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  1. @artfulsodger The boosts are still the same. The "pay to have your opinion shared" is a bit like Twitter blue ticks, which is a shame. But I can accept them if it means can sustain a self-hosted podcast network, free from big platforms or generic adverts for therapy or beds or home-assembly ready meals.

  2. @artfulsodger @[email protected]
    Don't know how it compares with this, but I have been using Open Note Scanner (github.com/allgood/OpenNoteSca). It is so good I don't need to clean my scans anymore.

  3. A roundup of my 2024

    2024 has been a good year for me and my family, and I wanted to share some highlights from it.

    Personal life

    Keirthana and I had our tenth wedding anniversary ❤️ at the beginning of this year (we have known each other for more than 32 years now!) and celebrated it with a trip to Murudeshwara (a long train journey that we enjoyed) where our daughter had her first beach experience.

    Statue of Lord Shiva, Murudeshwara

    Our daughter also had her first flight, and her first international trip (to Singapore) along with my cousin who had his firsts too. A day trip to the Universal Studios at Sentosa was a highlight of this trip.

    Shrek Castle at Universal Studios, Sentosa, Singapore

    We also had a memorable trip to Jaipur with family while presenting at the UbuCon Asia 2024 event held there. More details about that later.

    A beloved family member passed away in the middle of this year, causing a mix of sorrow and relief to the bereaved.

    Towards the end of the year, we managed to achieve some longstanding financial goals, which should stand us in good stead for the future.

    While there were some challenges throughout the year, we are grateful to have been in a position to deal with them well. 🙏

    Work

    I continue to work in the awesome Launchpad team at Canonical, and we have been doing a great job so far in coping with the departures of legendary colleagues (Colin and William), and the team growth has helped with it. This has given me a valuable opportunity to grow and provide leadership in specific areas (infrastructure, overall system design etc.) within the team, and I am grateful for that.

    At the beginning of this year, Keirthana and I had a stressful time when we had to assess our options and decide not to travel to the Canonical engineering sprint at Madrid in May. As a Real Madrid, I was really looking forward to going to Madrid, visit the iconic Santiago Bernabéu stadium, and possibly attend a Real Madrid game. 💔 But this tough decision had to be made due to a lack of reasonable childcare options for our daughter during our work trip. We were able to travel to The Hague for the second engineering sprint in October and also attend the Ubuntu Summit 2024.

    A snap taken at the Den Haag Centraal Bus Stop Ubuntu Summit 2024 logo

    During the summit, I had the chance to meet and thank some inspirational people from the Linux ecosystem (Mathieu Comandon from the Lutris project, GloriousEggroll of Proton GE, Nobara fame, Neal Gompa, a prolific contributor to Linux distributions and a fixture in many of my favorite Linux podcasts), ex-colleagues, and friends (Soumyadeep Ghosh). I loved the Matrix 2.0 talk by Mathew Hodgson and the lightning talk by Nirav Patel from Framework where he successfully switched the Mainboard of a Framework laptop from x86 to RISC-V during the talk was mind-blowing!

    Keirthana and I presented talks at the UbuCon Asia 2024 at Jaipur in September. My talk was about ‘6 little-known features: How to make the most out of Launchpad’ and it was well-received by an audience containing a mix of many students very new to Linux and some seasoned, veteran community members.

    A snap from my talk

    During this event, I met Soumyadeep Ghosh, a still-in-college prodigy doing great work in the Ubuntu, Snap, KDE, and the open source software communities, and gained a new friend!

    I started learning Golang this year and have used it to build some toy personal projects so far. Python has spoiled me so much that I find it very difficult to pick up a new programming language. After relying on the ‘batteries included’ approach of Python and its standard library, I find the ‘So what if it is not there in Golang? We can easily implement it ourselves’ attitude of developers using Golang, very hard to accept. But this ‘learn, unlearn, and relearn’ process is very important for me to master, and so I will continue learning Golang in 2025.

    Hobbies

    Self-hosting

    I built my first homeserver (code-named, tesseract, because of the cubic shape of the Fractal Design Node 804 case that I used for the build) at the beginning of this year and moved all the local self-hosted services from the 2 Raspberry Pi 4s to it. I run Ubuntu 24.04 on this server with multiple ZFS pools having plenty of storage. Even though I have known about ZFS for a very long time (right from my college days as a Sun Microsystems Campus Ambassador in 2008), I am grateful to the 2.5 Admins podcast (Jim Salter and Allan Jude, in particular) for evangelizing ZFS and nudging me to use it! I plan to convert all my computers to use ZFS, with tesseract acting as a zfs send backup target, soon.

