

I wouldn’t be surprised to see multiple MySQL forks emerge in 2026, now that more people are realizing how bad Oracle has been as an open source project steward for MySQL.
Blog: optimizedbyotto.com


I wouldn’t be surprised to see multiple MySQL forks emerge in 2026, now that more people are realizing how bad Oracle has been as an open source project steward for MySQL.


In case you are Czech, there is a translation at https://www.root.cz/clanky/prestante-uz-pouzivat-mysql-neni-to-skutecny-open-source/?nahled=1
Glad to see more translations show up!


There was a bunch of luck involved that Andres Freund detected this. Give more time, it would have ended up in stable releases eventually if not detected.


Exactly. I don’t use Omarchy, but I think it is good someone did a polished distro for a specific use case, and some web dev Windows users will surely find it more appealing than a generic distro where they need to figure out a lot of stuff from scratch.


To me it is hard to find the best apps in their directory as they don’t have a good ranking system. The other sites that rank by GitHub stars do a pretty good job of surfacing what are the truly most popular and successful apps.


TLS is good *only’ if you are also validating those certs. And that is what MariaDB 11.8 is now doing.


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Seems there are also https://www.opensourcealternative.to/, https://euroalternative.co/ and https://european-alternatives.eu/


I am asking for general strategies, not for a solution to a specific case.


By UV 3000 you probably don’t mean the ultraviolet lamp that is the first page of Google is full of when searching with this term…? I doubt UV - whatever it is - is a common approach.


MariaDB supports Galera clustering out-of-the-box, and also traditional primary/replica setups. But you need to have something that spans multiple hosts to monitor and manage it, and that is outside of what a single-host OS package management system can do.


You mean ollama? There are so many options, any favorites?


I just prefix all my git aliases with g-. So for status I type g-s<tab>.


You need bisect only as a last resort. Effective use of git blame, git log -p -S <keyword> etc has always been enough for me. Also, the projects I work with take 10+ minutes to compile even when cached, so doing tens of builds to bisect is much slower than just hunting for strings in git commits and code.


I had the same feeling until I started using gitk. I always have a gitk window open and press F5 to reload, so it shows me the state of everything after I’ve run git commands. Now I grasp everything much better.


Only product from Microsoft I actually like using and trust. Quality from 1998, and still going :)


One is enough if it is very big
MariaDB has a lot of users, and they should be more vocal about it to give it more visibility.