Timeline of GitHub
From Timelines
This is a timeline of GitHub, a web-based Git or version control repository and Internet hosting service.
Big picture
Time Period | Development summary | More details |
---|---|---|
2008 | Conception, initial launch, and core features | GitHub is founded initially as Logical Awesome in February and the website launches in April. Core parts of GitHub launch during this year, including the company blog, per-project wikis, GitHub Gist, and GitHub Pages.[1] |
2009 – June 2013 | Continued growth and product releases | GitHub continues to release products including GitHub Enterprise, Redcarpet, and Hubot. Many companies that now regularly use GitHub – including Facebook and Google – join GitHub during this period.[2] |
July 2013 – September 2015 | Continued growth and product releases; outreach; attacks and censorship against the site; CEO resigns | GitHub continues to launch a series of products and enhancements to existing products. For the desktop, it releases Electron, Atom, and a desktop client. In terms of outreach, it launches the Bug Bounty Program, ChooseALicense.com, GitHub Classroom, GitHub Student Developer Pack, and the GitHub Engineering blog. The GitHub website also experiences multiple attacks as well as censorship from governments. In April 2014, co-founder and CEO Tom Preston-Werner resigns the company following allegations of harassment.[3] |
October 2015 – present | Change in pricing model | GitHub changes its pricing model from a repository-based one to a user-based one; in the process, it introduces unlimited private repositories for paying customers.[4][5] |
Full timeline
Year | Month and date | Event type | Details |
---|---|---|---|
2005 | 7 April | Background | The initial version of Git, a version control system with support for data integrity,[6] is released. Git would come to power GitHub.[7] |
2007 | 1 October | Company | Development of the GitHub platform begins.[1] |
2008 | 8 February | Company | GitHub is founded.[1] |
2008 | 22 February | Product | GitHub launches its company blog. In the announcement blog post, GitHub notes that per-project wikis have also launched.[8] |
2008 | April | Product | Tom Preston-Werner, Chris Wanstrath, and PJ Hyett launch the GitHub website after having made it available a few months prior as a beta release.[9] |
2008 | 18 June | Userbase | Reddit joins GitHub.[10] |
2008 | 9 July | Userbase | Yahoo! joins GitHub.[11] |
2008 | 21 July | Product | GitHub launches Gist, a pastebin-style service with versioning.[12][13] |
2008 | 5 November | Product | The initial version of Jekyll, a static site generator, is released by GitHub CEO Tom Preston-Werner.[14][15] Jekyll would come to power GitHub Pages. |
2008 | 14 December | Userbase | The Sunlight Foundation, an American 501(c)(3) nonpartisan, nonprofit organization that advocates for open government,[16] joins GitHub.[17] By September 2010, the foundation would have 97 software projects hosted on GitHub.[18] |
2008 | 18 December | Product | GitHub announces GitHub Pages, a way for users to create custom websites.[19] |
2008 | Competition | Bitbucket launches. | |
2009 | 29 January | Userbase | Twitter joins GitHub.[20] |
2009 | 24 February | Growth (repository) | GitHub team members announce, in a talk at Yahoo! headquarters, that within the first year of being online, GitHub has accumulated over 46,000 public repositories, 17,000 of which were formed in the previous month alone. At this time, about 6,200 repositories have been forked at least once and 4,600 have been merged. |
2009 | 1 April | Userbase | Facebook joins GitHub.[21] |
2009 | 20 April | Product | GitHub completes its transition to use GitHub Flavored Markdown on the site. GitHub Flavored Markdown is a variant of the Markdown markup language.[22] |
2009 | 5 July | Growth (user) | GitHub reaches 100,000 users.[23][24] |
2009 | 27 July | Growth (repository) | Tom Preston-Werner announces that GitHub has grown to host 90,000 unique public repositories, 12,000 having been forked at least once, for a total of 135,000 repositories.[25] |
2009 | 14 December | Product | The initial commit to the Semantic Versioning repository is made by Tom Preston-Werner.[26][27] |
2010 | January | Company | GitHub Inc started to operate GitHub.[28] |
2010 | 10 March | Product | GitHub introduces Compare View, a feature that allows users to compare commits in a Git repository.[29] In July, GitHub would add support for comparing across repositories.[30] |
2010 | 1 July | Ruby and JavaScript become the most popular languages on GitHub, with 19% and 17% of the hosted code, respectively.[1] | |
2010 | 24 July | Growth (repository) | GitHub hits 1 million hosted repositories. Of these repositories, 60% are regular repositories while the remaining 40% are Gists.[31][32] |
