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Celebrate Pride with GitHub

Pride month is here, and we have a few LGBTQ-focused festivities lined up to celebrate. This year, we're hosting our annual Pride party, releasing brand new Pridetocat t-shirts, and marching in the San Francisco Pride Parade.

T-shirts

This year's special edition Pridetocat and Transtocat shirts will hit the OctoShop on June 20. With 400 sold, last year's tees raised more than $10,000 in proceeds donated to Lesbians Who Tech, Maven, and Trans*H4CK. We hope you'll enjoy the new shirts just as much and help us support grassroots LGBTQ organizations working in the Bay Area.

Party

Date: Monday, June 20
Time: 5:30pm-9:00pm
Location: GitHub HQ

Celebrate Pride with us at GitHub HQ. Meet up with old friends, make new ones, and learn about some of the great things happening in the LGBTQ community at our annual Pride Party. You can swing by to purchase a Pridetocat t-shirt, learn about the ways GitHub is being used to benefit the LGBTQ community, and hear from a few speakers to be announced later this month.

This event is open to all LGBTQ-identified folks and allies. Stay tuned for speaker lineup and registration details.

Patchwork

Date: Tuesday, June 22
Time: 7:00pm-10:00pm
Location: GitHub HQ

Learn Git and GitHub at a special LGBTQ edition of Patchwork. No coding experience is needed to participate in this free, hands-on workshop with support and talks from GitHubbers and special guests from the LGBTQ community. Everyone is welcome to join.

Register now or take a moment to learn more about our Patchwork events.

March

Date: Sunday, June 26
Time: 10:30am-end
Location: Downtown San Francisco

This all culminates in the annual San Francisco Pride Parade on Sunday, June 26. This year, we are so excited to march in the Pride Parade along with our friends at Salesforce to support our LGBTQ Hubbers and to celebrate San Francisco's diverse community. We hope to see you all there!

Improvements to Notification Emails

We've rolled out several changes to our email notifications. Now you have more ways to filter your email notifications and each email will contain more information about why you received it.

Updates to the footer

image 2016-05-26 at 2 15 55 pm

The footer of every email now indicates why you've received a specific correspondence. It contains the same subscription reasons that are available on GitHub.com—for example, whether you or your team were directly mentioned.

If you no longer want to follow a thread, you can mute any new conversations directly from the email. (Note that this will only work for email clients configured to receive HTML emails).

Notification reason as the CC email address

image 2016-05-26 at 2 13 45 pm

In addition, the same notification reasons exist as a CC email address. This should help with labelling and filtering emails you receive for services like GMail and iCloud that don't support filtering by our X-GitHub-Reason header.

Our Help documentation provides a full list of the subscription reasons.


We hope these changes enhance your email notification experience!

Let’s talk systems at CodeConf LA: June 27-29, 2016

CodeConf LA is happening next month

We’re welcoming the open source community to Los Angeles for three days of talks, workshops, and festivities. CodeConf LA is approaching fast, so grab your ticket or donate one today.

Theme

This year’s event will focus on systems engineering projects, practices, and programs in the open source community. Together, we’ll delve into the technical components and cultural aspects of systems—from maintaining critical infrastructure projects to teaching the next generation of systems engineers.

Sessions

June 27: A full day of workshops on using Innersource, Git internals, and graph databases
June 28-29: More than 25 featured sessions, lightning talks, and speaker Q&As

Over the course of the conference, there will be back-to-back talks exploring different subjects from contrasting perspectives, followed by a chance to participate in the conversation with other attendees.

Speakers

This year’s event rounds up more than 20 speakers from across the open source community—including developers, designers, and data technicians from Mozilla, the US Department of Commerce, and IBM. We’re also welcoming featured speakers:

  • Michael Bernstein, Vice President of Community at Code Climate
  • Josh Aas, Executive Director at Let’s Encrypt
  • Nadia Eghbal, Founder and Venture Capitalist
  • Kelsey Hightower, Developer at Google
  • Mitchell Hashimoto, Founder and CEO at HashiCorp

Stay tuned for a more detailed speaker schedule, which we'll be rolling out over the next few weeks.