    Gaming

    I continued to wade through my ever-growing backlog of video games this year, and managed to finish many more games this year than the averages from the previous years. You can see my Mastodon posts about these games in the thread starting from https://fosstodon.org/@artfulsodger/111681310712263253. Here is a list of the games that I played and completed this year.

    • Venba (Xbox Series X)
    • Spiderman 2 (PlayStation 5)
    • Trine 3 (Steam)
    • Cyberpunk 2077 Phantom Liberty (Steam)
    • Super Mario Odyssey (Nintendo Switch)
    • My Friend Peppa Pig (Xbox Series X) — I played this for/with my daughter, who is a big Peppa Pig fan
    • Journey (PlayStation 5)
    • Operation Tango (PlayStation 5 + Steam)
    • Trine 4 (Steam)
    • Astro Bot (PlayStation 5)
    • Plucky Squire (PlayStation 5)
    • Trine 5 (Steam)
    • We Were Here (Steam)
    • We Were Here Too (Steam)
    • Marvel’s Midnight Suns (PlayStation 5)
    • It takes two (Steam, 2nd playthrough, this time as May)

    As you can see, most of the above games have cooperative gameplay of some sort and that is what I have enjoyed the most this year, playing with my cousins during weekend nights. Astro Bot (I preordered it) was my best game of this year and I enjoyed every moment of it and got the Platinum trophy at the end.

    Astro Bot game cover image

    I attempted emulating my Nintendo Switch games using Yuzu (RIP!) before Nintendo took it down and then came back to stop all development on Ryujinx too. I swore off Nintendo due to this, but I suspect I will buy their games and consoles in the future because they do make excellent games! ☹️

    I had an on and off relationship with my Steam Deck and played some games on it, without completing anything meaningful. Dave the diver, Cult of the Lamb, Borderlands 2, Yakuza 0, and Psychonauts 2 are some honorable mentions. You can find more details about it in my Steam Replay 2024 showcase.

    I bought game discs/cartridges for Marvel’s Midnight Suns, Metaphor: Refantazio (I loved playing Persona 5 Royal), and The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom during my international trips, and I am yet to play the last two.

    Gadgets

    I bought myself an Aorus FO32U2P 32-inch 4K 240 Hz QD-OLED monitor to add to my existing BenQ EW3270U 32-inch 4K monitor, and it has been great to use so far. Since there isn’t a GPU that can run most of my favorite games at 4K 240 Hz, I will have to wait for a future GPU upgrade to be able to use the full power of this monitor. I chose this over the cheaper Alienware AW3225QF monitor because this doesn’t have a curved display and has more productivity features than AW3225QF. I still need to iron out some issues/limitations with my current setup to make the best use of it.

    Aorus FO32U2P monitor

    Ever since Apple released the M-series MacBooks a few years ago, with trailblazing compute power and battery life, I have been interested in buying one and running Asahi Linux. So this June, I bit the bullet and bought myself an M3 MacBook Pro laptop with the M3 Pro chip, 18 GB RAM, and 512 GB storage. While the Asahi Linux project doesn’t support it yet, I am happy to wait and use macOS till then. I have been using it as an “on-the-bed laptop for personal projects and entertainment” device so far, and have written this post on it.

    Furthermore, I bought 3 more TP-Link Deco XE75 mesh routers during my Netherlands trip to allow extending my home Wi-Fi network’s coverage and/or replace any existing devices if they fail. This was important to me because the Wi-Fi 6E/7 mesh routers are no longer sold in India due to some uncertainty around the licensing and usage of the corresponding radio bands for Wi-Fi or telecom mobile networks. I hope this should suffice for the next 5 years or so.

    Podcasts

    After listening to and supporting Jupiter Broadcasting network’s podcasts for nearly a decade, I stopped listening to their shows this year because of the excessive bitcoin shilling (I hate cryptocurrencies) that took the focus away from the great content in those shows. It looks like they have been doubling down on the bitcoin stuff since I stopped listening, so there might be no way back for me. ☹️

    The Late Night Linux family of podcasts have been as great as ever and provide a lot of excellent content. 2.5 Admins is my favorite podcast and I can’t wait to hear its every new episode.

