#tasskaff — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #tasskaff, aggregated by home.social.
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Cold brew in the making #SolinoCoffee #coldbrew #tasskaff #coffee
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homemade beverage update: flat white and a macha latte
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kurz mit #tasskaff in der offenen Balkontür stehen und rausglotzen - fast schon wie im Sommer!
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#weeklyreview 07/2026
February 8th – 14th, 2026
Summary
Somehow super hectic week. That’s why I only got to post last weeks review yesterday. Struggling with project management or the lack thereof in the office. More AI fiddling that I’m rather happy with. Good progress on #project25 and the China vacation plan. Also still enjoying the book about the Vienna Circle a lot.
AI, AI and more AI
This is a big topic for me right now. At the office of course but also in personal experiments.
Fediverse journaling plugin
With help of AI coding I’m getting to realise many small ideas I had but would never have had the time to realise. This week I’ve create a little WordPress plugin to use the fediverse as a journaling assistant.
I spent a lot of time in my fediverse clients (mostly Mona, IceCubes or the Mastodon web interface). So why not use that as an input channel for my weekly blogging. I tried different other approaches over the last few months to recollect what I was busy with during the week. Having scripts collecting my Mastodon posts over the weeks and compiling them into a weekly overview page for instance. So I thought it might be useful to just sent message in the Fediverse to my blog for journaling.
I’ve got the ActivityPub plugin installed and thus my Blog is just a normal account in the fediverse that I can mention or sent messages to. I’ve wrote a plugin in which I can authorise specific fediverse users in a WordPress author profile. If these fediverse users mention the WordPress author profile, that post gets appended to a weekly draft post on the Blog.
Now whenever I have something noteworthy, I’ll mention my blog account in my fediverse post and it gets automatically appended to a weekly review draft. At the end of the week I already have a list of things that bothered me during the week.
The code can be found here.
Some snippets from this weeks journal:
2026-02-11 17:37:06
I’d call it “vibe project management” where you just pretend to have a project plan. It visually looks like project plan. But factually it doesn’t make any sense because it has been created with Photoshop for Powerpoint …@falko2026-02-12 12:59:10
@Nico prinzipiell läuft es. Genutzt wird das Modell jetzt von einem Pi Coding Agent der in einer Debian VM läuft 🙈 @falkoI’ve tried my luck with an open weight coding model and the Pi Coding agent. Downloaded the qwen3-coder-next:latest model for Ollama. That’s a whopping 51GB in size as barely fits into my physical memory. The Pi coding agent was running inside a virtual machine. It works in principle… but is so slow that a reasonable test wasn’t really practical for the moment. Have to play a bit more with it. With that setup one could theoretically realise a fully offline coding agent. But I guess some more beefy hardware is needed. Although an Apple Silicon M2 Max isn’t really a slow machine.
Project Management in the age of vibe everything
To be honest, this has started much before AI and vibe coding became popular. The tendency to make up project plans with tools that are not meant for project planning. Most notorious in this field are Project Plans in Excel, Powerpoint or JIRA.
Why am I so upset about it? In my eyes a project plan helps you prioritise and visualise work by listing the tasks and milestones and putting them in chronological order. You define dependencies between tasks and maybe even resources. Once that has been established (and I don’t say this is trivial to collect) you can use proper project management software to identify the critical path of your project. That is the one sequence of events that you have to focus on. All the others will not move you necessarily closer to your project end (because they’re not on the critical path) until the items on the critical path are not finished.
It will also help you assess the effects of time lines slippage. How does that the affect to overall project timing? Or you can identify bottlenecks in your plan due to resources overload. So all good things that you management usually wants to see and from you as a project manager.
Yet, many project plans are just vibe fiddled with the likes of office software. So it just looks similar to a project plan visually. But these tools don’t help you actually manage your project. They just visualise what you think your project plan is. Not backed by hard data.
The most hilarious experience in this context was my conversation with the Atlassian Rovo AI assistant on the topic this week. Asked whether JIRA can be used for project management it of course answered that JIRA is actually best for this. Then probed how chronological order and critical path can then be managed it needed to back off and admit that you can’t do that in JIRA without lots of add-ons and/or paid extensions.
What puzzles me is, that this kind of “let’s just wing it” project management is accepted in many companies. My theory is, that management knows precisely that their demand for speed, quality and resource usage is completely unrealistic. Too much work get’s committed with too little resources. Milestone be set before the actually planning happened because it was promised to a customer or C-suite guy. Proper project management would proof with hard data that the timeline is totally unrealistic.
But with just vibe coded project plans they can just press and demand. And people obey with over-hours and compromises in quality and features.
Rural restaurants
On Sunday we’ve been at the lovely Kastanienhof in Flieth. A traditional village restaurant with traditional German food. It was really delicious and at a very affordable price range. For the three of us we payed something around 60 EUR in total including drinks and my starter. That’s about as much as I pay for me alone in Berlin when having BBQ ribs at Chicago Williams 😉
That Sunday morning I was helping a friend to put a new hard disk into his laptop. I needed more space and fortunately bought the new NVMe SSD already back in November. The same 4 TB disks now costs more than 100 EUR more thanks to the AI hype.
It had to be a Windows 11 installation as that’s what he had to use for his work. I’m not judging. It went surprisingly smooth. We’ve created a bootstick from the existing installation with the Windows 11 installer. He had already looked up a video on how to disassemble the laptop. That was a huge timesaver as the HP Laptop had 5 hidden screws that we had to uncover under the rubber feet.
New disk in, booted from USB and started the installation. After about 15 min the new OS was running and could start to install the needed software from scratch. He knew all his accounts and password and so we were done in a few hours with the whole setup. I honestly expected more fiddling needed.
China here we come
The planning of the upcoming China trip progresses. I’ve contacted a few friends in Beijing and established communication via WeChat with them now. We had stayed in contact loosely via Facebook and LinkedIN. Both services are just bad … for various reasons. But we switched to Chinas most popular chat app. They immediately offered pick up service and are generally excited to meet again. We’ve also got the rest of the schedule mostly sorted and now need to book the hotels and tours. It’s getting real.
#project25 update
This week the insulation material for the attic arrived and work is supposed to start next week. We quickly unloaded the stuff and placed partially into the attic and living room for convenience.