Venues

CodeConf is accessible from both LAX and BUR airports and is just around the corner from the Hollywood/Vine LA Metro stop. Parking is available but limited so we recommend taking a taxi or rideshare to the venue.

Conference Venue: Avalon Hollywood
1735 Vine St, Los Angeles, CA 90028
CodeConf LA will be held at Avalon Hollywood in Los Angeles, one of Hollywood’s most historic landmarks, a five-minute walk from both the Hollywood/Vine Metro Stop and the W Hotel.

Hotel: The W Hollywood
6250 Hollywood Blvd, Hollywood, California, 90028
Just a five-minute walk from the conference venue, the W Hollywood is situated on Hollywood Blvd, under the shadow of the iconic Hollywood sign.

Gatherings

Afterparty: Hyde Sunset Kitchen
8117 Sunset Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90046
Last year we saw live music at Nashville’s Country Music Hall of Fame. This year we’re playing pub trivia, enjoying delectable dessert bites by Top Chef Chris Crary, and making conversation around the patio firepit.

Tickets

Tickets to CodeConf 2016 are on sale for $399 and include access to all workshops, sessions, and the afterparty. Get your tickets today, or learn more about the event at codeconf.com. See you in LA!

Drag-and-drop tasks in Markdown task lists

You can now move checklist items around just by dragging and dropping them. Reorder items quickly and easily without editing the original comment's Markdown.

re-order

How to re-order task list items

Create a task list item using - [ ] at the start of a new line. When you hover over the left-hand side of an item's checkbox, you'll see the option to drag and drop it into a new location.

Learn more from our our documentation.

Mission Report: GitHub Satellite

satellitepanorama

On May 11 in Amsterdam, over 500 developers converged at GitHub Satellite to share and hear stories about open source, enterprise software, engineering best practices, and more. In case you missed it, here are some highlights and findings:

We kicked off the day with a session by GitHub CEO Chris Wanstrath, who shared a few brand new developments from around the GitHub Universe.

Unlimited Private Repositories

One of the very best things about Git and other distributed version control systems is the ability to create a new repository without asking permission or getting approval. While this has always been true for our public plans, it hasn’t been the case for individuals and teams working together in private. All of that changed with the introduction of unlimited private repositories into all of our paid plans. For detailed information on pricing changes, check out this blog post.

Electron 1.0

Electron 1.0 represents a major milestone in API stability and maturity. This release allows you to build apps that act and feel truly native on Windows, Mac, and Linux. Building Electron apps is easier than ever with new docs, new tools, and a new app to walk you through the Electron APIs. Check out the full write-up of the new release here.

11 05 16 wgf github -6676

All of the talks from the general sessions, as well as the Discover and Develop breakouts will be available to view soon, so keep your eye on Twitter..

GitHub Satellite would not have been possible without the support of our excellent sponsors, who provided delicious food, juice, coffee, and beautiful art installations for our enjoyment. Thanks to IBM, Heroku, Travis-CI, CircleCI, waffle.io, and Apiary.

The GitHub Universe continues to expand—join us on when we return to Pier 70 in San Francisco for the second annual Universe Conference, September 14-15.

Multiple assignees on Issues and Pull requests

Issues and pull requests often need to be assigned to more than one person. Multiple Assignees are now supported, allowing up to 10 people to be added to a given Issue or Pull request.

Using multiple assignees

Assignees can be added and removed on the web UI by clicking on the assignees dropdown in the sidebar and adding multiple users.

multipleassignees

Check out the documentation for more information on this feature.

Diversity and Inclusion at GitHub

At GitHub our goal is to help everyone build better software. To do that, we know we must create a company where anyone, regardless of what they look like or where they come from, can grow and thrive. When we deliberately seek different perspectives, life experiences, and identities, we can build better products for developers all around the world.