    I am currently evaluating ‘The Untitled Linux Show’ and so far it has been enjoyable.

    FOSS contributions

    This year, I have continued my recurring donation to the KDE project and started a new monthly donation to the Matrix project. If you haven’t done so, I strongly recommend donating/contributing to the FOSS projects of your choice.

    Gratitude

    2024 was a memorable and an eventful year, that ebbed and flowed every day. We are thankful for all the good and grateful for the privileges that allowed us to deal with the not-so-good well. Looking forward to a great 2025 ahead! Wish all of you a happy, prosperous, and fulfilling 2025! 🎉🙏

    #Gaming #UbuntuSummit2024

  4. A roundup of my 2024

    2024 has been a good year for me and my family, and I wanted to share some highlights from it.

    Personal life

    Keirthana and I had our tenth wedding anniversary ❤️ at the beginning of this year (we have known each other for more than 32 years now!) and celebrated it with a trip to Murudeshwara (a long train journey that we enjoyed) where our daughter had her first beach experience.

    Statue of Lord Shiva, Murudeshwara

    Our daughter also had her first flight, and her first international trip (to Singapore) along with my cousin who had his firsts too. A day trip to the Universal Studios at Sentosa was a highlight of this trip.

    Shrek Castle at Universal Studios, Sentosa, Singapore

    We also had a memorable trip to Jaipur with family while presenting at the UbuCon Asia 2024 event held there. More details about that later.

    A beloved family member passed away in the middle of this year, causing a mix of sorrow and relief to the bereaved.

    Towards the end of the year, we managed to achieve some longstanding financial goals, which should stand us in good stead for the future.

    While there were some challenges throughout the year, we are grateful to have been in a position to deal with them well. 🙏

    Work

    I continue to work in the awesome Launchpad team at Canonical, and we have been doing a great job so far in coping with the departures of legendary colleagues (Colin and William), and the team growth has helped with it. This has given me a valuable opportunity to grow and provide leadership in specific areas (infrastructure, overall system design etc.) within the team, and I am grateful for that.

    At the beginning of this year, Keirthana and I had a stressful time when we had to assess our options and decide not to travel to the Canonical engineering sprint at Madrid in May. As a Real Madrid, I was really looking forward to going to Madrid, visit the iconic Santiago Bernabéu stadium, and possibly attend a Real Madrid game. 💔 But this tough decision had to be made due to a lack of reasonable childcare options for our daughter during our work trip. We were able to travel to The Hague for the second engineering sprint in October and also attend the Ubuntu Summit 2024.

    A snap taken at the Den Haag Centraal Bus Stop Ubuntu Summit 2024 logo

    During the summit, I had the chance to meet and thank some inspirational people from the Linux ecosystem (Mathieu Comandon from the Lutris project, GloriousEggroll of Proton GE, Nobara fame, Neal Gompa, a prolific contributor to Linux distributions and a fixture in many of my favorite Linux podcasts), ex-colleagues, and friends (Soumyadeep Ghosh). I loved the Matrix 2.0 talk by Mathew Hodgson and the lightning talk by Nirav Patel from Framework where he successfully switched the Mainboard of a Framework laptop from x86 to RISC-V during the talk was mind-blowing!

    Keirthana and I presented talks at the UbuCon Asia 2024 at Jaipur in September. My talk was about ‘6 little-known features: How to make the most out of Launchpad’ and it was well-received by an audience containing a mix of many students very new to Linux and some seasoned, veteran community members.

    A snap from my talk

    During this event, I met Soumyadeep Ghosh, a still-in-college prodigy doing great work in the Ubuntu, Snap, KDE, and the open source software communities, and gained a new friend!

    I started learning Golang this year and have used it to build some toy personal projects so far. Python has spoiled me so much that I find it very difficult to pick up a new programming language. After relying on the ‘batteries included’ approach of Python and its standard library, I find the ‘So what if it is not there in Golang? We can easily implement it ourselves’ attitude of developers using Golang, very hard to accept. But this ‘learn, unlearn, and relearn’ process is very important for me to master, and so I will continue learning Golang in 2025.

