I still do both (and did before), but now just don't bother with Hacktoberfest.
Nice that someone's happy about it. As a long time open source contributor and maintainer, I gave up this year because it's gone downhill.
People just nuke a local git repo and reclone if something goes wrong. There isn't even an attempt to understand anything.
Seems like a security hole if the API still allows something while the UI doesn't.
Yeah, titlegore material.
So it has the intended effect.
Just means it's a shit charger that can't handle multiple devices at once because that requires higher quality electronic components.
But where's the start?
Privacy isn't just about your device not emitting signals... If you don't want your device and apps to track your location, you also don't want to receive those GPS signals.
Automatically determining a semantic version bump (based on the types of commits landed).
That's overly optimistic. It'll be wrong the moment one person forgets one exclamation mark in one commit message. And it might not even be their fault if it's not clear at the time it causes breaking changes somewhere downstream.
You can't replace proper release engineering.
Transactions aren't backups. You can just as easily commit before fully realizing it. Backups, backups, backups.
Hacktoberfest.