Over the past 18 months, diversity and inclusion have become a major focus for us. We’ve learned how diversity of life experiences makes a big difference in how we identify and solve problems, design software, and communicate. Today, we’re releasing our diversity data for the first time to show where we’ve made progress, where we haven’t, and to be transparent about how much further we have to go. We will also provide updates annually and share lessons we learn along the way.

This journey started for us in 2014, after we made some major mistakes and people got hurt. We were forced to re-evaluate our culture and our goals. We had to ask ourselves hard questions about where we fell short.

We started by looking at our own demographics—and they weren’t good. Our diversity was nowhere near industry standard, which is already too low. We also asked what we needed to do to make GitHub a place where everyone can do their best work, then started making changes.

So far, we’re seeing early signs of progress. For example, GitHub has grown from under 1% women of color at the end of 2014 to over 10% today. We’ve increased the number of women in leadership roles to 35% while the number of women overall has grown from 21% in 2014 to 36% today. Of our US employees, 6% are Latino and more than 1% of Hubbers identify as transgender, genderqueer, or nonbinary. We are proud that these are all growing segments of our company.

Still, we are falling short in obvious ways. There are no Black/African-American GitHubbers in management positions, which is unacceptable. Diversity in technical roles lags behind our overall organization. Our gender imbalance remains. And we still have a lot of work to do to ensure we are building an inclusive culture.

Specifically some of the areas we’re focusing on are:

  • Improving our recruitment processes to find candidates from all backgrounds, ensure that they meet a diverse slate of interviewers, and improve our hiring and onboarding practices so they are inclusive.

  • Institutionalizing our long-held belief that formal education is only one of many paths to success at GitHub and in tech overall. We want to hire great people based on their skills, which can be obtained in a multitude of ways.

  • Providing training for all Hubbers on building emotional intelligence, mitigating bias, and interpersonal communication as critical pieces of building inclusive culture.

  • Expanding our benefits to include transgender health care, fertility treatments, and ensuring that our maternity/paternity leave policies exceed the tech industry’s norms.

  • Modifying our San Francisco office to be more accessible. We’ve always intended our headquarters to be welcoming to our community by hosting events and are currently making changes to make it more inclusive. Hopefully we’ll see you here someday in the future.

  • Building partnerships with organizations that are successfully removing barriers to entry in tech like EveryoneOn, CODE2040, and Maven. This is a deliberate investment in the future workforce of our industry and in those who will increasingly use GitHub to build amazing things.

In looking at our data and the areas we're focusing on, there's a lot to be hopeful about—but we still have so much further to go. We are just at the beginning of making substantial changes and seeing their results.

I’ve personally learned a great deal over the past few years. One huge lesson for me has been learning that everyone has the potential to be a great developer, but not everyone has the opportunity. That's something we want to fix in our company and our community, and I invite you to join us in doing so.

I’ve also learned that increasing diversity isn’t a short term project but a lifelong journey. We want our company to reflect our world and I look forward to sharing updates on our progress with you in the future.

View the report

Repository Invitations

Beginning today, repository admins must invite you to their repository and you must accept the invitation before you can start collaborating. Repository invitations let you decide whether or not you want to join as a contributor.

Collaborating with other developers is one of the best parts of open source on GitHub, but getting there hasn't always been a happy journey. Previously, anyone could automatically add other developers to their repositories without explicit permission. This model openly provided some users with opportunities to harass members of our community by inviting them to offensive or attention-seeking repositories.

New invitation acceptance page

With repository invitations, every GitHub user can accept or decline requests to collaborate on someone else's repository. Should those invites go too far—due to spam or malicious content—you have the option to block the user sending them. Blocked users cannot invite you, fork your repositories, or comment on your activity.

Repository invitations are a big step forward in providing you with more control of your experiences on GitHub. We're excited to encourage more positive and respectful interactions between our users and look forward to future opportunities to further improve our community.

Learn more about repository invitations and contact support with any questions or feedback.