    Hobbies

    Self-hosting

    I built my first homeserver (code-named, tesseract, because of the cubic shape of the Fractal Design Node 804 case that I used for the build) at the beginning of this year and moved all the local self-hosted services from the 2 Raspberry Pi 4s to it. I run Ubuntu 24.04 on this server with multiple ZFS pools having plenty of storage. Even though I have known about ZFS for a very long time (right from my college days as a Sun Microsystems Campus Ambassador in 2008), I am grateful to the 2.5 Admins podcast (Jim Salter and Allan Jude, in particular) for evangelizing ZFS and nudging me to use it! I plan to convert all my computers to use ZFS, with tesseract acting as a zfs send backup target, soon.

    Gaming

    I continued to wade through my ever-growing backlog of video games this year, and managed to finish many more games this year than the averages from the previous years. You can see my Mastodon posts about these games in the thread starting from https://fosstodon.org/@artfulsodger/111681310712263253. Here is a list of the games that I played and completed this year.

    • Venba (Xbox Series X)
    • Spiderman 2 (PlayStation 5)
    • Trine 3 (Steam)
    • Cyberpunk 2077 Phantom Liberty (Steam)
    • Super Mario Odyssey (Nintendo Switch)
    • My Friend Peppa Pig (Xbox Series X) — I played this for/with my daughter, who is a big Peppa Pig fan
    • Journey (PlayStation 5)
    • Operation Tango (PlayStation 5 + Steam)
    • Trine 4 (Steam)
    • Astro Bot (PlayStation 5)
    • Plucky Squire (PlayStation 5)
    • Trine 5 (Steam)
    • We Were Here (Steam)
    • We Were Here Too (Steam)
    • Marvel’s Midnight Suns (PlayStation 5)
    • It takes two (Steam, 2nd playthrough, this time as May)

    As you can see, most of the above games have cooperative gameplay of some sort and that is what I have enjoyed the most this year, playing with my cousins during weekend nights. Astro Bot (I preordered it) was my best game of this year and I enjoyed every moment of it and got the Platinum trophy at the end.

    Astro Bot game cover image

    I attempted emulating my Nintendo Switch games using Yuzu (RIP!) before Nintendo took it down and then came back to stop all development on Ryujinx too. I swore off Nintendo due to this, but I suspect I will buy their games and consoles in the future because they do make excellent games! ☹️

    I had an on and off relationship with my Steam Deck and played some games on it, without completing anything meaningful. Dave the diver, Cult of the Lamb, Borderlands 2, Yakuza 0, and Psychonauts 2 are some honorable mentions. You can find more details about it in my Steam Replay 2024 showcase.

    I bought game discs/cartridges for Marvel’s Midnight Suns, Metaphor: Refantazio (I loved playing Persona 5 Royal), and The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom during my international trips, and I am yet to play the last two.

    Gadgets

    I bought myself an Aorus FO32U2P 32-inch 4K 240 Hz QD-OLED monitor to add to my existing BenQ EW3270U 32-inch 4K monitor, and it has been great to use so far. Since there isn’t a GPU that can run most of my favorite games at 4K 240 Hz, I will have to wait for a future GPU upgrade to be able to use the full power of this monitor. I chose this over the cheaper Alienware AW3225QF monitor because this doesn’t have a curved display and has more productivity features than AW3225QF. I still need to iron out some issues/limitations with my current setup to make the best use of it.

    Aorus FO32U2P monitor

    Ever since Apple released the M-series MacBooks a few years ago, with trailblazing compute power and battery life, I have been interested in buying one and running Asahi Linux. So this June, I bit the bullet and bought myself an M3 MacBook Pro laptop with the M3 Pro chip, 18 GB RAM, and 512 GB storage. While the Asahi Linux project doesn’t support it yet, I am happy to wait and use macOS till then. I have been using it as an “on-the-bed laptop for personal projects and entertainment” device so far, and have written this post on it.

    Furthermore, I bought 3 more TP-Link Deco XE75 mesh routers during my Netherlands trip to allow extending my home Wi-Fi network’s coverage and/or replace any existing devices if they fail. This was important to me because the Wi-Fi 6E/7 mesh routers are no longer sold in India due to some uncertainty around the licensing and usage of the corresponding radio bands for Wi-Fi or telecom mobile networks. I hope this should suffice for the next 5 years or so.