Unfortunately I noticed that the heating seemed to have stopped. It’s hopefully “just” because of low fuel level in the oil tanks. I had initially only bought 1000L back in June 2025 expecting this to last about a year.
I really have no experience with this kind of heating system. We didn’t spent much time in the house yet so the heating was set to winter mode most of the time. But then we also had a pretty cold winter so far and not insulated attic is kind of open to the lower floor norw. I’ve tried to seal it as good as possible with styrofoam plates. Still the heating seems to guzzle a lot of oil… that soon needs to be replace by a proper heat pump system.
still ice on the lake14 at last
Kiddo turned 14 this week … of course they grow up so fast 🙂
Learning
Learned (rather got it confirmed) this week from our doctor that ADS & depression is much harder noticed in women because they’re much better at blending in and make an effort to just play along to expectations. That of course is taxing and taking lots of energy which makes their symptoms even worse.
Reading
no changes over last week
#activitypub #coffee #enEN #project25 #tasskaff #Uckermark #weekly #weeklyreview #wordpress -
#weeklyreview 07/2026
February 8th – 14th, 2026
Summary
Somehow super hectic week. That’s why I only got to post last weeks review yesterday. Struggling with project management or the lack thereof in the office. More AI fiddling that I’m rather happy with. Good progress on #project25 and the China vacation plan. Also still enjoying the book about the Vienna Circle a lot.
AI, AI and more AI
This is a big topic for me right now. At the office of course but also in personal experiments.
Fediverse journaling plugin
With help of AI coding I’m getting to realise many small ideas I had but would never have had the time to realise. This week I’ve create a little WordPress plugin to use the fediverse as a journaling assistant.
I spent a lot of time in my fediverse clients (mostly Mona, IceCubes or the Mastodon web interface). So why not use that as an input channel for my weekly blogging. I tried different other approaches over the last few months to recollect what I was busy with during the week. Having scripts collecting my Mastodon posts over the weeks and compiling them into a weekly overview page for instance. So I thought it might be useful to just sent message in the Fediverse to my blog for journaling.
I’ve got the ActivityPub plugin installed and thus my Blog is just a normal account in the fediverse that I can mention or sent messages to. I’ve wrote a plugin in which I can authorise specific fediverse users in a WordPress author profile. If these fediverse users mention the WordPress author profile, that post gets appended to a weekly draft post on the Blog.
Now whenever I have something noteworthy, I’ll mention my blog account in my fediverse post and it gets automatically appended to a weekly review draft. At the end of the week I already have a list of things that bothered me during the week.
The code can be found here.
Some snippets from this weeks journal:
2026-02-11 17:37:06
I’d call it “vibe project management” where you just pretend to have a project plan. It visually looks like project plan. But factually it doesn’t make any sense because it has been created with Photoshop for Powerpoint …@falko2026-02-12 12:59:10
@Nico prinzipiell läuft es. Genutzt wird das Modell jetzt von einem Pi Coding Agent der in einer Debian VM läuft 🙈 @falkoI’ve tried my luck with an open weight coding model and the Pi Coding agent. Downloaded the qwen3-coder-next:latest model for Ollama. That’s a whopping 51GB in size as barely fits into my physical memory. The Pi coding agent was running inside a virtual machine. It works in principle… but is so slow that a reasonable test wasn’t really practical for the moment. Have to play a bit more with it. With that setup one could theoretically realise a fully offline coding agent. But I guess some more beefy hardware is needed. Although an Apple Silicon M2 Max isn’t really a slow machine.
Project Management in the age of vibe everything
To be honest, this has started much before AI and vibe coding became popular. The tendency to make up project plans with tools that are not meant for project planning. Most notorious in this field are Project Plans in Excel, Powerpoint or JIRA.
Why am I so upset about it? In my eyes a project plan helps you prioritise and visualise work by listing the tasks and milestones and putting them in chronological order. You define dependencies between tasks and maybe even resources. Once that has been established (and I don’t say this is trivial to collect) you can use proper project management software to identify the critical path of your project. That is the one sequence of events that you have to focus on. All the others will not move you necessarily closer to your project end (because they’re not on the critical path) until the items on the critical path are not finished.
It will also help you assess the effects of time lines slippage. How does that the affect to overall project timing? Or you can identify bottlenecks in your plan due to resources overload. So all good things that you management usually wants to see and from you as a project manager.
Yet, many project plans are just vibe fiddled with the likes of office software. So it just looks similar to a project plan visually. But these tools don’t help you actually manage your project. They just visualise what you think your project plan is. Not backed by hard data.
The most hilarious experience in this context was my conversation with the Atlassian Rovo AI assistant on the topic this week. Asked whether JIRA can be used for project management it of course answered that JIRA is actually best for this. Then probed how chronological order and critical path can then be managed it needed to back off and admit that you can’t do that in JIRA without lots of add-ons and/or paid extensions.
What puzzles me is, that this kind of “let’s just wing it” project management is accepted in many companies. My theory is, that management knows precisely that their demand for speed, quality and resource usage is completely unrealistic. Too much work get’s committed with too little resources. Milestone be set before the actually planning happened because it was promised to a customer or C-suite guy. Proper project management would proof with hard data that the timeline is totally unrealistic.
But with just vibe coded project plans they can just press and demand. And people obey with over-hours and compromises in quality and features.
Rural restaurants
On Sunday we’ve been at the lovely Kastanienhof in Flieth. A traditional village restaurant with traditional German food. It was really delicious and at a very affordable price range. For the three of us we payed something around 60 EUR in total including drinks and my starter. That’s about as much as I pay for me alone in Berlin when having BBQ ribs at Chicago Williams 😉
That Sunday morning I was helping a friend to put a new hard disk into his laptop. I needed more space and fortunately bought the new NVMe SSD already back in November. The same 4 TB disks now costs more than 100 EUR more thanks to the AI hype.
It had to be a Windows 11 installation as that’s what he had to use for his work. I’m not judging. It went surprisingly smooth. We’ve created a bootstick from the existing installation with the Windows 11 installer. He had already looked up a video on how to disassemble the laptop. That was a huge timesaver as the HP Laptop had 5 hidden screws that we had to uncover under the rubber feet.