GitHub Pages now runs Jekyll 3.1

As promised, GitHub Pages has moved to the Jekyll 3.1 branch with an upgrade to Jekyll 3.1.6. Jekyll 3.1 brings significant performance improvements to GitHub Pages. By using Liquid::Drops, rather than Ruby Hashes, Jekyll now calculates document and site metadata on demand, rather than calculating every possible value at build time.

While this should be a seamless transition for most GitHub Pages users, we recommend that all users test locally using the GitHub Pages Gem before pushing. This ensures that your site will continue to build as expected. Three things to note as you upgrade:

  1. All front matter defined in layouts are now accessible only via {{ layout }}. In you define a variable width: full in your layout's YAML front matter, access it with layout.width.

  2. The inheritance of front matter values properly merges a child layout's front matter over its parent's front matter. If you define a variable color: purple in a layout called post which has a parent layout of default, and you define color: blue in the default layout, then {{ layout.color }} will be purple. For more on this, read the pull request that made the change.

  3. If you are using the Jekyll Bootstrap theme, you must update the contents of _includes/JB/setup to use {{ layout.theme.name }} instead of {{ page.theme.name }}.

Beyond the performance improvements, Jekyll 3.1.6 includes over 100 changes, including many bug fixes, both to the rendering process and to the experience of previewing Jekyll locally.

For a full list of changes, see the Jekyll changelog and of course, if you have any questions, please get in touch with us.

More contributions on your profile

Earning green squares on your contribution graph means celebrating the work you do in open source and public projects. Starting today, you can also celebrate the work you do in private by sharing anonymized contributions from private repositories.

GitHub contribution graph settings

We think including your work in private repositories is a more accurate representation of your contributions, but your privacy is important too. Private contributions are not shown by default and, when enabled, are completely anonymized to the general public. You can opt into sharing your private contributions in your profile settings. Details of the issues, pull requests, and commits you have made on private repositories are only visible to your fellow repository collaborators.

As part of this update, code streaks are no longer featured on your contribution graph. The simplified interface focuses on the work you're doing rather than the duration of your activity.

Now that every paid plan includes unlimited private repositories, you can experiment all you want in private and still add to your contribution graph. For more information, read our help guide for toggling private contributions on your profile.

Migrate your repositories using ghe-migrator

Sometimes customers find themselves needing the unique advantages of GitHub Enterprise and decide to move their private repositories there. Now it's easier than ever to move repositories to GitHub Enterprise from GitHub.com or instances of GitHub Enterprise using ghe-migrator. In fact, it's helped more than 120 organizations migrate more than 2,500 repositories in the last nine months alone.

The advantage of using ghe-migrator instead of manually cloning and pushing repositories is that it includes GitHub data with the repository, including its issues, pull requests, user data, and wiki.

Completed migration to GitHub Enterprise

Before getting started

First off, using the ghe-migrator utility requires GitHub Enterprise version 2.3 or greater. If your version is not recent enough to use ghe-migrator, please refer to the documentation for upgrading GitHub Enterprise. The migration process also requires two other servers to be running. You will need a unix-based server running GitHub Enterprise's backup-utils and another instance of GitHub Enterprise (running the same version as your production instance) to perform dry runs of the migration.

If you are using authentication mechanisms such as LDAP or SAML, or want to enforce user naming conventions, you should also compile a CSV of username mappings. The CSV should look like this (substituting githubenterprise.example.com with the URL of your GitHub Enterprise instance):

model_name,source_url,target_url,action
user,https://github.com/nathos,https://githubenterprise.example.com/nhenderson,map
user,https://github.com/allthedoll,https://githubenterprise.example.com/jstrusz,map
user,https://github.com/jonmagic,https://githubenterprise.example.com/jhoyt,rename
user,https://github.com/mattcantstop,https://githubenterprise.example.com/mduff,map

Where source_url refers to the URL of a given GitHub.com user, and target_url contains the desired username in GitHub Enterprise. Use the map action if the target user already exists on GitHub Enterprise, and rename if the user needs to be created. You can learn more about custom mappings in the GitHub Enterprise Documentation.