2010 | 12 August | Product | GitHub announces that its per-project wikis are now backed by Git. The company also releases Gollum, the software powering these wikis.[33] On the same day, Gollum is declared to be version 1.0.0.[34] |
2010 | 29 December | Userbase | Pinterest joins GitHub.[35] |
2011 | 19 April | Product | GitHub releases Redcarpet, a Markdown parsing library based on Upskirt.[36] |
2011 | 20 April | Growth (repository) | GitHub announces that it is hosting 2 million repositories.[37][38] |
2011 | 2 June | Growth | ReadWriteWeb reports that GitHub has surpassed SourceForge, Google Code, and CodePlex in total number of commits for the period January to May 2011.[39][40] |
2011 | 23 June | Growth (employee) | At this time, GitHub has 33 employees.[41] |
2011 | 15 August | Product | GitHub begins using the Ace code editor when editing files on the web interface.[42] |
2011 | October (approximate) | Competition | GitLab launches.[43] |
2011 | 11 October | Product | The initial version (version 1.0.0) of Hubot, a chatbot developed by GitHub and written in CoffeeScript, is released.[44][45][46][47] |
2011 | 1 November | Product | GitHub launches GitHub Enterprise. GitHub Enterprise is similar to GitHub's public service but is designed for use by large-scale enterprise software development teams where the enterprise wishes to host their repositories behind a corporate firewall.[2] |
2012 | 17 January | Userbase | Google joins GitHub.[48] |
2012 | 6 April | Userbase | The United States Consumer Financial Protection Bureau announces that it will open source the software it writes or contracts with a third-party to write. The agency decides to host its source code on GitHub.[49][50] |
2012 | 1 July | Financial | GitHub receives $100 million in a series of investment, primarily from Andreessen Horowitz.[1] |
2012 | 9 July | Financial | Peter Levine, general partner at GitHub's investor Andreessen Horowitz, states that GitHub has been growing revenue at 300% annually.[51] |
2012 | 1 August | Userbase | The source code for the petitioning system We the People as well as the mobile apps White House for iOS and White House for Android are released on GitHub.[1] |
2012 | 10 September | GitHub experiences service outage due to a poor database migration.[52] | |
2012 | 18 October | Censorship | GitHub goes down due to a distributed denial of service attack.[53] |
2012 | 13 December | Growth (employee) | At this time, GitHub has 139 employees.[54] |
2013 | 3 January | Product | GitHub introduces ZeroClipboard to the site, which allows for copying long lines of text and hashes with a single click.[55] |
2013 | 7 January | Product | GitHub launches Contributions, an addition to user profile pages that shows which repositories the user has been active in, as well as a calendar of activities.[56][57] |
2013 | 14 January | User growth, repository growth | GitHub reaches 3 million total users. At this time, GitHub also has almost 5 million repositories.[58][59] |
2013 | 21 January | Censorship | GitHub is blocked in China using DNS hijacking. Confirming the block, a spokesperson for GitHub says: "It does appear that we're at least being partly blocked by the Great Firewall of China".[60] The block would be lifted on January 23, 2013 after an online protest on Sina Weibo.[61] |
2013 | 26 January | Censorship | GitHub users in China experience a man-in-the-middle attack in which attackers could have possibly intercepted traffic between the site and its users in China. The mechanism of the attack is through a fake SSL certificate.[62] Users attempting to access GitHub received a warning of an invalid SSL certificate, which due to being signed by an unknown authority was quickly detected.[63] |
2013 | 15 February | Product | GitHub open-sources Boxen, a tool that automates setting up macOS machines.[64] |
2013 | April | Product | GitHub adds support for the STL file format for 3D modeling.[65] |
2013 | 5 April | Product | GitHub moves GitHub Pages to a dedicated domain, github.io. GitHub cites security reasons for the migration: to remove "potential vectors for cross domain attacks targeting the main github.com session" and mitigate phishing attempts. This migration reserves github.com for GitHub itself.[66][67] |
2013 | 9 May | Userbase | United States president Barack Obama signs Executive Order 13642, "Making Open and Machine Readable the New Default for Government Information". As part of this new Open Data Policy, data is released on GitHub.[68][69] |
2013 | 23 May | Growth (repository) | GitHub reaches 3.5 million users and 6 million repositories.[1] |
2013 | 31 May | Product | GitHub announces the release of Octokit, a set of client libraries for working with the GitHub API.[70] |
2013 | 15 July | Product | GitHub launches the ChooseALicense.com website to help users choose a free and open-source software license.[71][72] |