New disk in, booted from USB and started the installation. After about 15 min the new OS was running and could start to install the needed software from scratch. He knew all his accounts and password and so we were done in a few hours with the whole setup. I honestly expected more fiddling needed.
China here we come
The planning of the upcoming China trip progresses. I’ve contacted a few friends in Beijing and established communication via WeChat with them now. We had stayed in contact loosely via Facebook and LinkedIN. Both services are just bad … for various reasons. But we switched to Chinas most popular chat app. They immediately offered pick up service and are generally excited to meet again. We’ve also got the rest of the schedule mostly sorted and now need to book the hotels and tours. It’s getting real.
#project25 update
This week the insulation material for the attic arrived and work is supposed to start next week. We quickly unloaded the stuff and placed partially into the attic and living room for convenience.
Unfortunately I noticed that the heating seemed to have stopped. It’s hopefully “just” because of low fuel level in the oil tanks. I had initially only bought 1000L back in June 2025 expecting this to last about a year.
I really have no experience with this kind of heating system. We didn’t spent much time in the house yet so the heating was set to winter mode most of the time. But then we also had a pretty cold winter so far and not insulated attic is kind of open to the lower floor norw. I’ve tried to seal it as good as possible with styrofoam plates. Still the heating seems to guzzle a lot of oil… that soon needs to be replace by a proper heat pump system.
still ice on the lake14 at last
Kiddo turned 14 this week … of course they grow up so fast 🙂
Learning
Learned (rather got it confirmed) this week from our doctor that ADS & depression is much harder noticed in women because they’re much better at blending in and make an effort to just play along to expectations. That of course is taxing and taking lots of energy which makes their symptoms even worse.
Reading
no changes over last week
#activitypub #coffee #enEN #project25 #tasskaff #Uckermark #weekly #weeklyreview #wordpress -
#weeklyreview 07/2026
February 8th – 14th, 2026
Summary
Somehow super hectic week. That’s why I only got to post last weeks review yesterday. Struggling with project management or the lack thereof in the office. More AI fiddling that I’m rather happy with. Good progress on #project25 and the China vacation plan. Also still enjoying the book about the Vienna Circle a lot.
AI, AI and more AI
This is a big topic for me right now. At the office of course but also in personal experiments.
Fediverse journaling plugin
With help of AI coding I’m getting to realise many small ideas I had but would never have had the time to realise. This week I’ve create a little WordPress plugin to use the fediverse as a journaling assistant.
I spent a lot of time in my fediverse clients (mostly Mona, IceCubes or the Mastodon web interface). So why not use that as an input channel for my weekly blogging. I tried different other approaches over the last few months to recollect what I was busy with during the week. Having scripts collecting my Mastodon posts over the weeks and compiling them into a weekly overview page for instance. So I thought it might be useful to just sent message in the Fediverse to my blog for journaling.
I’ve got the ActivityPub plugin installed and thus my Blog is just a normal account in the fediverse that I can mention or sent messages to. I’ve wrote a plugin in which I can authorise specific fediverse users in a WordPress author profile. If these fediverse users mention the WordPress author profile, that post gets appended to a weekly draft post on the Blog.
Now whenever I have something noteworthy, I’ll mention my blog account in my fediverse post and it gets automatically appended to a weekly review draft. At the end of the week I already have a list of things that bothered me during the week.
The code can be found here.
Some snippets from this weeks journal:
2026-02-11 17:37:06
I’d call it “vibe project management” where you just pretend to have a project plan. It visually looks like project plan. But factually it doesn’t make any sense because it has been created with Photoshop for Powerpoint …@falko2026-02-12 12:59:10
@Nico prinzipiell läuft es. Genutzt wird das Modell jetzt von einem Pi Coding Agent der in einer Debian VM läuft 🙈 @falkoI’ve tried my luck with an open weight coding model and the Pi Coding agent. Downloaded the qwen3-coder-next:latest model for Ollama. That’s a whopping 51GB in size as barely fits into my physical memory. The Pi coding agent was running inside a virtual machine. It works in principle… but is so slow that a reasonable test wasn’t really practical for the moment. Have to play a bit more with it. With that setup one could theoretically realise a fully offline coding agent. But I guess some more beefy hardware is needed. Although an Apple Silicon M2 Max isn’t really a slow machine.
Project Management in the age of vibe everything
To be honest, this has started much before AI and vibe coding became popular. The tendency to make up project plans with tools that are not meant for project planning. Most notorious in this field are Project Plans in Excel, Powerpoint or JIRA.
Why am I so upset about it? In my eyes a project plan helps you prioritise and visualise work by listing the tasks and milestones and putting them in chronological order. You define dependencies between tasks and maybe even resources. Once that has been established (and I don’t say this is trivial to collect) you can use proper project management software to identify the critical path of your project. That is the one sequence of events that you have to focus on. All the others will not move you necessarily closer to your project end (because they’re not on the critical path) until the items on the critical path are not finished.
It will also help you assess the effects of time lines slippage. How does that the affect to overall project timing? Or you can identify bottlenecks in your plan due to resources overload. So all good things that you management usually wants to see and from you as a project manager.
Yet, many project plans are just vibe fiddled with the likes of office software. So it just looks similar to a project plan visually. But these tools don’t help you actually manage your project. They just visualise what you think your project plan is. Not backed by hard data.
The most hilarious experience in this context was my conversation with the Atlassian Rovo AI assistant on the topic this week. Asked whether JIRA can be used for project management it of course answered that JIRA is actually best for this. Then probed how chronological order and critical path can then be managed it needed to back off and admit that you can’t do that in JIRA without lots of add-ons and/or paid extensions.
What puzzles me is, that this kind of “let’s just wing it” project management is accepted in many companies. My theory is, that management knows precisely that their demand for speed, quality and resource usage is completely unrealistic. Too much work get’s committed with too little resources. Milestone be set before the actually planning happened because it was promised to a customer or C-suite guy. Proper project management would proof with hard data that the timeline is totally unrealistic.
But with just vibe coded project plans they can just press and demand. And people obey with over-hours and compromises in quality and features.
