WYULWETJ4VKT2UOTKJWJTBO7W2TDXUWMLCN7WT5543H7VQ57FGRQC
NYFLNSVVETUQ6ODIEMFKWUXPLWM2XQNSKLO5J7ZHCHP6L5JQLSEQC
ARAFRHKULUG66WDRPKJB4GL5WCMP4LD2TRTYO3RA2T3XZDRLXEUQC
UH3YXOLFMHJD6GJOW6P5BSHAM5XVV623ZBEYNKSF5YFFSGC7UWPAC
4AZS4L6BP7TTCR5RUB36TG5PTEEIMSTGKB5IVB5QNHJVMRF7LMZQC
KPHR32IR66UCKNT6ZSMILVAHDFQWWEW2X64QNHFEJOINV7IG5GMQC
PMBAMPBILIG73B7YUGBDXLEUDMEHIUBL3SO72WMWSRLFYNNB43EAC
<!-- .slide: data-background="img/background/usb-sticks.jpg" data-background-color="black" data-background-opacity="0.3"-->
# Back To The Future
[https://pxhere.com/en/photo/652221](https://pxhere.com/en/photo/652221) <!-- .element: class="attribution" -->
note:
**Time Elapsed:** 15 min.
TODO: vind een manier om het publiek hier te vragen welke features ze zoeken.
Altijd goed om dan ook al wat keuze te bieden.
De Pijul-website staat aardig vol met kritiek op Git - handig om inspiratie op te doen.
Let wel: dit onderdeel kan wat mij betreft als eerste vervallen; mochten we in tijdnood komen.
---
<!-- .slide: data-background="img/background/usb-sticks.jpg" data-background-color="black" data-background-opacity="0.3"-->
# Veracity
[https://pxhere.com/en/photo/652221](https://pxhere.com/en/photo/652221) <!-- .element: class="attribution" -->
note:
**Time Elapsed:** 25 min.
---
<h2>Will Git Be Around</h2>
<h1>Forever?</h1>
<h4>A List Of Possible Successors</h4>
<table>
<tr>
<td style="vertical-align: middle;">Hanno Embregts</td>
<td style="text-align: right;"><img width="20%" data-src="img/icons/twitter-white.png" class="no-background"/></td>
<td style="vertical-align: middle; padding: 0 0 0 0"><a href="https://www.twitter.com/hannotify">@hannotify</a></td>
</tr>
</table>
<img data-src="img/logos/voxxed-days-athens.png" width="40%" class="no-background"/>
<br/>
<aside class="notes">
<p>
<strong>Time Elapsed:</strong> 0 min.
</p>
<p>
Hi, my name is Hanno.
I work at Info Support as an IT consultant.
Also, I'm from the Netherlands.
Now, everything you've heard about my country is probably true.
When we go to work in the morning, we wear our wooden clogs.
We never drive cars to work; no, we ride our bikes.
Or we ice-skate in the winter.
On our daily commute we easily pass ten different windmills.
And the office cafeteria serves stroopwafels ONLY.
I actually brought some with me, because we have plenty of them.
So feel free to grab one after the talk.
Or DURING the talk, if you get bored.
I didn't say WHEN you get bored, I said IF you get bored!
</p>
</aside>
<h2>Will Git Be Around</h2>
<h1>Forever?</h1>
<h4>A List Of Possible Successors</h4>
<table>
<tr>
<td style="vertical-align: middle;">Hanno Embregts</td>
<td style="text-align: right;"><img width="20%" data-src="img/icons/twitter-white.png" class="no-background"/></td>
<td style="vertical-align: middle; padding: 0 0 0 0"><a href="https://www.twitter.com/hannotify">@hannotify</a></td>
</tr>
</table>
<img data-src="img/logos/voxxed-days-athens.png" width="40%" class="no-background"/>
<br/>
<aside class="notes">
<p>
<strong>Time Elapsed:</strong> 0 min.
</p>
<p>
Hi, my name is Hanno.
I'm from the Netherlands, where I work at Info Support as an IT consultant.
Besides doing consultancy work, I also teach a few courses.
Now at Info Support we offer a wide range of courses, which exist mainly to get our junior colleagues up to speed with important concepts or products they'll need for their daily work.
</p>
<p>
One of the courses I teach is called 'Git for Developers'.