2013 | 15 July | Product | The initial version of Electron (at the time called Atom Shell) is released by GitHub.[73][74][75] |
2013 | 7 August | Growth (repository) | GitHub reaches 7 million projects by their users.[1] |
2013 | September | Growth (user) | GitHub reaches 4 million active users.[76] |
2013 | 20 December | Userbase | Facebook publishes a blog post about its progress in open-source software. At the time, Facebook has over 90 Git repositories hosted on GitHub.[77] |
2013 | 22 December | Growth (employee) | At this time, GitHub has 234 employees.[78] |
2013 | 23 December | Growth (repository) | GitHub announces it has reached 10 million repositories.[79][80] |
2013 | late in the year | Userbase | Microsoft joins GitHub.[81] |
2014 | 6 January | Acquisition | Easel, a browser-based web design tool, announces that it has been acquired by GitHub. GitHub would announce the acquisition several days later.[82][83][84] |
2014 | 9 January | Product | GitHub launches their Bug Bounty Program.[85][86] |
2014 | 12 February | Legal | WhatsApp sends a DMCA takedown request to GitHub for alleged copyright and trademark violations.[87][88] |
2014 | 26 February | Product | GitHub releases the initial version of Atom, a free and open-source[89][90] text and source code editor.[91] |
2014 | 17 March | Company | GitHub programmer Julie Ann Horvath alleges that founder and CEO Tom Preston-Werner and his wife Theresa engaged in a pattern of harassment against her that led to her leaving the company.[92][1] |
2014 | April | Company | GitHub releases a statement denying Horvath's allegations of harassment.[3][93] However, following an internal investigation, GitHub would confirm the claims. GitHub's CEO Chris Wanstrath would write on the company blog, "The investigation found Tom Preston-Werner in his capacity as GitHub's CEO acted inappropriately, including confrontational conduct, disregard of workplace complaints, insensitivity to the impact of his spouse's presence in the workplace, and failure to enforce an agreement that his spouse should not work in the office."[94] CEO Preston-Werner would subsequently resign from the company. |
2014 | 6 May | Product | GitHub fully releases the source code of its text editor Atom. Previously, many of its libraries and packages were open source, but the editor itself was not.[95] |
2014 | 16 May | The Crunchies announces that GitHub is a winner in Best Bootstrapped Startup.[1] | |
2014 | 17 July | Company | GitHub introduces a middle management system. Prior to this, GitHub was a flat organization.[1] |
2014 | 7 October | Product | GitHub announces the GitHub Student Developer Pack, which gives students access to various premium services from GitHub and other tech companies.[96][97][98] |
2014 | 2 December | Censorship | Roscomnadzor, Russia's regulatory agency, blocks GitHub for hosting various copies of a suicide manual. Because GitHub uses HTTPS, which encrypts data between a user's computer and GitHub, internet service providers (ISP) are forced to block the whole website instead of the pages in question. Complying ISPs included Beeline, MTS, MGTS, and Megafon. Maxim Ksenzov, the Deputy Head of the Roscomnadzor, said in a statement that the block was due to GitHub not complying with earlier takedown requests for the manual on October 10, 2014.[99] GitHub was also momentarily blocked on October 2, 2014 until the original copy of the manual was deleted.[100] |
2014 | 31 December | Censorship | GitHub is blocked in India (along with 31 other Websites) over pro-ISIS content posted by users.[101] On 10 January 2015, GitHub would be unblocked. Again, on 12 Sep 2015, GitHub would be blocked all over India.[102] |
2015 | 28 January | Product | GitHub announces that it has doubled its maximum payout for its bounty program to $10,000.[103] |
2015 | 2 February | Userbase | The Office of Management and Budget releases budget data for fiscal years 2016 and 2017.[104][105] |
2015 | 7 February | Growth (employee) | At this time, GitHub has 257 employees.[106] |
2015 | March | Competition | Google announces that it would be closing down Google Code on January 15, 2016.[107] Most projects on the site would enter read-only mode on August 24, 2015.[108] |
2015 | 26 March | Censorship | GitHub falls victim to a massive distributed denial-of-service (DDOS) attack that lasts for more than 118 hours.[109] The attack, which appeared to originate from China, primarily targeted GitHub-hosted user content describing methods of circumventing Internet censorship.[110][111][112] |
2015 | 30 March | Growth (user) | GitHub reports having over 9 million users and over 21.1 million repositories, making it the largest host of source code in the world.[113] |
