Update README.md
028345c - runs a metanarrative begins to play out across the individual narratives of per-repository files. lonely, isolated commits are sent to a remote server, with specific instructions calling *against* the use of their contents. never is a 'repository' updated even once. are these files really diffable? are the repositories really git-natured? could this be a ftp client instead?
- 1.52 kB initial commit
- 1.65 kB Update README.md
- 457 Bytes a metanarrative begins to play out across the individual narratives of per-repository files. lonely, isolated commits are sent to a remote server, with specific instructions calling *against* the use of their contents. never is a 'repository' updated even once. are these files really diffable? are the repositories really git-natured? could this be a ftp client instead?
- 839 MB a metanarrative begins to play out across the individual narratives of per-repository files. lonely, isolated commits are sent to a remote server, with specific instructions calling *against* the use of their contents. never is a 'repository' updated even once. are these files really diffable? are the repositories really git-natured? could this be a ftp client instead?
- 398 Bytes a metanarrative begins to play out across the individual narratives of per-repository files. lonely, isolated commits are sent to a remote server, with specific instructions calling *against* the use of their contents. never is a 'repository' updated even once. are these files really diffable? are the repositories really git-natured? could this be a ftp client instead?
- 728 Bytes a metanarrative begins to play out across the individual narratives of per-repository files. lonely, isolated commits are sent to a remote server, with specific instructions calling *against* the use of their contents. never is a 'repository' updated even once. are these files really diffable? are the repositories really git-natured? could this be a ftp client instead?
- 33 Bytes a metanarrative begins to play out across the individual narratives of per-repository files. lonely, isolated commits are sent to a remote server, with specific instructions calling *against* the use of their contents. never is a 'repository' updated even once. are these files really diffable? are the repositories really git-natured? could this be a ftp client instead?