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i was more going after these angles: (a) once upon a time, it was _expected_ of a competent developer to be able to run a server with a web server and a resume html file. putting your resume in github is no more impressive than putting your resume in your personal wikipedia profile.
(b) some of us have been programming a lot longer than github has been around, and it does not come close to effectively showing community contribution over such a career.
(c) as someone responding to my original comment noted, not all code can be published. i have a lot of commits, even in github, which you can't see.
All that said, I do expect people increasingly to examine github for recent community work, I would be concerned with someone who had never used it, though outside the fad bubble of the sf mission, a lot of people are using bitbucket and - GASP - hosting their own git repos.GitHub is a great tool, a useful community 'hub', but also a SPOF and a relatively young player in the source control space. I can say from experience, however, it's just very frustrating to have a recruiter say that some founders ten years your junior who probably have a great idea and could be great to work for want to see a github profile. kids, i helped build Rackspace, without which there would be no GitHub. Give those old-timers a call. ;) Anyway, this debate may not be fair to OP who was just showing how to use GH to host actual resume. There are some advantages, but really, fire up a $5 DigitalOcean VM and show me that you know about code running some way other than foreground in your laptop console. |