2015 | 8 April | Product | GitHub announces Git Large File Storage (Git LFS). Git LFS allows users to store and work with large binary files in Git.[114][115] |
2015 | 30 April | At the conference Build 2015, Microsoft announces that Microsoft Visual Studio 2015 will have GitHub integrations, and that GitHub Enterprise would become available on Microsoft Azure.[116] | |
2015 | 19 May | Product | GitHub launches the GitHub Engineering blog, which hosts information about GitHub's engineering practices.[117] |
2015 | 3 June | Company | GitHub announces the formation of GitHub Japan G.K., a subsidiary of GitHub, Inc., as well as its new office in Tokyo, Japan. This new office is the first GitHub office outside of the United States.[118][119] |
2015 | 25 June | Product | GitHub releases version 1.0 of its Atom text editor.[120][121] |
2015 | 25 July | Financial | GitHub announces it has raised $250 million in funding in a round led by Sequoia Capital. The round valued the company at approximately $2 billion.[1][122] |
2015 | 12 August | Product | GitHub launches a desktop client for working with the site, for macOS and Microsoft Windows.[123][124] |
2015 | 15 August | Growth (employee) | At this time, GitHub has 330 employees.[125] |
2015 | 1 September | Growth (user) | At this time, GitHub has around 10 million users.[1] |
2015 | 1 September | Growth (user) | Around this time, 10,000 users are reportedly joining GitHub per weekday.[126] |
2015 | 22 September | Product | GitHub launches GitHub Classroom, a way for teachers to create and share programming assignments.[127] |
2015 | 24 September | Chris Wanstrath, co-founder and CEO of GitHub, is named as one of the Fortune 40 under 40.[128] | |
2015 | 1 October – 2 October | Conference | GitHub Universe 2015 takes place in San Francisco, California.[129] GitHub Universe is GitHub's user conference; the company would continue to host the conference in subsequent years.[130][131] |
2015 | 1 October | Product | GitHub announces a partnership with Yubico to allow YubiKey authentication on the GitHub website.[132] |
2015 | 3 December | Userbase | Apple open-sources its programming language Swift and hosts it on GitHub.[133] This also marks the beginning of Apple using GitHub, as the company did not host anything on GitHub prior to this.[134][135] |
2016 | 28 January | Growth (repository) | At this time, there are over 29 million repositories on GitHub.[38] |
2016 | 28 March | Growth (user) | GitHub announces that Atom, a text editor it created, has hit 1 million monthly active users.[136] GitHub knows this number because Atom comes with a package called metrics that tracks usage information using Google Analytics and sends it to GitHub.[137]
|
2016 | 5 April | Company | GitHub announces Spokes (called Distributed Git or DGit at the time), GitHub's application-level replication system for Git, which makes GitHub more resilient to server outages.[138][139][140] |
2016 | 9 May | Product | Version 1 of Electron is released.[141][142] |
2016 | 10 May | Product | GitHub introduces unlimited private repositories as it changes its pricing model from a repository-based one to a user-based one.[4][5] |
2016 | 17 May | Growth (employee) | At this time, GitHub has 568 employees.[143] |
2016 | 6 July | Userbase | Nike, Inc. releases the source code of several of its projects on GitHub.[144][145] |
2016 | 7 September | GitHub is ranked #14 on the Forbes Cloud 100 list.[146] | |
2016 | 14 September – 15 September | Conference | GitHub Universe 2016 takes place in San Francisco, California.[147] GitHub Universe is "the flagship user conference for the GitHub community".[148] |
2016 | 8 October | Censorship | GitHub access is blocked by the Turkish government to prevent email leakage of a hacked account belonging to the country's Energy Minister.[149] |
2016 | 24 December | Growth (employee) | At this time, GitHub has 592 employees.[150] |
2017 | 14 February | Product | GitHub launches the Open Source Guides at the dedicated domain name opensource.guide.[151][152] |
See also
References
- ↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 "History of Github". Archived from the original on April 9, 2016.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "Introducing GitHub Enterprise". GitHub. Retrieved 13 July 2014.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Miller, Claire Cain (April 21, 2014). "GitHub Founder Resigns After Investigation". Bits. The New York Times.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Serdar Yegulalp (May 11, 2016). "GitHub ushers in unlimited private repositories". InfoWorld. Retrieved February 24, 2017.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Kakul Srivastava (May 10, 2016). "Introducing unlimited private repositories". GitHub. Retrieved February 24, 2017.
- ↑ Torvalds, Linus (2007-06-10). "Re: fatal: serious inflate inconsistency". git (Mailing list).
