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Google Open Source Programming SourceForge

Google Code Disables New Project Creation, Will Shut Down On January 25, 2016 140

An anonymous reader writes GitHub has officially won. Google has announced that Google Code project creation has been disabled today, with the ultimate plan to kill off the service next year. On August 24, 2015, the project hosting service will be set to read-only. This means you will still be able to checkout/view project source, issues, and wikis, but nobody will be able to make changes or new commits. On January 25, 2016, Google Code will be shut down. Google says you will be able to download tarballs of project source, issues, and wikis "throughout the rest of 2016." After that, Google Code will be gone for good.
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Google Code Disables New Project Creation, Will Shut Down On January 25, 2016

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  • Taken a look at the top projects lately?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      It is nothing but an adware site if you try to download on windows now. Completely irresponsible management of what is little more than a husk.

  • Google Product (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Who didn't see this coming?

    Google, where good ideas go to die.

    • Re:Google Product (Score:5, Insightful)

      by JourneymanMereel ( 191114 ) on Thursday March 12, 2015 @04:05PM (#49244825) Homepage Journal

      This was my thought exactly. Sadly, Google has proven themselves to be very unreliable.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Google has proved quite Evil as in they are not immune to the al mighty dollar..

      • Re:Google Product (Score:5, Interesting)

        by snowgirl ( 978879 ) on Thursday March 12, 2015 @04:31PM (#49245027) Journal

        It's not unreliability...

        If it's not worth spending money to keep developers on the project, then better to shutter it, and have people move off than just let it sit abandoned indefinitely... right?

        I mean, that's what makes sense in the real world...

        • Re:Google Product (Score:5, Insightful)

          by N1AK ( 864906 ) on Thursday March 12, 2015 @05:23PM (#49245435) Homepage

          It's not unreliability...

          I think it is. When I am choosing a service one important consideration is how much effort getting onto that solution is, and how likely it is it will last. Even if Google provides a better service, I reconsider using it over a slightly inferior alternative because they're track record is terrible on this front.

          I understand completely why they want to kill of unpopular projects, but from a user perspective it sucks that they launch a service, try and persuade people to put the non-negligible effort in to learn it, then kill it because they screwed up and couldn't make it worthwhile maintaining.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          I mean, that's what makes sense in the real world...

          I don't mean to alarm you - but you posted that on slashdot.

      • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

        by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday March 12, 2015 @06:10PM (#49245835)
        Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      Sorry, but to me that seems a quite responsible way to shut down a project that they've decided not to continue. There have been many times in the past when they deserved criticism for how they handled shutting down a project, but this doesn't appear to be one of them.

  • "Tum tum tum (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Another one bites the dust!"

    More seriously though, I'll never understand people who rely on Google's applications.

  • Read the comments (Score:5, Informative)

    by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Thursday March 12, 2015 @04:07PM (#49244845)

    If you have code in Google Code, read through the comments in the first link - there is some important Q&A going on there, including a flag you can set in advanced project settings when you've migrated off Google Code, that will forward on links looking at Google Code to the new home...

    I didn't see it stated explicitly but I'm thinking they are only supporting migration to GitHub for forwarding compatibility? I don't have a Google Code account so I can't check what the setting says it does.

  • Everything else is just an attempt to grab personal data. What did you think would happen?

    All their products should be thought of as experiments with a shelf life.
  • It might have worked had they promoted it to people who could use it. At all. I get the feeling that they promoted it to people they could identify as rockstar indie devs and blew off the rest of us. Well, that's what you get, Google. Maybe next time you won't pretend like your service is so special that it should be gated with a crimson rope, and you'll promote it to everybody who can use it.
  • Any bets on how long until GitHub makes a tool to import Google Code projects?
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday March 12, 2015 @05:06PM (#49245303)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Upgrades (Score:2, Interesting)

      by SuperKendall ( 25149 )

      Too bad archive.org is not a dynamic thing, instead of a static view of websites past...

      You could call it "parallelinternet.org", where you could fork behavior of any website at any time and have its functionality live on forever even after a company dropped support for the original.

      I know that's not very feasible, but it's nice to dream.

      • by tepples ( 727027 )

        You could call it "parallelinternet.org", where you could fork behavior of any website at any time and have its functionality live on forever even after a company dropped support for the original.

        AGPLv3 would make it possible.

      • This project aims to do exactly that. https://github.com/ikreymer/py... [github.com]

        It'll record your browsing experience and play it back for you later. It will even record links that you did not originally browse. (You have to configure the depth)

        The developer is working on it constantly

        • Thanks for the link, although it wasn't quite what I was thinking of it's a really impressive idea, and is way more practical to pull off.