Rural restaurants
On Sunday we’ve been at the lovely Kastanienhof in Flieth. A traditional village restaurant with traditional German food. It was really delicious and at a very affordable price range. For the three of us we payed something around 60 EUR in total including drinks and my starter. That’s about as much as I pay for me alone in Berlin when having BBQ ribs at Chicago Williams 😉
That Sunday morning I was helping a friend to put a new hard disk into his laptop. I needed more space and fortunately bought the new NVMe SSD already back in November. The same 4 TB disks now costs more than 100 EUR more thanks to the AI hype.
It had to be a Windows 11 installation as that’s what he had to use for his work. I’m not judging. It went surprisingly smooth. We’ve created a bootstick from the existing installation with the Windows 11 installer. He had already looked up a video on how to disassemble the laptop. That was a huge timesaver as the HP Laptop had 5 hidden screws that we had to uncover under the rubber feet.
New disk in, booted from USB and started the installation. After about 15 min the new OS was running and could start to install the needed software from scratch. He knew all his accounts and password and so we were done in a few hours with the whole setup. I honestly expected more fiddling needed.
China here we come
The planning of the upcoming China trip progresses. I’ve contacted a few friends in Beijing and established communication via WeChat with them now. We had stayed in contact loosely via Facebook and LinkedIN. Both services are just bad … for various reasons. But we switched to Chinas most popular chat app. They immediately offered pick up service and are generally excited to meet again. We’ve also got the rest of the schedule mostly sorted and now need to book the hotels and tours. It’s getting real.
#project25 update
This week the insulation material for the attic arrived and work is supposed to start next week. We quickly unloaded the stuff and placed partially into the attic and living room for convenience.
Unfortunately I noticed that the heating seemed to have stopped. It’s hopefully “just” because of low fuel level in the oil tanks. I had initially only bought 1000L back in June 2025 expecting this to last about a year.
I really have no experience with this kind of heating system. We didn’t spent much time in the house yet so the heating was set to winter mode most of the time. But then we also had a pretty cold winter so far and not insulated attic is kind of open to the lower floor norw. I’ve tried to seal it as good as possible with styrofoam plates. Still the heating seems to guzzle a lot of oil… that soon needs to be replace by a proper heat pump system.
still ice on the lake14 at last
Kiddo turned 14 this week … of course they grow up so fast 🙂
Learning
Learned (rather got it confirmed) this week from our doctor that ADS & depression is much harder noticed in women because they’re much better at blending in and make an effort to just play along to expectations. That of course is taxing and taking lots of energy which makes their symptoms even worse.
Reading
no changes over last week
#activitypub #coffee #enEN #project25 #tasskaff #Uckermark #weekly #weeklyreview #wordpress -
#weeklyreview 07/2026
February 8th – 14th, 2026
Summary
Somehow super hectic week. That’s why I only got to post last weeks review yesterday. Struggling with project management or the lack thereof in the office. More AI fiddling that I’m rather happy with. Good progress on #project25 and the China vacation plan. Also still enjoying the book about the Vienna Circle a lot.
AI, AI and more AI
This is a big topic for me right now. At the office of course but also in personal experiments.
Fediverse journaling plugin
With help of AI coding I’m getting to realise many small ideas I had but would never have had the time to realise. This week I’ve create a little WordPress plugin to use the fediverse as a journaling assistant.
I spent a lot of time in my fediverse clients (mostly Mona, IceCubes or the Mastodon web interface). So why not use that as an input channel for my weekly blogging. I tried different other approaches over the last few months to recollect what I was busy with during the week. Having scripts collecting my Mastodon posts over the weeks and compiling them into a weekly overview page for instance. So I thought it might be useful to just sent message in the Fediverse to my blog for journaling.
I’ve got the ActivityPub plugin installed and thus my Blog is just a normal account in the fediverse that I can mention or sent messages to. I’ve wrote a plugin in which I can authorise specific fediverse users in a WordPress author profile. If these fediverse users mention the WordPress author profile, that post gets appended to a weekly draft post on the Blog.
Now whenever I have something noteworthy, I’ll mention my blog account in my fediverse post and it gets automatically appended to a weekly review draft. At the end of the week I already have a list of things that bothered me during the week.
The code can be found here.
Some snippets from this weeks journal:
2026-02-11 17:37:06
I’d call it “vibe project management” where you just pretend to have a project plan. It visually looks like project plan. But factually it doesn’t make any sense because it has been created with Photoshop for Powerpoint …@falko2026-02-12 12:59:10
@Nico prinzipiell läuft es. Genutzt wird das Modell jetzt von einem Pi Coding Agent der in einer Debian VM läuft 🙈 @falkoI’ve tried my luck with an open weight coding model and the Pi Coding agent. Downloaded the qwen3-coder-next:latest model for Ollama. That’s a whopping 51GB in size as barely fits into my physical memory. The Pi coding agent was running inside a virtual machine. It works in principle… but is so slow that a reasonable test wasn’t really practical for the moment. Have to play a bit more with it. With that setup one could theoretically realise a fully offline coding agent. But I guess some more beefy hardware is needed. Although an Apple Silicon M2 Max isn’t really a slow machine.
Project Management in the age of vibe everything
To be honest, this has started much before AI and vibe coding became popular. The tendency to make up project plans with tools that are not meant for project planning. Most notorious in this field are Project Plans in Excel, Powerpoint or JIRA.
Why am I so upset about it? In my eyes a project plan helps you prioritise and visualise work by listing the tasks and milestones and putting them in chronological order. You define dependencies between tasks and maybe even resources. Once that has been established (and I don’t say this is trivial to collect) you can use proper project management software to identify the critical path of your project. That is the one sequence of events that you have to focus on. All the others will not move you necessarily closer to your project end (because they’re not on the critical path) until the items on the critical path are not finished.
It will also help you assess the effects of time lines slippage. How does that the affect to overall project timing? Or you can identify bottlenecks in your plan due to resources overload. So all good things that you management usually wants to see and from you as a project manager.
Yet, many project plans are just vibe fiddled with the likes of office software. So it just looks similar to a project plan visually. But these tools don’t help you actually manage your project. They just visualise what you think your project plan is. Not backed by hard data.