    Podcasts

    After listening to and supporting Jupiter Broadcasting network’s podcasts for nearly a decade, I stopped listening to their shows this year because of the excessive bitcoin shilling (I hate cryptocurrencies) that took the focus away from the great content in those shows. It looks like they have been doubling down on the bitcoin stuff since I stopped listening, so there might be no way back for me. ☹️

    The Late Night Linux family of podcasts have been as great as ever and provide a lot of excellent content. 2.5 Admins is my favorite podcast and I can’t wait to hear its every new episode.

    I am currently evaluating ‘The Untitled Linux Show’ and so far it has been enjoyable.

    FOSS contributions

    This year, I have continued my recurring donation to the KDE project and started a new monthly donation to the Matrix project. If you haven’t done so, I strongly recommend donating/contributing to the FOSS projects of your choice.

    Gratitude

    2024 was a memorable and an eventful year, that ebbed and flowed every day. We are thankful for all the good and grateful for the privileges that allowed us to deal with the not-so-good well. Looking forward to a great 2025 ahead! Wish all of you a happy, prosperous, and fulfilling 2025! 🎉🙏

    #Gaming #UbuntuSummit2024

  5. A roundup of my 2024

    2024 has been a good year for me and my family, and I wanted to share some highlights from it.

    Personal life

    Keirthana and I had our tenth wedding anniversary ❤️ at the beginning of this year (we have known each other for more than 32 years now!) and celebrated it with a trip to Murudeshwara (a long train journey that we enjoyed) where our daughter had her first beach experience.

    Statue of Lord Shiva, Murudeshwara

    Our daughter also had her first flight, and her first international trip (to Singapore) along with my cousin who had his firsts too. A day trip to the Universal Studios at Sentosa was a highlight of this trip.

    Shrek Castle at Universal Studios, Sentosa, Singapore

    We also had a memorable trip to Jaipur with family while presenting at the UbuCon Asia 2024 event held there. More details about that later.

    A beloved family member passed away in the middle of this year, causing a mix of sorrow and relief to the bereaved.

    Towards the end of the year, we managed to achieve some longstanding financial goals, which should stand us in good stead for the future.

    While there were some challenges throughout the year, we are grateful to have been in a position to deal with them well. 🙏

    Work

    I continue to work in the awesome Launchpad team at Canonical, and we have been doing a great job so far in coping with the departures of legendary colleagues (Colin and William), and the team growth has helped with it. This has given me a valuable opportunity to grow and provide leadership in specific areas (infrastructure, overall system design etc.) within the team, and I am grateful for that.

    At the beginning of this year, Keirthana and I had a stressful time when we had to assess our options and decide not to travel to the Canonical engineering sprint at Madrid in May. As a Real Madrid, I was really looking forward to going to Madrid, visit the iconic Santiago Bernabéu stadium, and possibly attend a Real Madrid game. 💔 But this tough decision had to be made due to a lack of reasonable childcare options for our daughter during our work trip. We were able to travel to The Hague for the second engineering sprint in October and also attend the Ubuntu Summit 2024.

    A snap taken at the Den Haag Centraal Bus Stop Ubuntu Summit 2024 logo

    During the summit, I had the chance to meet and thank some inspirational people from the Linux ecosystem (Mathieu Comandon from the Lutris project, GloriousEggroll of Proton GE, Nobara fame, Neal Gompa, a prolific contributor to Linux distributions and a fixture in many of my favorite Linux podcasts), ex-colleagues, and friends (Soumyadeep Ghosh). I loved the Matrix 2.0 talk by Mathew Hodgson and the lightning talk by Nirav Patel from Framework where he successfully switched the Mainboard of a Framework laptop from x86 to RISC-V during the talk was mind-blowing!

    Keirthana and I presented talks at the UbuCon Asia 2024 at Jaipur in September. My talk was about ‘6 little-known features: How to make the most out of Launchpad’ and it was well-received by an audience containing a mix of many students very new to Linux and some seasoned, veteran community members.

    A snap from my talk

    During this event, I met Soumyadeep Ghosh, a still-in-college prodigy doing great work in the Ubuntu, Snap, KDE, and the open source software communities, and gained a new friend!

