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by usrbinbash
949 days ago
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I'd be happy to put up a repo for them, if they ask. Problem is, they often don't. And not to make too big a deal out of it, but using github, gitlab or anything along these lines, is mostly free, not exactly rocket science, and private repos exist. |
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No doubt. But that requires them knowing you exist, and what to ask you for.
The companies I've seen do this well (1) make it self-serve (anyone can click a link, without knowing who to reach out to) & (2) remove as many dumb organizational roadblocks as possible (e.g. company-wide repo visibility and search, no job role filtering to who can use tools, etc).
> but using github, gitlab or anything along these lines, is mostly free, not exactly rocket science, and private repos exist.
Putting internal files on an external third-party service under a personal account?
It solves the technical issue, but it creates some security/data issues.