- ↑ Cade Metz (March 12, 2015). "How GitHub Conquered Google, Microsoft, and Everyone Else". WIRED. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Chris Wanstrath (February 22, 2008). "The Blog Arrives". GitHub. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
- ↑ Catone, Josh (24 July 2008). "GitHub Gist is Pastie on Steroids".
GitHub hosts about 10,000 projects and officially launched in April of this year after a beta period of a few months.
- ↑ "reddit (reddit.com's code)". GitHub. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
Joined on Jun 18, 2008
- ↑ "yahoo (Yahoo! Inc.)". GitHub. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
Joined on Jul 09, 2008
- ↑ "GitHub Gist is Pastie on Steroids".
- ↑ Chris Wanstrath (July 21, 2008). "Here's the Gist of it". GitHub. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
- ↑ Preston-Werner, Tom (2008-11-17). "Blogging Like a Hacker". Preston-Werner.com. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
- ↑ "History". Jekyll • Simple, blog-aware, static sites. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Marohn, Kirsti (April 9, 2015). "Website offers peek at politicians' deleted tweets". St. Cloud Times. Retrieved 17 April 2015.
- ↑ "sunlightlabs (Sunlight Labs)". GitHub. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
Joined on Dec 14, 2008
- ↑ Scott Stadum (September 9, 2010). "Tools for Transparency: GitHub". Sunlight Foundation. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
- ↑ Tom Preston-Werner (December 18, 2008). "GitHub Pages". GitHub. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
- ↑ "twitter (Twitter, Inc.)". GitHub. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
Joined on Jan 29, 2009
- ↑ "facebook (Facebook)". GitHub. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
Joined on Apr 01, 2009
- ↑ Tom Preston-Werner (April 20, 2009). "GFM Everywhere!". GitHub. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
- ↑ "GitHub". QuantiModo. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
- ↑ PJ Hyett (July 5, 2009). "100,000 Users!". GitHub. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
- ↑ Dascalescu, Dan (3 November 2009). "The PITA Threshold: GitHub vs. CPAN". Dan Dascalescu's Wiki.
- ↑ Tom Preston-Werner (December 14, 2009). "First commit".
- ↑ "Semantic Versioning 2.0.0". Semantic Versioning. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ "Cloudswave".
- ↑ Ryan Tomayko (March 1, 2010). "Introducing GitHub Compare View". GitHub. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
- ↑ Ryan Tomayko (July 15, 2010). "Cross-Repository Compare View". GitHub. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
- ↑ Zach Holman (July 25, 2010). "One Million Repositories". GitHub. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Andy Brett (July 25, 2010). "GitHub Hits One Million Hosted Projects". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 24, 2017.
- ↑ Rick Olson (technoweenie) (August 12, 2010). "Making GitHub More Open: Git-backed Wikis". GitHub. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
- ↑ Tom Preston-Werner. "Release v1.0.0 · github/gollum". GitHub. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
- ↑ "pinterest (Pinterest)". GitHub. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
Joined on Dec 29, 2010
- ↑ Vicent Martí (April 19, 2011). "Rolling out the Redcarpet". GitHub. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
- ↑ Kyle Neath (20 April 2011). "Those are some big numbers". Git Official Blog. GitHub.
- ↑ 38.0 38.1 Nadia Eghbal (January 28, 2016). "We're in a brave, new post open source world". Medium. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
In 2011, there were 2 million repositories on GitHub. Today, there are over 29 million. GitHub's Brian Doll noted that the first million repositories took nearly 4 years to create; getting from nine to ten million took just 48 days.
- ↑ "Github Has Surpassed Sourceforge and Google Code in Popularity".
During the period Black Duck examined, Github had 1,153,059 commits, Sourceforge had 624,989, Google Code and 287,901 and CodePlex had 49,839.
- ↑ "Github Has Surpassed Sourceforge and Google Code in Popularity".
- ↑ "About". GitHub. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
Hubbernauts Employed 33
- ↑ Chris Wanstrath (August 15, 2011). "Edit like an Ace". GitHub. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
- ↑ Drew Olanoff (October 13, 2011). "Ship it faster and cheaper - GitLab is GitHub for your own servers - The Next Web". The Next Web. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
- ↑ Cade Metz (October 23, 2015). "The Hardest Working Person At Silicon Valley's Most Important Startup Isn't a Person". WIRED. Retrieved February 25, 2017.
- ↑ Corey Donohoe (October 25, 2011). "v1.0.0". GitHub. Retrieved February 25, 2017.