It's a one-day course where we teach the students how to use Git as a developer (none of that GUI stuff of course; command-line For The Win!).
Besides doing the practical stuff we also discuss the pros and cons of distributed version control systems and how they compare to the earlier VCS's, like CVS and Subversion.
Now the other day a student came to me after attending the course and said: "Git is great and all that, but what is gonna be the next big thing?"
</p>
<p>
Which was a great question, because I couldn't really answer it.
I was quite sure distributed version control systems like Git and Mercurial would be around for a while longer, so that's what I told him.
And he replied: "Surely Git won't be around forever?!"
Now I really hated the fact that I couldn't tell him more on the subject, so I decided to research the matter a bit further.
And what started out as finding the answer to a simple question turned into giving a conference talk.
Which is the one you're attending right now!
</p>
<p>
So, welcome to you all.
I'm going to assume that you are all more or less like the student I told you about.
He just couldn't believe that everything in version control land would stay the same for a long period of time.
And I hope you're also a little bit like me, because you probably also can't stand not being able to know the answer to a question.
So, let's see if we can find the answer together, shall we?
</p>
</aside>
<!-- .slide: data-background="img/background/usb-sticks.jpg" data-background-color="black" data-background-opacity="0.3"-->
# Teaching A Course On Git
[https://pxhere.com/en/photo/652221](https://pxhere.com/en/photo/652221) <!-- .element: class="attribution" -->
note:
**Time Elapsed:** 1 min.
Besides doing consultancy work, I also teach a few courses.
Now at Info Support we offer a wide range of courses, which exist mainly to get our junior colleagues up to speed with important concepts or products they'll need for their daily work.
One of the courses I teach is called 'Git for Developers'.
It's a one-day course where we teach the students how to use Git as a developer (none of that GUI stuff of course; command-line For The Win!).
Besides doing the practical stuff we also discuss the pros and cons of distributed version control systems and how they compare to the earlier VCS's, like CVS and Subversion.
Now the other day a student came to me after attending the course and said: "Git is great and all that, but what is gonna be the next big thing?"
Which was a great question, because I couldn't really answer it.
I was quite sure distributed version control systems like Git and Mercurial would be around for a while longer, so that's what I told him.
And he replied: "Surely Git won't be around forever?!"
Now I really hated the fact that I couldn't tell him more on the subject, so I decided to research the matter a bit further.
And what started out as finding the answer to a simple question turned into giving a conference talk.
Which is the one you're attending right now!
So, welcome to you all.
I'm going to assume that you are all more or less like the student I told you about.
He just couldn't believe that everything in version control land would stay the same for a long period of time.
And I hope you're also a little bit like me, because you probably also can't stand not being able to know the answer to a question.
So, let's see if we can find the answer together, shall we?
---
note:
Speaking of browser market shares, when I was in college I did a talk on 'the browser wars'.
The talk was actually quite similar to the one I'm doing right now.
Because it was also about predictions.
In this college talk I tried to predict what browser we would be using ten years later in time.
Now in the year I did this talk the hurricane Katrina struck the southern coast of the USA.
Also in this year a video sharing website called "YouTube" is founded.
And lastly, in this year cyclist Lance Armstrong won his seventh consecutive Tour de France.
(although he was 'stripped' of his titles, because of drug allegations)
So what do you think the year was?
The year was 2005.
---
<!-- .slide: data-background="img/background/the-browser-wars-2005.png" --->
note:
This was actually one of the slides I used.
This was fourteen years ago, and it shows.
It looks RETRO, doesn't it?
I mean, the obnoxious headers and footers.
The background gradient.
The page number at the bottom.
Fantastic stuff.
The slide also shows that the Internet Explorer browser family was VERY dominant in 2005.
Almost 90% of all Internet users used an IE browser.
In this talk I predicted three things, of which two REALLY HAPPENED IN THE END.
---
## In ten years time...
1. ...Internet Explorer would be surpassed as the top browser family;
2. ...Mozilla Firefox would surpass Internet Explorer;
3. ...Mozilla Firefox would be the top browser.
note:
Just the last prediction didn't happen, the other two did!
