Just a headsup for any server admins running Firefish, apparently it is no longer being maintained. One of the core developers of Firefish has written about the situation in the link provided.
blahaj.zone moved to ice-shrimp too but honestly calckey/firefish (HATE the name) always left a bad taste in my mouth.
i’ve always loved misskey above all else.
We partly moved to ice shrimp, but it was quite divergent from Hajkey, and after being burnt by our Calckey experience, we lost a lot of momentum and energy, so it’s sort of sat there in a mostly working state, not ice shrimp and not Hajkey for a while now.
Once we’re both back from South America though, we’ll do a migration to Sharkey (a direct soft fork of Misskey). After that, Kaity will look at gradually adding our Hajkey specific features directly in to Sharkey where possibly.
ooh yess thank you i didn’t mean to imply i was in charge or anything i was just reading from the announcement :3
Hah, no stress. That’s not how I read your comment. I was just taking the chance to expand on it :)
this seems to be a trend playing out.
i hope instances can come up with a more standardized methods of control that dont leave all the keys in a single humans hands. we know how unstable humans are.
Not to downplay all the blood, sweat, and tears that have been shed while making the fediverse work, but if I may offer some unsolicited advice to the author of the linked post: Airing that out publicly tends to be counter-productive. Usually it’s best to “keep it in the family.” We don’t know what’s going on in the original owner’s life right now. Even if the original project dies, that can be an opportunity for a new project to take its place, and who knows—the original owner might even show up again and contribute to the new project someday (or not).
In this case, the author could have just said hey all, we apologize for the inconvenience but the original project appears to be abandoned, so we’ve forked the project with the intention of implementing some new features and keeping it alive (insert GH link here).
I say all this without knowing the full history of this project, and I don’t mean to downplay the author’s frustration, just my two cents.
Open source devs being in a parasocial relationship with their projects uwu
Usually I would agree but in this case it’s important to provide context for people using the platform. According to the post Firefish’s admin practically abandoned it for months now and was radio silent and now hasn’t replied to the core team in over a week, someone had to say what’s going on.
Everyone knows how hard managing these things are, and it’s often a thankless job, but this sadly seems like another example of someone taking on a leadership role then bailing for whatever reason. The owner should’ve let someone else handle firefish.social if they didn’t have the time.
I’d like to add from a user’s point of view. Firefish.social was advertised as the flagship instance and in the beginning everything was fine and nice on there but then they started to implement new stuff and this broke something leading to the flagship instance being down or unusable for most of the time. Days turned into weeks with the server not running or at least not without problems (only talking about timelines, not to mention other features like antennae or lists which wouldn’t work at all) without any communication from the admins and no replies to direct inquiries. I eventually moved to another instance running a stable firefish version. But our admin also complains about being ignored by the dev team, so they decided we will be moving to Sharkey. And we all know that Kainoa is young, started uni last year and a new job - that’s all fine and understandable but maxbe not compatible with running such a big project. Which again is fine but also means that -for now- the project is not being worked on while in a broken state. I think this is valuable information for users and admins and it was good to hear this from someone in the core team.
Damn, that repository and its forks really know how to crash and burn. I’m glad to see it’s being given more life with another fork. That said, with a name like Catodon, I can pretty much guarantee it won’t be a resounding success 🥺
with a name like Catodon, I can pretty much guarantee it won’t be a resounding success
Pfft, are you kidding me?? I’ll take the other side of that bet any day!
The power of opensource.
…is that it can be picked up and continued by anyone rather than lost forever, right?
No, we prefer the proprietary ones so that a rival can buy out their competition, end their products, and force everyone to migrate to their worse version of the software you were happy with!
Oh wow. And I was suggesting Firefish to my wife to get her off twitter because it looked “fancier” than Mastodon. Glad she hasn’t switched over yet, and I’ll probably just get her on Mastodon instead. I wish catodon success though, and I hope it’s a better replacement for Firefish.
There’s Sharkey, which is also a fork of Misskey like Firefish
Mastodon is like the boring solid mainstay that will always be there and keep the fediverse alive. There are tons of other fedi projects that are more exciting, but they burst into flames way too often for my taste lol
@postwatchbot@lemy.lol
Long live IceShrimp!