    I started learning Golang this year and have used it to build some toy personal projects so far. Python has spoiled me so much that I find it very difficult to pick up a new programming language. After relying on the ‘batteries included’ approach of Python and its standard library, I find the ‘So what if it is not there in Golang? We can easily implement it ourselves’ attitude of developers using Golang, very hard to accept. But this ‘learn, unlearn, and relearn’ process is very important for me to master, and so I will continue learning Golang in 2025.

    Hobbies

    Self-hosting

    I built my first homeserver (code-named, tesseract, because of the cubic shape of the Fractal Design Node 804 case that I used for the build) at the beginning of this year and moved all the local self-hosted services from the 2 Raspberry Pi 4s to it. I run Ubuntu 24.04 on this server with multiple ZFS pools having plenty of storage. Even though I have known about ZFS for a very long time (right from my college days as a Sun Microsystems Campus Ambassador in 2008), I am grateful to the 2.5 Admins podcast (Jim Salter and Allan Jude, in particular) for evangelizing ZFS and nudging me to use it! I plan to convert all my computers to use ZFS, with tesseract acting as a zfs send backup target, soon.

    Gaming

    I continued to wade through my ever-growing backlog of video games this year, and managed to finish many more games this year than the averages from the previous years. You can see my Mastodon posts about these games in the thread starting from https://fosstodon.org/@artfulsodger/111681310712263253. Here is a list of the games that I played and completed this year.

    • Venba (Xbox Series X)
    • Spiderman 2 (PlayStation 5)
    • Trine 3 (Steam)
    • Cyberpunk 2077 Phantom Liberty (Steam)
    • Super Mario Odyssey (Nintendo Switch)
    • My Friend Peppa Pig (Xbox Series X) — I played this for/with my daughter, who is a big Peppa Pig fan
    • Journey (PlayStation 5)
    • Operation Tango (PlayStation 5 + Steam)
    • Trine 4 (Steam)
    • Astro Bot (PlayStation 5)
    • Plucky Squire (PlayStation 5)
    • Trine 5 (Steam)
    • We Were Here (Steam)
    • We Were Here Too (Steam)
    • Marvel’s Midnight Suns (PlayStation 5)
    • It takes two (Steam, 2nd playthrough, this time as May)

    As you can see, most of the above games have cooperative gameplay of some sort and that is what I have enjoyed the most this year, playing with my cousins during weekend nights. Astro Bot (I preordered it) was my best game of this year and I enjoyed every moment of it and got the Platinum trophy at the end.

    Astro Bot game cover image

    I attempted emulating my Nintendo Switch games using Yuzu (RIP!) before Nintendo took it down and then came back to stop all development on Ryujinx too. I swore off Nintendo due to this, but I suspect I will buy their games and consoles in the future because they do make excellent games! ☹️

    I had an on and off relationship with my Steam Deck and played some games on it, without completing anything meaningful. Dave the diver, Cult of the Lamb, Borderlands 2, Yakuza 0, and Psychonauts 2 are some honorable mentions. You can find more details about it in my Steam Replay 2024 showcase.

    I bought game discs/cartridges for Marvel’s Midnight Suns, Metaphor: Refantazio (I loved playing Persona 5 Royal), and The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom during my international trips, and I am yet to play the last two.

    Gadgets

    I bought myself an Aorus FO32U2P 32-inch 4K 240 Hz QD-OLED monitor to add to my existing BenQ EW3270U 32-inch 4K monitor, and it has been great to use so far. Since there isn’t a GPU that can run most of my favorite games at 4K 240 Hz, I will have to wait for a future GPU upgrade to be able to use the full power of this monitor. I chose this over the cheaper Alienware AW3225QF monitor because this doesn’t have a curved display and has more productivity features than AW3225QF. I still need to iron out some issues/limitations with my current setup to make the best use of it.

    Aorus FO32U2P monitor

    Ever since Apple released the M-series MacBooks a few years ago, with trailblazing compute power and battery life, I have been interested in buying one and running Asahi Linux. So this June, I bit the bullet and bought myself an M3 MacBook Pro laptop with the M3 Pro chip, 18 GB RAM, and 512 GB storage. While the Asahi Linux project doesn’t support it yet, I am happy to wait and use macOS till then. I have been using it as an “on-the-bed laptop for personal projects and entertainment” device so far, and have written this post on it.