---
<!-- .slide: data-background="img/background/browser-shares-2007-2018.jpg" data-background-size="contain" data-background-color="white" --->
[https://www.bbntimes.com/en/global-economy/market-shares-for-browsers-and-platforms](https://www.bbntimes.com/en/global-economy/market-shares-for-browsers-and-platforms) <!-- .element: class="attribution" -->
note:
I didn't count on Google Chrome - a new browser - to take the top spot.
But see!
Internet Explorer WAS surpassed within ten years time.
And Firefox DID surpass IE for a few months in 2016.
OK, technically that did take 11 years, not 10.
---
## Key question: was I right?
note:
So, was I right with the browser prediction?
What *was* the most popular browser in 2015?
TODO: samenvoegen met wat hierboven staat.
---
note:
Now who in their right mind would dare to claim that Google Chrome will be around forever?
I mean, it will probably be gone in ten years or so...
By then it will have been replaced by a superior product.
These replacements in the browser world have happened at least four times until now.
Mosaic was replaced by Netscape, which was replaced by Internet Explorer.
Which was replaced by Internet Explorer, which was replaced by Mozilla Firefox, which was replaced by Google Chrome.
And I can't think of a reason why it wouldn't happen for a fifth time.
---
note:
So let's see how these things have happened until now in the version control world!
<!-- .slide: data-background="img/background/usb-sticks.jpg" data-background-color="black" data-background-opacity="0.3"-->
# The Browser Wars
[https://pxhere.com/en/photo/652221](https://pxhere.com/en/photo/652221) <!-- .element: class="attribution" -->
note:
**Time Elapsed:** 15 min.
---
note:
Speaking of browser market shares, when I was in college I did a talk on 'the browser wars'.
The talk was actually quite similar to the one I'm doing right now.
Because it was also about predictions.
In this college talk I tried to predict what browser we would be using ten years later in time.
Now in the year I did this talk the hurricane Katrina struck the southern coast of the USA.
Also in this year a video sharing website called "YouTube" is founded.
And lastly, in this year cyclist Lance Armstrong won his seventh consecutive Tour de France.
(although he was 'stripped' of his titles, because of drug allegations)
So what do you think the year was?
The year was 2005.
---
<!-- .slide: data-background="img/background/the-browser-wars-2005.png" --->
note:
This was actually one of the slides I used.
This was fourteen years ago, and it shows.
It looks RETRO, doesn't it?
I mean, the obnoxious headers and footers.
The background gradient.
The page number at the bottom.
Fantastic stuff.
The slide also shows that the Internet Explorer browser family was VERY dominant in 2005.
Almost 90% of all Internet users used an IE browser.
In this talk I predicted three things, of which two REALLY HAPPENED IN THE END.
---
## In ten years time...
1. ...Internet Explorer would be surpassed as the top browser family;
2. ...Mozilla Firefox would surpass Internet Explorer;
3. ...Mozilla Firefox would be the top browser.
note:
Just the last prediction didn't happen, the other two did!
---
<!-- .slide: data-background="img/background/browser-shares-2007-2018.jpg" data-background-size="contain" data-background-color="white" --->
[https://www.bbntimes.com/en/global-economy/market-shares-for-browsers-and-platforms](https://www.bbntimes.com/en/global-economy/market-shares-for-browsers-and-platforms) <!-- .element: class="attribution" -->
note:
I didn't count on Google Chrome - a new browser - to take the top spot.
But see!
Internet Explorer WAS surpassed within ten years time.
And Firefox DID surpass IE for a few months in 2016.
OK, technically that did take 11 years, not 10.
---
## Key question: was I right?
note:
So, was I right with the browser prediction?
What *was* the most popular browser in 2015?
TODO: samenvoegen met wat hierboven staat.
---
note:
Now who in their right mind would dare to claim that Google Chrome will be around forever?
I mean, it will probably be gone in ten years or so...
By then it will have been replaced by a superior product.
These replacements in the browser world have happened at least four times until now.
Mosaic was replaced by Netscape, which was replaced by Internet Explorer.
Which was replaced by Internet Explorer, which was replaced by Mozilla Firefox, which was replaced by Google Chrome.
And I can't think of a reason why it wouldn't happen for a fifth time.
---
note:
So let's see how these things have happened until now in the version control world!
TODO: neem hier inhoud uit https://www.plasticscm.com/documents/version-control-history/version-control-history-poster-A3.pdf in op.