- ↑ Ron Miller (November 14, 2015). "At GitHub You Don't Need No Stinkin' Office, But There Is A Nice One If You Do". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 25, 2017.
- ↑ "HUBOT". GitHub. Retrieved February 25, 2017.
- ↑ "google (Google)". GitHub. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
Joined on Jan 17, 2012
- ↑ Matthew Burton (April 6, 2012). "The CFPB's source code policy: open and shared". Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Scott Merrill (April 9, 2012). "U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Gets Open Source, Publishes on GitHub". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Peter Levine (2012-07-09). "Software Eats Software Development".
- ↑ Alex Williams (September 15, 2012). "GitHub Says Database Issues Caused This Week's Outage and Performance Problems". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Alex Williams (October 18, 2012). "GitHub Goes Down With "Major Disruption" From DDoS Attack". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ "About". GitHub. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
Hubbernauts 139
- ↑ Alex Williams (January 3, 2013). "GitHub Replaces Copy And Paste With ZeroClipboard". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Alex Williams (January 8, 2013). "GitHub Introduces Contributions, A New Way To Display On Profile Pages What Developers Are Doing". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Justin Palmer (January 7, 2013). "Introducing Contributions". GitHub. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Alex Williams (January 17, 2013). "GitHub Passes The 3 Million Developer Mark". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Rob Sanheim (January 16, 2013). "Three Million Users". GitHub. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
Monday night, on the very first day of our all-hands winter summit this week, the three millionth person signed up for a GitHub account.
- ↑ Protalinski, Emil. "The Chinese government appears to be blocking GitHub via DNS (Update: Investigation underway)". The Next Web. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
- ↑ Kan, Michael. "GitHub unblocked in China after former Google head slams its censorship". Computer World. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
- ↑ Claburn, Thomas. "China's GitHub Censorship Dilemma". InformationWeek. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
- ↑ "China, GitHub and the man-in-the-middle". GreatFire. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
- ↑ Alex Williams (February 15, 2013). "GitHub Open Sources "Boxen," A One-Command Tool To Ready Newly Unboxed Macs For Developers". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ John Biggs (September 18, 2013). "GitHub Adds 3D Modeling Features That Make It A Printer-Agnostic Choice For Object Sharing". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
Github, everyone’s favorite nerdery, added STL object file support – basically a system for uploading and rendering 3D models – in April.
- ↑ Ryan Tomayko (April 5, 2013). "New GitHub Pages domain: github.io".
- ↑ Ken Yeung (April 7, 2013). "GitHub moves its hosted developer Pages to a github.io domain over security concerns". Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Robert McMillan (May 9, 2013). "Now You Can Fork U.S. Government Policy … On GitHub". WIRED. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
- ↑ "Open Government Initiative".
- ↑ Alex Williams (May 31, 2013). "GitHub Announces Octokit, The Official Way To Build Using The GitHub API". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Richard Fontana (September 16, 2013). "choosealicense.com and GitHub's license picker". Opensource.com. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Phil Haack (July 15, 2013). "Choosing an Open Source License". GitHub.
- ↑ Earliest tagged release
- ↑ Sawicki, Kevin (April 23, 2015). "Atom Shell is now Electron". Atom. Retrieved 2015-12-02.
- ↑ https://github.com/atom/electron
- ↑ Ingrid Lunden (September 11, 2013). "GitHub Hits The 4M User Mark As It Looks Beyond Developers For Its Next Stage Of Growth". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ James Pearce (December 20, 2013). "2013: A Year of Open Source at Facebook". Facebook Code. Facebook. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
On our GitHub account alone, we now have more than 90 repos comprising over 40,000 commits and that have collectively been forked 15,000 times.
- ↑ "About". GitHub. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
Hubbernauts 234
- ↑ "10 Million Repositories". GitHub. 2013-12-23. Retrieved 2013-12-28.
- ↑ J. O'Dell (December 23, 2013). "GitHub doubled its repositories in 2013 from 5 million to 10 million". VentureBeat.
- ↑ Nikhil Sonnad (July 23, 2014). "Microsoft might finally be committing to open source". Quartz. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
Late last year Microsoft finally made itself an account on Github
- ↑ Frederic Lardinois (January 9, 2014). "GitHub Acquires Y Combinator Alum Easel, A Browser-Based Web Design Tool". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Easel Inc. (January 6, 2014). "Easel Blog: Easel Acquired by GitHub". Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Ryan Day (January 9, 2014). "Easel is a GitHubber". GitHub. Retrieved February 22, 2017.
- ↑ Neil Matatall (January 9, 2017). "Bug Bounty anniversary promotion: bigger bounties in January and February". GitHub. Retrieved February 24, 2017.
