Last week, the awesome guys from DigitalOcean launched this year's installment of their Hacktoberfest... hackathon? I've decided to take part in it because there's a limited edition T-shirt up for grabs. I mean, *it's limited edition*. Who could say no to that?
For those of you who have no clue what I'm talking about, here's Hacktoberfest in 3 steps:
1. Sign up on the
by linking your GitHub account. If you don't have one, better make one now.
1. Find **4 public projects hosted on GitHub** (or perhaps pick 4 nasty bugs in the same one) and submit a pull request to them. **It doesn't matter if the pull requests are not accepted or merged**, what's important is to get them out there.
1. Make sure you do this by the **31st October**.
1. Win a **free** T-shirt! It's a T-shirt. People sure love T-shirts, right? And it's free. Do I need to say more?
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I rounded up a small list of worthy projects eligible for a wholesome make-it-count PR made by *moi*. Here they are, least ambitious first:
1.
1.
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1.
: good-looking CPU monitoring CLI tool written in Python. I'm currently looking into adding a threshold-based hooks system to it so that if a certain metric (e.g. temperature, voltage, etc.) exceeds a defined upper limit, an arbitrary script is run perhaps to alert someone that their server is toasting itself. PR on the making!
1.
whereby its image preview functionality made images be painted on top of the previous one. This means that if both the previous and the next image previews are of different sizes, the smaller one will appear superimposed onto the larger one. This is annoying and I'd like to fix it.
My plan for the rest of the month is to power through my remaining 2 PR's. Let's see how it goes. I recommend you do the same. Help fix things, learn heaps of new stuff in the meantime, get a free T-shirt.
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<sup>1: rubbish</sup>