I Inherited an Open Source Project
Last week I was browsing Twitter when I noticed a retweet where Honzawas putting all of his open source projects up for adoption since he is going to go work at Apple. I took a look at the long list of neat projects that were up for adoption and decided to throw my hat in the ring for Pong.
Pong is a simple self-hosted server monitoring tool written in Swift. I have been increasingly interested in server side swift so this is a great opportunity to dive in a learn some more.
I don’t have any major plans for this project right now other than being a good steward and a responsive maintainer. If you have some ideas of things that you would like to see please let me know!
Thank you for reading! Share your thoughts with me on bluesky, mastodon, or via email.
Check out some more stuff to read down below.
Most popular posts this month
- Great Lakes, Illinois
- My Custom Miniflux CSS Theme
- Are we inside a Sarlacc?
- Setting up ANTLR4 on Windows
- Terminal RSS Reader With Nom
Recent Favorite Blog Posts
This is a collection of the last 8 posts that I bookmarked.
- A Year Of Vibes from Armin Ronacher's Thoughts and Writings
- Pluralistic: A perfect distillation of the social uselessness of finance (18 Dec 2025) from Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
- Moving from WordPress to Substack from charity.wtf
- Grow, Like a Tree Not a Cancer from Jim Nielsen’s Blog
- Pluralistic: All the books I reviewed in 2025 (02 Dec 2025) from Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
- DEP-18: A proposal for Git-based collaboration in Debian from Optimized by Otto
- [RIDGELINE] No Phones in The Ten-don Shop from Craig Mod — Writer + Photographer
- Open design: the opportunity design students didn’t know they were missing from Ubuntu blog
Articles from blogs I follow around the net
2025 was for AI what 2010 was for cloud (xpost)
The satellite, experimental technology has become the mainstream, foundational tech. (At least in developer tools.) (xposted from new home) I was at my very first job, Linden Lab, when EC2 and S3 came out in 2006. We were running Second Life out of three …
via charity.wtf December 22, 20252025 was for AI what 2010 was for cloud
The satellite, experimental technology has become the mainstream, foundational tech. (At least in developer tools.)
via charity.wtf December 22, 2025What New Developers Need to Know About Working with AI
It’s been a few years since I wrote Letters to a New Developer, about what I wish I’d known when I was starting out. The industry has changed with the […]
via Dan Moore! December 22, 2025Generated by openring