The most hilarious experience in this context was my conversation with the Atlassian Rovo AI assistant on the topic this week. Asked whether JIRA can be used for project management it of course answered that JIRA is actually best for this. Then probed how chronological order and critical path can then be managed it needed to back off and admit that you can’t do that in JIRA without lots of add-ons and/or paid extensions.
What puzzles me is, that this kind of “let’s just wing it” project management is accepted in many companies. My theory is, that management knows precisely that their demand for speed, quality and resource usage is completely unrealistic. Too much work get’s committed with too little resources. Milestone be set before the actually planning happened because it was promised to a customer or C-suite guy. Proper project management would proof with hard data that the timeline is totally unrealistic.
But with just vibe coded project plans they can just press and demand. And people obey with over-hours and compromises in quality and features.
Rural restaurants
On Sunday we’ve been at the lovely Kastanienhof in Flieth. A traditional village restaurant with traditional German food. It was really delicious and at a very affordable price range. For the three of us we payed something around 60 EUR in total including drinks and my starter. That’s about as much as I pay for me alone in Berlin when having BBQ ribs at Chicago Williams 😉
That Sunday morning I was helping a friend to put a new hard disk into his laptop. I needed more space and fortunately bought the new NVMe SSD already back in November. The same 4 TB disks now costs more than 100 EUR more thanks to the AI hype.
It had to be a Windows 11 installation as that’s what he had to use for his work. I’m not judging. It went surprisingly smooth. We’ve created a bootstick from the existing installation with the Windows 11 installer. He had already looked up a video on how to disassemble the laptop. That was a huge timesaver as the HP Laptop had 5 hidden screws that we had to uncover under the rubber feet.
New disk in, booted from USB and started the installation. After about 15 min the new OS was running and could start to install the needed software from scratch. He knew all his accounts and password and so we were done in a few hours with the whole setup. I honestly expected more fiddling needed.
China here we come
The planning of the upcoming China trip progresses. I’ve contacted a few friends in Beijing and established communication via WeChat with them now. We had stayed in contact loosely via Facebook and LinkedIN. Both services are just bad … for various reasons. But we switched to Chinas most popular chat app. They immediately offered pick up service and are generally excited to meet again. We’ve also got the rest of the schedule mostly sorted and now need to book the hotels and tours. It’s getting real.
#project25 update
This week the insulation material for the attic arrived and work is supposed to start next week. We quickly unloaded the stuff and placed partially into the attic and living room for convenience.
Unfortunately I noticed that the heating seemed to have stopped. It’s hopefully “just” because of low fuel level in the oil tanks. I had initially only bought 1000L back in June 2025 expecting this to last about a year.
I really have no experience with this kind of heating system. We didn’t spent much time in the house yet so the heating was set to winter mode most of the time. But then we also had a pretty cold winter so far and not insulated attic is kind of open to the lower floor norw. I’ve tried to seal it as good as possible with styrofoam plates. Still the heating seems to guzzle a lot of oil… that soon needs to be replace by a proper heat pump system.
still ice on the lake14 at last
Kiddo turned 14 this week … of course they grow up so fast 🙂
Learning
Learned (rather got it confirmed) this week from our doctor that ADS & depression is much harder noticed in women because they’re much better at blending in and make an effort to just play along to expectations. That of course is taxing and taking lots of energy which makes their symptoms even worse.
Reading
no changes over last week
#activitypub #coffee #enEN #project25 #tasskaff #Uckermark #weekly #weeklyreview #wordpress -
#weeklyreview 07/2026
February 8th – 14th, 2026
Summary
Somehow super hectic week. That’s why I only got to post last weeks review yesterday. Struggling with project management or the lack thereof in the office. More AI fiddling that I’m rather happy with. Good progress on #project25 and the China vacation plan. Also still enjoying the book about the Vienna Circle a lot.
AI, AI and more AI
This is a big topic for me right now. At the office of course but also in personal experiments.
Fediverse journaling plugin
With help of AI coding I’m getting to realise many small ideas I had but would never have had the time to realise. This week I’ve create a little WordPress plugin to use the fediverse as a journaling assistant.
I spent a lot of time in my fediverse clients (mostly Mona, IceCubes or the Mastodon web interface). So why not use that as an input channel for my weekly blogging. I tried different other approaches over the last few months to recollect what I was busy with during the week. Having scripts collecting my Mastodon posts over the weeks and compiling them into a weekly overview page for instance. So I thought it might be useful to just sent message in the Fediverse to my blog for journaling.
I’ve got the ActivityPub plugin installed and thus my Blog is just a normal account in the fediverse that I can mention or sent messages to. I’ve wrote a plugin in which I can authorise specific fediverse users in a WordPress author profile. If these fediverse users mention the WordPress author profile, that post gets appended to a weekly draft post on the Blog.
Now whenever I have something noteworthy, I’ll mention my blog account in my fediverse post and it gets automatically appended to a weekly review draft. At the end of the week I already have a list of things that bothered me during the week.
The code can be found here.
Some snippets from this weeks journal:
2026-02-11 17:37:06
I’d call it “vibe project management” where you just pretend to have a project plan. It visually looks like project plan. But factually it doesn’t make any sense because it has been created with Photoshop for Powerpoint …@falko2026-02-12 12:59:10
@Nico prinzipiell läuft es. Genutzt wird das Modell jetzt von einem Pi Coding Agent der in einer Debian VM läuft 🙈 @falkoI’ve tried my luck with an open weight coding model and the Pi Coding agent. Downloaded the qwen3-coder-next:latest model for Ollama. That’s a whopping 51GB in size as barely fits into my physical memory. The Pi coding agent was running inside a virtual machine. It works in principle… but is so slow that a reasonable test wasn’t really practical for the moment. Have to play a bit more with it. With that setup one could theoretically realise a fully offline coding agent. But I guess some more beefy hardware is needed. Although an Apple Silicon M2 Max isn’t really a slow machine.
Project Management in the age of vibe everything
To be honest, this has started much before AI and vibe coding became popular. The tendency to make up project plans with tools that are not meant for project planning. Most notorious in this field are Project Plans in Excel, Powerpoint or JIRA.