          That would be a really interesting tool to reverse-engineer A-B testing going on on websites...

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Slow, frustrating and spammy. Someone put SourceForge our or our misery too, please.

    I'm not sure consolidating everything at one or two cloud VCS sites is a brilliant idea. All I know for certain is that whenever I track down the source for something and end up at SourceForge my estimation of that project goes way down.

  • 10x Programmers (Score:5, Interesting)

    by BlackHawk-666 ( 560896 ) on Thursday March 12, 2015 @06:29PM (#49245975)

    Google, with all their rockrstar 10x programmers and engineers fail yet again. What's the point of hiring "only the best" through a series of day long gruelling interview processes and obscure ego inflating (for the interviewers) exams - when all the software they write ends up in the trash. Their only good products are the search engine, gmail (getting marginal), and youtube (bought from someone else). Two hit products for such a massive company of the world's best software engineers seems like a pretty big let down.

    Nothing good ever seems to come out of these massive, lumbering, over managed companies. Their two decent products came at a time when they were much smaller. All the innovation is coming from small, lean and agile companies who take risks. Google is just the next Microsoft, ready to crest the wave any time now.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Android?
      Chrome?
      Maps?

      • And the actual money-making one: AdSense
      • by zlogic ( 892404 )

        Drive/Docs is also popular in some circles.
        And Hangouts are quite popular for doing conferences, interviews and online collaboration.

      • Android - it's just Linux with a shiny front end slapped on it. Most of the work was done by volunteers outside of Google. I doubt even 3% of the code found on any given Android device was made at Google, and that's being very generous. If you count the apps downloaded to it, it would be under 1%.

        Chrome - wasn't this a fork of webkit or some other browser written by other people? They did a lot of work on it, but it's by no means a Google product.

        Maps - I know they acquired some companies for this, not sure

    • Most software ends up in the trash anyway. That's just the way the tech industry is.

      Better to shut down this product and have the engineers work on something that is more rewarding for everyone involved.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

      You have to understand what Google products are for. Google builds stuff that it needs and isn't available. When a good alternative comes along it considers its job done and moves on. When Google Code started there were not many people offering something like that, and now there are many. It paved the way, encouraged other services to develop and now is being jettisoned because it doesn't generate any revenue.

      Gmail brings in cash so will keep going. When it started there was nothing quite like it, with the

    • Google, with all their rockrstar 10x programmers and engineers fail yet again. What's the point of hiring "only the best" through a series of day long gruelling interview processes and obscure ego inflating (for the interviewers) exams - when all the software they write ends up in the trash. Their only good products are the search engine, .....

      I take it you haven't used Google search lately to find new(not ones you lost the address to) websites? It has gotten really sucky. The first two pages are sockpuppet websites for whatever company is trying to sell you something. Example: learning a new language. You sued to be able to find real specialty sites on the web. Not so much anymore.

      • I actually switched a little while ago to DuckDuckGo, after using Google for the last...um, when did Altavista start to suck? You're pretty much spot on about the first two result pages, they are filled with paid for placements. I can't seem to search on something without some retailer site(s) coming up willing to sell me the product, and I mean like 30 of them. Search for the manual for your television and you'll have to scroll right down past all the people wanting to sell that model of TV to you.

  • So many of the Google Code projects are stuck on svn. Hope they migrate over to git.

    • There's nothing wrong with svn within its limits. It doesn't do as many things as git does, but lots of people who started with svn or cvs are very comfortable with it. What's wrong with it as a centralized repository?

      • Git is better for productivity than svn, especially with regard to handling branches and merging. The sooner we get away from it the better.

  • It would be nice to hear from an archivist about how they plan to go about archiving the projects. How well does Archive.org's time machine cover Google Code? It would be cool if Google would post a link to a zip export of every project so you can just pul upl the last (and latest) result up on Archive.org and download the project.

  • It is not over, it is a new start. The pre GitHub sites like Google code are closing down. But post GitHub sites are alive and growing. At GitLab we see increasing adoption and a fast growing GitLab.com. People want free private repo's, more features and hosting based on open source software.

    • by jeremyp ( 130771 )

      The trouble is that version control is fast becoming a monoculture. Soon git will be the only version control solution in town and it's a bit shit really. It's popular mainly because Linus Torvalds wrote it, not because it's actually technically a good program.

  • by sodul ( 833177 ) on Friday March 13, 2015 @02:21AM (#49247935) Homepage

    And I mean besides sourceforge, which I used to like but not so much anymore. I have a project hosted on google code that facilitates automatic merging between subversion branches. It would be ironic to host that on GitHub.

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