All of the commands below will run directly on the GitHub Enterprise instance. Start by logging in to the administrative shell using SSH.

Note: All of the steps below should be performed on the sandbox instance of GitHub Enterprise before running them on the production instance.

You will need a personal access token from GitHub.com with the admin:org permission selected. The token must be generated by an owner of the organization that contains the repositories you wish to migrate. Once obtained, set an environment variable on your GitHub Enterprise instance for easy reference.

export GITHUB_TOKEN=[your personal access token]

You will also need a personal access token from your GitHub Enterprise instance from a site admin user. This will be the user performing the import to GitHub Enterprise.

It is important to make frequent backups of your GitHub Enterprise instance using backup-utils in between each step of the migration process. This affords flexibility in trying different migration strategies.

Exporting from GitHub.com

From your GitHub Enterprise instance, run the following cURL command to start an export job on GitHub.com. Substitute your organization name and list of repositories to export.

curl -H "Authorization: token ${GITHUB_TOKEN}" -X POST \
  -H "Accept: application/vnd.github.wyandotte-preview+json" \
  -d'{"lock_repositories":false,"repositories":["githubschool/example-repository"]}' \
  https://api.github.com/orgs/githubschool/migrations

From the response body, we want to capture the migration url, denoted by the url key in the JSON. Save it to an environment variable.

export MIGRATION_URL=https://api.github.com/orgs/githubschool/migrations/999

Note: When running this command on your sandbox instance, set "lock_repositories" to false. When you do your production migration, set it to true, and it will prevent users from creating commits, pull requests, issues, etc on the repository on GitHub.com.

The previous command will send a response immediately, indicating that the export of your repositories has begun on GitHub.com. You'll need to send a request to the migration status endpoint to monitor the status of the export. This command will poll the migration API every thirty seconds then output exported when it's complete.

unset STATE
until [[ $STATE == *"exported"* ]]
do
  STATE="$(curl -s -H "Authorization: token ${GITHUB_TOKEN}" \
  -H "Accept: application/vnd.github.wyandotte-preview+json" \
  $MIGRATION_URL \
  | grep -E '"state": ".*"')"
  echo $STATE
  sleep 5
done

When the job is complete, it will display "state": "exported" then exit.

Note: If you prefer to check the status of the export manually, and review more information about the export, you may simply send a simple cURL request to the migration API.

curl -s -H "Authorization: token ${GITHUB_TOKEN}" \
-H "Accept: application/vnd.github.wyandotte-preview+json" \
$MIGRATION_URL

This next command will download the exported archive.

ARCHIVE_URL=`curl -H "Authorization: token ${GITHUB_TOKEN}" \
  -H "Accept: application/vnd.github.wyandotte-preview+json" \
  $MIGRATION_URL/archive`; \
  curl "${ARCHIVE_URL}" -o migration_archive.tar.gz

The archive is stored on GitHub's servers, and will automatically be deleted after seven days. However, you can run this command to delete it immediately.

curl -H "Authorization: token ${GITHUB_TOKEN}" -X DELETE \
  -H "Accept: application/vnd.github.wyandotte-preview+json" \
  $MIGRATION_URL/archive

Preparing to import

Next, you want to unpack the archive and prepare GitHub Enterprise for the import. In this step, GitHub Enterprise makes note of the objects that will be imported by saving references to them in a database table.

ghe-migrator prepare migration_archive.tar.gz

It's important to capture the Migration GUID from the previous command's output. Save that to an environment variable.

export MIGRATION_GUID=e9ebc5fe-9694-45af-925c-376651d933d7

It's possible that users, repositories, organizations, or other entities will have conflicting names. ghe-migrator comes with a utility to detect and output these conflicts to a CSV file.

ghe-migrator conflicts -g $MIGRATION_GUID > conflicts.csv

conflicts.csv will contain the naming collisions for the import and their suggested actions to resolve those collisions. You may need to rename some models, map them from GitHub.com to their GitHub Enterprise counterpart, or merge them together, as in members of a team. You can read about how to resolve migration conflicts in our GitHub Enterprise documentation.