The GitHub Bug Bounty Program is turning three years old.
- ↑ Kristin Burnham (October 15, 2015). "How (and why) to start a bug bounty program". Computerworld Hong Kong. Retrieved February 25, 2017.
Shawn Davenport, VP of security at GitHub, launched the company's bug bounty program a year and a half ago, but the time it took to get there was much longer, he says.
- ↑ Cory Doctorow (February 21, 2014). "Whatsapp abused the DMCA to censor related projects from Github". Boing Boing. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ "dmca/2014-02-12-WhatsApp.md at master · github/dmca". GitHub. 2014-02-12. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Henry, Alan (May 8, 2014). "Atom, the Text Editor from GitHub, Goes Free and Open-Source". Lifehacker.
- ↑ Lardinois, Frederic (May 6, 2014). "GitHub Open Sources Its Atom Text Editor". TechCrunch.
- ↑ "Introducing Atom". Atom. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
- ↑ Biddle, Sam; Tiku, Nitasha (17 March 2014). "Meet the Married Duo Behind Tech's Biggest New Harassment Scandal". Vallywag. Gawker. Archived from the original on 17 March 2014. Retrieved March 17, 2014.
- ↑ Wilhelm, Alex (April 21, 2014). "GitHub Denies Allegations Of "Gender-Based Harassment," Co-Founder Preston-Werner Resigns". TechCrunch.
- ↑ "Follow up to the investigation results". April 28, 2014.
- ↑ Frederic Lardinois (May 6, 2014). "GitHub Open Sources Its Atom Text Editor". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
Today, after 10 weeks in public beta, it is making all of the editor available under the MIT open source license, including all of the packages and libraries that make allow it to support different programming languages.
- ↑ Frederic Lardinois (October 7, 2014). "GitHub Partners With DigitalOcean, Unreal Engine, Others To Give Students Free Access To Developer Tools". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ "GitHub Student Developer Pack". GitHub Education. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ John Britton (October 7, 2014). "The best developer tools, now free for students". GitHub. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Lunden, Ingrid. "Russia Blacklists, Blocks GitHub Over Pages That Refer To Suicide". TechCrunch. Retrieved 1 April 2015.
- ↑ Лихачёв, Никита. "AliExpress, 2ch и GitHub попали в реестр запрещённых сайтов" [AliExpress, 2ch and GitHub put on the register of banned sites]. TJournal (in Russian). Retrieved 9 April 2015.
- ↑ "GitHub, Vimeo and 30 more sites blocked in India over content from ISIS". thenextweb.com. The Next Web. 2014-12-31.
- ↑ "India blocks 32 websites, including GitHub, Internet Archive, Pastebin, Vimeo".
- ↑ "GitHub Doubles Down on Maximum Bug Bounty Payouts". Threatpost. January 29, 2015. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
Michael Mimoso
- ↑ "White House open-sources budget data on GitHub". VentureBeat. February 2, 2015. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
Daniel Terdiman
- ↑ "GitHub - WhiteHouse/budgetdata: The data behind the President's 2016 Budget". Retrieved February 27, 2017.
- ↑ "Build software better, together". GitHub. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
There are 257 of us working at GitHub, from all over the globe.
- ↑ Google Project Hosting (2015-03-12). "Bidding farewell to Google Code". Google Open Source Blog. Retrieved 12 March 2015.
- ↑ "Information about Google Code's read-only transition". Retrieved 25 August 2015.
- ↑ "Large Scale DDoS Attack on github.com". github.com. GitHub. 27 March 2015. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
- ↑ "Last night, GitHub was hit with massive denial-of-service attack from China". theverge.com. The Verge. 27 March 2015. Retrieved 27 March 2015.
- ↑ "U.S. Coding Website GitHub Hit With Cyberattack". wsj.com. The Wall Street Journal. 29 March 2015. Retrieved 29 March 2015.
- ↑ "Massive denial-of-service attack on GitHub tied to Chinese government". arstechnica.com. Ars Technica. 31 March 2015. Retrieved 1 April 2015.
- ↑ "GitHub is Like Oxygen".