Why am I so upset about it? In my eyes a project plan helps you prioritise and visualise work by listing the tasks and milestones and putting them in chronological order. You define dependencies between tasks and maybe even resources. Once that has been established (and I don’t say this is trivial to collect) you can use proper project management software to identify the critical path of your project. That is the one sequence of events that you have to focus on. All the others will not move you necessarily closer to your project end (because they’re not on the critical path) until the items on the critical path are not finished.
It will also help you assess the effects of time lines slippage. How does that the affect to overall project timing? Or you can identify bottlenecks in your plan due to resources overload. So all good things that you management usually wants to see and from you as a project manager.
Yet, many project plans are just vibe fiddled with the likes of office software. So it just looks similar to a project plan visually. But these tools don’t help you actually manage your project. They just visualise what you think your project plan is. Not backed by hard data.
The most hilarious experience in this context was my conversation with the Atlassian Rovo AI assistant on the topic this week. Asked whether JIRA can be used for project management it of course answered that JIRA is actually best for this. Then probed how chronological order and critical path can then be managed it needed to back off and admit that you can’t do that in JIRA without lots of add-ons and/or paid extensions.
What puzzles me is, that this kind of “let’s just wing it” project management is accepted in many companies. My theory is, that management knows precisely that their demand for speed, quality and resource usage is completely unrealistic. Too much work get’s committed with too little resources. Milestone be set before the actually planning happened because it was promised to a customer or C-suite guy. Proper project management would proof with hard data that the timeline is totally unrealistic.
But with just vibe coded project plans they can just press and demand. And people obey with over-hours and compromises in quality and features.
Rural restaurants
On Sunday we’ve been at the lovely Kastanienhof in Flieth. A traditional village restaurant with traditional German food. It was really delicious and at a very affordable price range. For the three of us we payed something around 60 EUR in total including drinks and my starter. That’s about as much as I pay for me alone in Berlin when having BBQ ribs at Chicago Williams 😉
That Sunday morning I was helping a friend to put a new hard disk into his laptop. I needed more space and fortunately bought the new NVMe SSD already back in November. The same 4 TB disks now costs more than 100 EUR more thanks to the AI hype.
It had to be a Windows 11 installation as that’s what he had to use for his work. I’m not judging. It went surprisingly smooth. We’ve created a bootstick from the existing installation with the Windows 11 installer. He had already looked up a video on how to disassemble the laptop. That was a huge timesaver as the HP Laptop had 5 hidden screws that we had to uncover under the rubber feet.
New disk in, booted from USB and started the installation. After about 15 min the new OS was running and could start to install the needed software from scratch. He knew all his accounts and password and so we were done in a few hours with the whole setup. I honestly expected more fiddling needed.
China here we come
The planning of the upcoming China trip progresses. I’ve contacted a few friends in Beijing and established communication via WeChat with them now. We had stayed in contact loosely via Facebook and LinkedIN. Both services are just bad … for various reasons. But we switched to Chinas most popular chat app. They immediately offered pick up service and are generally excited to meet again. We’ve also got the rest of the schedule mostly sorted and now need to book the hotels and tours. It’s getting real.
#project25 update
This week the insulation material for the attic arrived and work is supposed to start next week. We quickly unloaded the stuff and placed partially into the attic and living room for convenience.
Unfortunately I noticed that the heating seemed to have stopped. It’s hopefully “just” because of low fuel level in the oil tanks. I had initially only bought 1000L back in June 2025 expecting this to last about a year.
I really have no experience with this kind of heating system. We didn’t spent much time in the house yet so the heating was set to winter mode most of the time. But then we also had a pretty cold winter so far and not insulated attic is kind of open to the lower floor norw. I’ve tried to seal it as good as possible with styrofoam plates. Still the heating seems to guzzle a lot of oil… that soon needs to be replace by a proper heat pump system.
still ice on the lake14 at last
Kiddo turned 14 this week … of course they grow up so fast 🙂
Learning
Learned (rather got it confirmed) this week from our doctor that ADS & depression is much harder noticed in women because they’re much better at blending in and make an effort to just play along to expectations. That of course is taxing and taking lots of energy which makes their symptoms even worse.
Reading
no changes over last week
#activitypub #coffee #enEN #project25 #tasskaff #Uckermark #weekly #weeklyreview #wordpress -
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Erst mal einen #orangespresso ballern #tasskaff
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#weeklyreview 46/2025
I finally gave in and accepted the aging of my body. Went to an optometrist to get my eyes measured for glasses for work. I noticed that my arms are getting shorter and it’s harder to read at short distance.
First I had tried the cheap reading glasses from the grocery store. But these only work at really short distance for me. Like 30cm from my face. I need something that improves the readability at arms length for me.
The guy at the Augenoptik Mitte measured short sightedness of up to 1.25 dpt and also warped lenses. So compensation glasses were in order. I tried several frames and had family and friends give their opinion. Eventually settled for 0.75 dpt and warp correction glasses and this frame as a compromise. I would have also gone with a more prominent, Colin Farrell Gentleman style frame. But the majority vote was on this more subtle model.
And what shall I say … the make a difference. Much less stress on the eyes watching computer screens and mobile phones now.
one frame that I like very much. But that frame unfortunately was as expensive as the lenses and alternative frame combined …VHS
On Monday I held a little AI introductory course at the community college (VHS) in Templin. 9 people showed up and were eager to learn how the most common tools work and what are the caveats and risks with these tools. The audience was mostly 50+ of age. I guess that’s the normal VHS audience.
Sloppy preparation
On Tuesday we had our monthly gathering of ye old greybeards (I’m actually the only one with a beard in that group). Our usual spot is the Pratergarten Restaurant which is usually empty at that time. But not this Tuesday… as it was Saint Martins day, they had goose on the menu and were fully booked. So we had to find an alternative place in walking distance. Settle for an Indian restaurant that had to bear with our tech rambling.
Indian food … yummyRibs at last
The feast continued on Wednesday at Chicago Williams BBQ in Charlottenburg. My best friend @slamr invited me for dinner at my favourite rib place. And of course it was delicious and juice and lovely. We rounded it up with Espresso Martinis.
Weird coffee based drinks
Speaking of coffee … the Espresso Martini was a first for me. Not too bad I’d say. I’m embracing some variety in my coffee consumption and also had a bulletproof coffee (Ghee, MCT oil, Coffee) and an Orangespresso this week.