    Furthermore, I bought 3 more TP-Link Deco XE75 mesh routers during my Netherlands trip to allow extending my home Wi-Fi network’s coverage and/or replace any existing devices if they fail. This was important to me because the Wi-Fi 6E/7 mesh routers are no longer sold in India due to some uncertainty around the licensing and usage of the corresponding radio bands for Wi-Fi or telecom mobile networks. I hope this should suffice for the next 5 years or so.

    Podcasts

    After listening to and supporting Jupiter Broadcasting network’s podcasts for nearly a decade, I stopped listening to their shows this year because of the excessive bitcoin shilling (I hate cryptocurrencies) that took the focus away from the great content in those shows. It looks like they have been doubling down on the bitcoin stuff since I stopped listening, so there might be no way back for me. ☹️

    The Late Night Linux family of podcasts have been as great as ever and provide a lot of excellent content. 2.5 Admins is my favorite podcast and I can’t wait to hear its every new episode.

    I am currently evaluating ‘The Untitled Linux Show’ and so far it has been enjoyable.

    FOSS contributions

    This year, I have continued my recurring donation to the KDE project and started a new monthly donation to the Matrix project. If you haven’t done so, I strongly recommend donating/contributing to the FOSS projects of your choice.

    Gratitude

    2024 was a memorable and an eventful year, that ebbed and flowed every day. We are thankful for all the good and grateful for the privileges that allowed us to deal with the not-so-good well. Looking forward to a great 2025 ahead! Wish all of you a happy, prosperous, and fulfilling 2025! 🎉🙏

    #Gaming #UbuntuSummit2024

  6. It’s a dream come true to visit the Estadio Santiago Bernabéu and watch a match live! Hala Madrid! 🎉❤️

  7. I started playing on my yesterday and it was refreshingly good and fun. Will continue playing it to completion.

  8. @ironicbadger, borgbackup backup of all my servers in my home and on the Internet to rsync.net which is then rsync’ed down to my main home server running . All Linux computers run ZFS, make backups using and send to that server using . I’m planning to set up a personal remote backup at my in-laws’ place which provides a ZFS send target over

  9. @ironicbadger, borgbackup backup of all my servers in my home and on the Internet to rsync.net which is then rsync’ed down to my main home server running #ZFS. All Linux computers run ZFS, make backups using #sanoid and send to that server using #syncoid. I’m planning to set up a personal remote backup at my in-laws’ place which provides a ZFS send target over #Tailscale

  10. @ironicbadger, borgbackup backup of all my servers in my home and on the Internet to rsync.net which is then rsync’ed down to my main home server running #ZFS. All Linux computers run ZFS, make backups using #sanoid and send to that server using #syncoid. I’m planning to set up a personal remote backup at my in-laws’ place which provides a ZFS send target over #Tailscale

  11. @ironicbadger, borgbackup backup of all my servers in my home and on the Internet to rsync.net which is then rsync’ed down to my main home server running #ZFS. All Linux computers run ZFS, make backups using #sanoid and send to that server using #syncoid. I’m planning to set up a personal remote backup at my in-laws’ place which provides a ZFS send target over #Tailscale

  12. @ironicbadger, borgbackup backup of all my servers in my home and on the Internet to rsync.net which is then rsync’ed down to my main home server running #ZFS. All Linux computers run ZFS, make backups using #sanoid and send to that server using #syncoid. I’m planning to set up a personal remote backup at my in-laws’ place which provides a ZFS send target over #Tailscale

  13. I finished reading today and I liked it a lot. A standalone story set in a realistic fantasy setup executed very well. It had the typical Brandon-Sanderson-style plot, pitting the protagonist against an infinitely powerful and unknown foe which the former has no way or ability to defeat till the very end and still things end well. This aspect felt a bit repetitive to me but the rest of the story was well done.

  14. Completed today ✅ I have completed most of the side content and the main game today and it was so much fun! That plot was 💔 As I still have some of the insanely tough boss fights left, I’ll play it for some more time. I was over-levelled for the final boss of the main story and finished it in 3 hits without taking any damage! It is my game of the year too!🎉❤️

  15. @shur3d, if you are able to use on the machines to be backed up too, you can use its snapshot replication for this. While there are many tools for this, I’ve been using + for this and it works very well.

