary software or give your data to Google and friends.
There is no such thing aa “first party” in most open source projects. This repo has contributions by 111 different developers at the moment.
No. No I sure don’t.
There is. It’s the original development team of the project.
All to the same first-party SyncThing repo.
The one that got discontinued, you mean? It didn’t matter that it was “first party” as it still got the axe. This fork has existed for multiple years now, and may end up having a longer life than the “first party” one had.
This is not uncommon in the open source space.
Yes I do remember saying that a few hours ago.
You can “may” anything you want.
Good job avoiding my point entirely :)
I didn’t avoid your point at all.
I wasn’t discussing what “may” happen. I was discussing what’s more likely to happen.
I’m still using the old app, it may lack some new features, but it was already good enough