- ↑ Rick Olson (technoweenie) (April 8, 2015). "Announcing Git Large File Storage (LFS)". GitHub. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
- ↑ "Git Large File Storage". Git Large File Storage. GitHub. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
- ↑ Jordan Novet (April 30, 2015). "GitHub Enterprise comes to Microsoft Azure, GitHub launches Visual Studio 2015 integrations". VentureBeat. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
- ↑ Sam Lambert (May 19, 2015). "Hello World". GitHub Engineering. GitHub. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
- ↑ Jon Russell (June 4, 2015). "GitHub Expands To Japan, Its First Office Outside The U.S.". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Daisuke Don Horie (June 3, 2015). "Announcing GitHub Japan". GitHub. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Frederic Lardinois (June 25, 2015). "GitHub's Atom Text Editor Hits 1.0, Now Has Over 350,000 Monthly Active Users". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
- ↑ Cade Metz (June 25, 2015). "GitHub Atom's Code-Editor Nerds Take Over Their Universe". WIRED. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
- ↑ "GitHub raises $250 million in new funding, now valued at $2 billion". Fortune. 2015-07-29.
- ↑ Joab Jackson (August 12, 2015). "GitHub launches desktop client to lure more developers". PCWorld. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
- ↑ Amy Palamountain (August 12, 2015). "GitHub Desktop is now available". GitHub. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
- ↑ "Build software better, together". GitHub. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
There are 330 of us working at GitHub, from all over the globe.
- ↑ "2 Reasons to Keep an Eye on GitHub".
- ↑ Cade Metz (September 22, 2015). "GitHub Open Sources a Tool That Teaches Students to Code". WIRED. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
- ↑ "Chris Wanstrath - 40 Under 40". Fortune. September 24, 2015. Archived from the original on April 6, 2016. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
- ↑ "GitHub Universe · October 1 - 2, 2015". Retrieved February 28, 2017.
- ↑ Frederic Lardinois (October 1, 2015). "GitHub Launches Support For U2F Security Keys". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
- ↑ Matt Weinberger (October 1, 2015). "GitHub, the $2 billion 'Facebook for programmers,' has a plan to get even bigger". Business Insider. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
- ↑ Robert Hackett (October 1, 2015). "GitHub's newest partnership could do wonders for web security". Fortune. Archived from the original on February 25, 2017. Retrieved February 25, 2017.
- ↑ Jacob Kastrenakes (December 3, 2015). "Apple's new programming language Swift is now open source". The Verge. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
- ↑ "Internet Archive Wayback Machine result, showing snapshots of Apple's GitHub organization page starting December 3, 2015". Retrieved February 28, 2017.
- ↑ "Apple's GitHub organization page as of July 9, 2015, showing no public repositories". archive.fo. July 9, 2015. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
This organization has no public repositories. This organization has no public members. You must be a member to see who's a part of this organization.
- ↑ Jordan Novet (March 28, 2016). "GitHub's Atom text editor hits 1 million monthly active users". VentureBeat. Retrieved February 25, 2017.
- ↑ "A hackable text editor for the 21st Century". Atom. Retrieved February 25, 2017.
In the same way that aggregate usage information is important when developing a web application, we've found that it's just as important for desktop applications. By knowing which Atom features are being used the most, and how the editor is performing, we can focus our development efforts in the right place.
- ↑ Cade Metz (April 5, 2016). "Triple Play: GitHub's Code Now Lives in Three Places at Once". WIRED. Retrieved February 25, 2017.
- ↑ "Introducing DGit". GitHub Engineering. April 5, 2016. Retrieved February 25, 2017.
- ↑ "Building resilience in Spokes". GitHub Engineering. September 7, 2016. Retrieved February 25, 2017.
- ↑ Klint Finley (May 12, 2016). "JavaScript Conquered the Web. Now It's Taking Over the Desktop". WIRED. Retrieved February 24, 2017.
- ↑ "electron v1.0.0". GitHub.
- ↑ "Build software better, together". GitHub. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
There are 568 of us working at GitHub, from all over the globe.
- ↑ John Mannes (July 6, 2016). "Nike releases open-source software to play with the techies". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
- ↑ Dan O'Shea (July 7, 2016). "Nike releases open source code on GitHub". Retail Dive. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
- ↑ "Forbes Cloud 100". Forbes. Retrieved 31 October 2016.
- ↑ "Program". GitHub Universe. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
- ↑ "Frequently Asked Questions". GitHub Universe. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
- ↑ "Turkey blocked GitHub and Dropbox to hide leaks – reports".
- ↑ "Build software better, together". GitHub. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
592 Employees worldwide
- ↑ Nadia Eghbal (February 14, 2017). "Announcing Open Source Guides". GitHub.
- ↑ gdad-s-river (February 18, 2017). "How To Contribute To Open Source? — GitHub Just Released A Massive Guide To Help You". Fossbytes. Retrieved February 23, 2017.