Great stabbility
Thursday a “drama” unfolded. I was stabbed … in the arm… in a pharmacy.
But I had actually asked for it and eventually payed for it. It was my refresher for the COVID-19 vaccine that was conveniently offered at the pharmacy next door to the office.
That morning I did weight training in our gym. So my arms hurt evenly despite the vaccination was just on one side 😆
Party
On Saturday we had our annual year end party of the village society. Again friends offered their house to be the venue for the gathering and we enjoyed delicious food and conversations while reflecting on the past year. The society makes a difference in the village by taking an effort to bring people together at various events. This sparks conversations and often times brings new perspectives and a feeling of belonging.
My contribution to the buffet was a square version of my notorious New York Cheesecake. I caramelised the base with brown sugar and a torch on our terrace to make sure the filling doesn’t soak the base took quickly. It worked will.
Tinkering
I was playing around with Claude Agents this week. Idea was to help with generating a draft for my weekly blog posts. Normally I’d look at the photos I took in the last week to remember what was going on. Additionally I look at my Mastodon posts. That’s all stuff an agent could do for me and create a summarised draft. So I cobbled together some agents that would fetch my Mastodon posts, get my photos from my Immich instance, generate image descriptions for these images and out of that content generate a draft blog post.
I’m not posting these drafts verbatim as the LLMs are usually too chatty and not my style. But I might going to use it as an input for my own write up of the past week.
The state of the agent can be seen here: https://repos.mxhdr.net/maxheadroom/weekly-blogging-agent
The draft for this post that came out of the agent looks like this:
Drafttitle: “Week 46: November 9-16, 2025”
date: 2025-11-16
week: 46
year: 2025
author: Falko
tags:- weekly
- cheesecake
- coffee
- vaccination
- uckermark
- social
summary: “A week of baking experiments, caffeinated adventures, vaccination humor, and quality time with friends”
stats:
posts: 11
photos: 54
locations:
– Uckermark
Weekly Highlights
Welcome to this week’s roundup! It’s been a busy week here in Uckermark, filled with baking experiments, interesting beverages, social gatherings, and even a medical procedure that turned into a comedy routine. Let me walk you through some of the highlights.
This week brought together 11 original posts (plus 29 shares of interesting content I found), and my camera captured 54 moments worth remembering. From the fog-shrouded landscapes of rural Brandenburg to the warmth of friends gathering around food and drinks, it’s been a week rich with experiences.
The Great Stabbening: COVID Vaccination Edition
Wednesday brought what I can only describe as a medical thriller told in four acts. It started dramatically:
November 13, 2025 at 8:48 PM
I was stabbed today
The tension built:
November 13, 2025 at 8:49 PM
… in a pharmacy … in the arm… with a syringe.
The reveal:
November 13, 2025 at 8:50 PM
… To get my COVID vaccination. The doctor didn’t cry.
And the punchline:
November 13, 2025 at 8:51 PM
frankly I got great stabbility
This thread got some great engagement, with folks sharing their own vaccination stories and appreciation for the wordplay. Sometimes the mundane moments of life become the most entertaining when you approach them with the right attitude.
New York Cheesecake: A Square Adventure
Saturday morning brought the revelation of my baking experiment – my first attempt at making a square-shaped New York Cheesecake.
November 16, 2025 at 9:02 AM
Tried to make a square shape New York Cheesecake for the first time yesterday. It was meant to be shared at a party and I thought it would be easier to share in smaller pieces. It came out good I think. The base was solid enough to get the out of the pan. I also properly caramelized the top of the base so it doesn’t soak as quickly #NewYorkCheesecake #foodporn #foodpornofmastodon
This turned out to be my most engaged post of the week with 8 favorites! The square shape idea actually worked surprisingly well – easier to portion, and the caramelized base held up beautifully.
Caption: The finished product – note that perfectly caramelized base!From the Department of Weird Coffee-Based Drinks
Friday brought an exploration of unconventional caffeinated beverages:
November 14, 2025 at 6:46 AM
From the department of weird coffee based drinks we present: the #Espresso Martini, the #Orangepresso and a bulletproof coffee #tasskaff
The Espresso Martini stole the show this week. There’s something magical about the combination of coffee and cocktail culture.
Caption: That perfect foam top – the mark of a well-made espresso martini
Caption: Another angle of the evening’s caffeinated cocktailsThe Orangepresso and bulletproof coffee were interesting experiments too, but there’s something about that espresso martini that just hits different.
Social Moments: Friends, Food, and Good Times
Throughout the week, I captured several moments of friends gathering together. Whether it’s at a bar, in someone’s living room, or around a table full of food, these moments of connection are what make life rich.
Caption: Cheers! Good friends, good food, good times
Caption: Cozy evening gatheringsThese casual moments – the toasts, the laughter, the shared meals – they’re the fabric of a well-lived life. Saturday was particularly social, with 17 photos captured in just one day.
Honorable Mentions
A few other moments from the week:
- Pastpuzzle battles: Two attempts this week, with mixed results. Some days you nail it, some days… you don’t.
- Uckermark in the fog: “I set render distance to 20m #Uckermark” – when the weather gives you gaming jokes
- Music sharing: That Tyrone track on Spotify deserved a share
- Forest facts: Germany’s forests are only about 10,000 years old – fascinating tidbits from the datawrapper folks
Closing Thoughts
Looking back on this week, it’s been a delightful mix of creativity (that cheesecake!), humor (stabbility!), and connection (all those social gatherings). The fog that rolled through Uckermark this weekend feels like a fitting metaphor – sometimes we can’t see far ahead, but that doesn’t mean the journey isn’t worthwhile.
With 54 photos and 11 original posts, this week was more active than I initially realized. The best moments weren’t always the planned ones – sometimes they were the spontaneous wordplay about vaccinations or the casual photos of friends just being together.
Here’s to more baking experiments, more weird coffee drinks, and more moments worth capturing. Thanks for following along!
Generated with assistance from the Weekly Blogging Agent System
#espresso #foodporn #foodpornofmastodon #newyorkcheesecake #orangepresso #tasskaff #uckermark #weeklyreview
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#weeklyreview 46/2025
I finally gave in and accepted the aging of my body. Went to an optometrist to get my eyes measured for glasses for work. I noticed that my arms are getting shorter and it’s harder to read at short distance.