Once you're satisfied with the mappings you've set in conflicts.csv, you can send that file back to ghe-migrator to be interpreted.

ghe-migrator map -i conflicts.csv -g $MIGRATION_GUID

This is also a good point to include any username mappings you may have set up earlier.

ghe-migrator map -i username_mappings.csv -g $MIGRATION_GUID

Import and audit

With mappings in place, you can now import our archive into GitHub Enterprise.

ghe-migrator import migration_archive.tar.gz -g $MIGRATION_GUID -u AdminUser

Where AdminUser is the username of a Site Admin on the GitHub Enterprise Appliance. After entering this command, you will be prompted to enter the GitHub Enterprise personal access token you set up during preparation.

Tip: To see what records are going to be imported or mapped before importing, you can run ghe-migrator audit -g $MIGRATION_GUID

After the import is complete, you can use ghe-migrator audit to see what was imported. Typically, you'll want to filter for records that failed to import.

ghe-migrator audit -s failed_import,failed_map,failed_rename,failed_merge -g $MIGRATION_GUID

Once you are satisfied that the migration has completed successfully, you need to unlock the repositories on the GitHub Enterprise instance to allow users to access it. They are locked by default to prevent anyone from using them before you're sure you're happy with the import.

You may choose to unlock all repositories from this migration at once from the command line:

ghe-migrator unlock -g $MIGRATION_GUID -u YOUR-USERNAME -p YOUR-TOKEN

Or you may choose to unlock repositories individually using the Site Admin tools:

  1. Go to Admin Tools (stafftools) for each repository that was migrated.

    stafftools shortcut

  2. Click on Admin in the left sidebar.

    Admin link

  3. Click Unlock in the Single Repository Lock area.

    Unlock repo button

Conclusion

Now you'll be able to use your repositories that were once on GitHub.com in your company's instance of GitHub Enterprise. Important related information, such as issues and pull requests, will accompany your repositories. Should you require guidance with the ghe-migrator utility, GitHub Professional Services is here to help by offering on-site and remote migration assistance.

Other Resources

  • To learn more about ghe-migrator's capabilities, you can consult the GitHub Enterprise Migration documentation.
  • A guided video demonstration of the steps in this article is available on our YouTube channel.
  • For importing repositories to GitHub.com, read our blog post about the GitHub Importer.

Introducing unlimited private repositories

unlimited private repositories

We couldn’t be more excited to announce that all of our paid plans on GitHub.com now include unlimited private repositories. GitHub will always be free for public and open source projects, but starting today there are just two ways to pay for GitHub.com:

  • Personal: $7/month
  • Organization: $9/user/month, $25/month for your first five users

One of the very best things about Git and other distributed version control systems is the ability to create a new repository without asking permission or getting approval. While this has always been true for our public plans, it hasn’t been the case for individuals and teams working together in private. All that changes today.

If you’re new to GitHub, you can sign up to start using unlimited private repositories. If you’re already using GitHub.com, read on to learn how these changes will impact you.

Individual developers

If you’re using GitHub for private projects, now there’s just one paid plan—unlimited private repositories for $7/month. No matter what you were paying before, your plan now includes as many repositories as you need to work on projects in private—you can even invite collaborators.

Over the next few days, we will automatically move all paid accounts, from Micro to Large, to the new plan. If you’re currently paying for one of those larger plans, look out for a prorated credit on your account.

Organizations

If you’re currently paying for one of our organization plans, you’ll have the option to upgrade to unlimited private repositories at any time. For many of you, this change will mean immediate freedom from repository limits and a better way to grow and pay for GitHub.