  16. @shur3d, if you are able to use #ZFS on the machines to be backed up too, you can use its snapshot replication for this. While there are many tools for this, I’ve been using #sanoid + #syncoid for this and it works very well.

  17. @shur3d, if you are able to use #ZFS on the machines to be backed up too, you can use its snapshot replication for this. While there are many tools for this, I’ve been using #sanoid + #syncoid for this and it works very well.

  18. @shur3d, if you are able to use #ZFS on the machines to be backed up too, you can use its snapshot replication for this. While there are many tools for this, I’ve been using #sanoid + #syncoid for this and it works very well.

  19. @shur3d, if you are able to use #ZFS on the machines to be backed up too, you can use its snapshot replication for this. While there are many tools for this, I’ve been using #sanoid + #syncoid for this and it works very well.

  20. This weekend, I migrated my large, wall-of-text, single docker compose file containing all the services in my home server into multiple smaller, logically grouped “stacks” with a more organized directory structure and a convenient UI-based management tool, Arcane (getarcane.app/). Before settling with , I also tried and evaluated and which had their own pros and cons like Arcane does. I will revisit these alternatives in a few months again.

  21. This weekend, I migrated my large, wall-of-text, single docker compose file containing all the services in my home server into multiple smaller, logically grouped “stacks” with a more organized directory structure and a convenient UI-based management tool, Arcane (getarcane.app/). Before settling with #Arcane, I also tried and evaluated #Dockge and #Komodo which had their own pros and cons like Arcane does. I will revisit these alternatives in a few months again. #Docker #Homelab

  22. This weekend, I migrated my large, wall-of-text, single docker compose file containing all the services in my home server into multiple smaller, logically grouped “stacks” with a more organized directory structure and a convenient UI-based management tool, Arcane (getarcane.app/). Before settling with #Arcane, I also tried and evaluated #Dockge and #Komodo which had their own pros and cons like Arcane does. I will revisit these alternatives in a few months again. #Docker #Homelab

  23. This weekend, I migrated my large, wall-of-text, single docker compose file containing all the services in my home server into multiple smaller, logically grouped “stacks” with a more organized directory structure and a convenient UI-based management tool, Arcane (getarcane.app/). Before settling with #Arcane, I also tried and evaluated #Dockge and #Komodo which had their own pros and cons like Arcane does. I will revisit these alternatives in a few months again. #Docker #Homelab

  24. This weekend, I migrated my large, wall-of-text, single docker compose file containing all the services in my home server into multiple smaller, logically grouped “stacks” with a more organized directory structure and a convenient UI-based management tool, Arcane (getarcane.app/). Before settling with #Arcane, I also tried and evaluated #Dockge and #Komodo which had their own pros and cons like Arcane does. I will revisit these alternatives in a few months again. #Docker #Homelab

  25. Now I need to rush to my doctor (thank God that I can go meet them asap unlike first-world countries with ridiculous policies, waiting times, and insurance restrictions) and sort this out. Wearing a continuous glucose monitoring system like FreeStyle Libre should help with the transition. 🤞I always buy a pack of 5 insulins in advance and I’m fortunate that I found out about this early when I tried to buy the next pack and Levemir was out of stock everywhere. 🙏

  26. As someone who has lived with for more than 50% of their life, there is nothing more scary and existential-dread-inducing than hearing that their current insulins (Novorapid and Levemir) are being discontinued in favour of more profitable newer variants (Fiasp and Tresiba). I had heard about the Levemir discontinuation in the US a year or so ago & my doctor had no visibility into the same happening in India. Levemir is out of stock in most places now and I have two more pens left

  27. has satisfied all my needs in the last ~2 years and allowed me to remove Microsoft Windows. I’m grateful for that. But it is ridiculous to have to search for issues and the details of fixes/workarounds on Discord of all places and Reddit (more open than Discord but 😬). GloriousEggroll made this for his/his father’s needs and I’m grateful for him choosing to share that with the world, but this is becoming more and more unacceptable to me as something I use and rely on. 😔😒

  28. Completed today ✅ Not much to say in addition to what I already said in a previous post. I felt the open world fatigue and this was definitely worse than . I’ll try to play the game to 100% completion and get the platinum trophy like I did with its predecessor.

  29. I enjoyed playing more than this. Even , in spite of its obvious flaws, was more interesting and fun to play than this (gasp!)