We want everyone to have a plan with unlimited private repositories, but don’t worry—you are welcome to stay on your current plan while you evaluate the new cost structure and understand how to best manage your organization members and their private repository access. And while we're currently not enforcing a timeline to move, rest assured that you'll have at least 12 months notice before any mandated change to your plan.

A better way to work

We’ve heard from developers across our community that this new model is a better way to work. We agree—through years of building our business and developing GitHub for you, we've seen first hand the advantages of working without private repository limits. We hope you’ll create more repositories, write more code, and keep doing amazing things with GitHub.

As always, we’re here to help. Take a look at our new plans, learn how to update your personal or organization plan, or get in touch—we’d love to hear from you.

Frequently asked questions

For a paid organization on GitHub.com what kind of users will be charged?

You must purchase a seat for each user in your GitHub.com organization. These users fill a seat:

  • Organization members and owners
  • Pending invitations
  • Outside collaborators with access to 1 or more private repositories

These users do not fill a seat:

  • Outside collaborators with access to only public repositories
  • Billing managers

Will GitHub force me to move to per-user pricing after 12 months?

No. At this time we are not enforcing a timeline to move and if in the future we do decide to set a timeline we are committing to giving you at least 12 months.

I am an existing organization customer and prefer the per-repository plans. Can I remain on my current plan?

Yes, you can choose to continue paying based on the number of repositories you use. You can also upgrade or downgrade in the legacy repository structure based on the number of repositories you need.

Can there be collaborators on private repositories for the personal plan?

Yes. A paid personal account allows you to invite collaborators directly to your private repositories. If you need more granular permissions beyond full access, an organization plan is recommended.

Electron 1.0 is here

For two years, Electron has lowered the barrier to developing desktop applications—making it possible for developers to build cross-platform apps using HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. Now we’re excited to share a major milestone for Electron and for the community behind it. The release of Electron 1.0 is now available from electron.atom.io.

New to Electron? Electron is an open source framework that can help you build apps for Mac, Windows, and Linux. See how:

What’s new in Electron 1.0

Electron 1.0 comes with API stability and usability improvements, and makes it simpler than ever to explore and learn about Electron APIs with a new app, Electron API Demos. We’re also releasing and improving upon a couple tools that help developers along the way.

Read the full story on the Electron blog

Built on Electron

In just the last year, we’ve seen 1.2 million downloads and a growing community of hundreds of developers, open source maintainers, and companies who use the framework as the foundation of their apps. They’ve built everything from email, chat, and Git apps to SQL analytics tools, torrent clients, and robots. Take a tour of even more Electron apps to see what’s possible.

Electron downloads

Electron 1.0 is the result of a community effort by hundreds of developers, building amazing things. Are you ready to build your first Electron app? Get started with our quick start guide—we can’t wait to see what you create.

Better discoverability for GitHub Pages sites

Ensuring that your GitHub Pages site appears in search engines and is shareable via social media is now easier with the introduction of the Jekyll SEO Tag plugin.

By simply adding the {% seo %} tag to your site's template Jekyll will automatically add the appropriate search engine metadata to each page, including the page title, description, canonical URL, next and previous URLs for posts, and JSON-LD site and post metadata to help your site get properly indexed by search engines.

Additionally, the SEO tag plugin adds open graph and summary card metadata, ensuring properties like the title, description, and any featured images are displayed richly when your content is shared on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and other social networks.

While you've always been able to add the various metadata tags yourself, the plugin provides a battle-tested template of crowdsourced best-practices, which along with the Jekyll sitemap plugin, will help your site appear in major search engines.

For more information, see using Jekyll SEO Tag on GitHub Pages.

Happy Search Engine Optimizing!

GitHub Desktop now has a dark side

GitHub Desktop on Windows is a nice complement to developer tools such as Atom and Visual Studio. Now it visually complements those tools too! The latest update adds the ability to select a new dark theme.

GitHub Desktop with dark theme enabled

You can access this setting from the Options menu in GitHub Desktop.

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