First I had tried the cheap reading glasses from the grocery store. But these only work at really short distance for me. Like 30cm from my face. I need something that improves the readability at arms length for me.
The guy at the Augenoptik Mitte measured short sightedness of up to 1.25 dpt and also warped lenses. So compensation glasses were in order. I tried several frames and had family and friends give their opinion. Eventually settled for 0.75 dpt and warp correction glasses and this frame as a compromise. I would have also gone with a more prominent, Colin Farrell Gentleman style frame. But the majority vote was on this more subtle model.
And what shall I say … the make a difference. Much less stress on the eyes watching computer screens and mobile phones now.
one frame that I like very much. But that frame unfortunately was as expensive as the lenses and alternative frame combined …VHS
On Monday I held a little AI introductory course at the community college (VHS) in Templin. 9 people showed up and were eager to learn how the most common tools work and what are the caveats and risks with these tools. The audience was mostly 50+ of age. I guess that’s the normal VHS audience.
Sloppy preparation
On Tuesday we had our monthly gathering of ye old greybeards (I’m actually the only one with a beard in that group). Our usual spot is the Pratergarten Restaurant which is usually empty at that time. But not this Tuesday… as it was Saint Martins day, they had goose on the menu and were fully booked. So we had to find an alternative place in walking distance. Settle for an Indian restaurant that had to bear with our tech rambling.
Indian food … yummyRibs at last
The feast continued on Wednesday at Chicago Williams BBQ in Charlottenburg. My best friend @slamr invited me for dinner at my favourite rib place. And of course it was delicious and juice and lovely. We rounded it up with Espresso Martinis.
Weird coffee based drinks
Speaking of coffee … the Espresso Martini was a first for me. Not too bad I’d say. I’m embracing some variety in my coffee consumption and also had a bulletproof coffee (Ghee, MCT oil, Coffee) and an Orangespresso this week.
Great stabbility
Thursday a “drama” unfolded. I was stabbed … in the arm… in a pharmacy.
But I had actually asked for it and eventually payed for it. It was my refresher for the COVID-19 vaccine that was conveniently offered at the pharmacy next door to the office.
That morning I did weight training in our gym. So my arms hurt evenly despite the vaccination was just on one side 😆
Party
On Saturday we had our annual year end party of the village society. Again friends offered their house to be the venue for the gathering and we enjoyed delicious food and conversations while reflecting on the past year. The society makes a difference in the village by taking an effort to bring people together at various events. This sparks conversations and often times brings new perspectives and a feeling of belonging.
My contribution to the buffet was a square version of my notorious New York Cheesecake. I caramelised the base with brown sugar and a torch on our terrace to make sure the filling doesn’t soak the base took quickly. It worked will.
Tinkering
I was playing around with Claude Agents this week. Idea was to help with generating a draft for my weekly blog posts. Normally I’d look at the photos I took in the last week to remember what was going on. Additionally I look at my Mastodon posts. That’s all stuff an agent could do for me and create a summarised draft. So I cobbled together some agents that would fetch my Mastodon posts, get my photos from my Immich instance, generate image descriptions for these images and out of that content generate a draft blog post.
I’m not posting these drafts verbatim as the LLMs are usually too chatty and not my style. But I might going to use it as an input for my own write up of the past week.
The state of the agent can be seen here: https://repos.mxhdr.net/maxheadroom/weekly-blogging-agent
The draft for this post that came out of the agent looks like this:
Drafttitle: “Week 46: November 9-16, 2025”
date: 2025-11-16
week: 46
year: 2025
author: Falko
tags:- weekly
- cheesecake
- coffee
- vaccination
- uckermark
- social
summary: “A week of baking experiments, caffeinated adventures, vaccination humor, and quality time with friends”
stats:
posts: 11
photos: 54
locations:
– Uckermark
Weekly Highlights
Welcome to this week’s roundup! It’s been a busy week here in Uckermark, filled with baking experiments, interesting beverages, social gatherings, and even a medical procedure that turned into a comedy routine. Let me walk you through some of the highlights.
This week brought together 11 original posts (plus 29 shares of interesting content I found), and my camera captured 54 moments worth remembering. From the fog-shrouded landscapes of rural Brandenburg to the warmth of friends gathering around food and drinks, it’s been a week rich with experiences.
The Great Stabbening: COVID Vaccination Edition
Wednesday brought what I can only describe as a medical thriller told in four acts. It started dramatically:
November 13, 2025 at 8:48 PM
I was stabbed today
The tension built:
November 13, 2025 at 8:49 PM
… in a pharmacy … in the arm… with a syringe.
The reveal:
November 13, 2025 at 8:50 PM
… To get my COVID vaccination. The doctor didn’t cry.
And the punchline:
November 13, 2025 at 8:51 PM
frankly I got great stabbility
This thread got some great engagement, with folks sharing their own vaccination stories and appreciation for the wordplay. Sometimes the mundane moments of life become the most entertaining when you approach them with the right attitude.
New York Cheesecake: A Square Adventure
Saturday morning brought the revelation of my baking experiment – my first attempt at making a square-shaped New York Cheesecake.
November 16, 2025 at 9:02 AM
Tried to make a square shape New York Cheesecake for the first time yesterday. It was meant to be shared at a party and I thought it would be easier to share in smaller pieces. It came out good I think. The base was solid enough to get the out of the pan. I also properly caramelized the top of the base so it doesn’t soak as quickly #NewYorkCheesecake #foodporn #foodpornofmastodon
This turned out to be my most engaged post of the week with 8 favorites! The square shape idea actually worked surprisingly well – easier to portion, and the caramelized base held up beautifully.
Caption: The finished product – note that perfectly caramelized base!From the Department of Weird Coffee-Based Drinks
Friday brought an exploration of unconventional caffeinated beverages:
November 14, 2025 at 6:46 AM
From the department of weird coffee based drinks we present: the #Espresso Martini, the #Orangepresso and a bulletproof coffee #tasskaff
The Espresso Martini stole the show this week. There’s something magical about the combination of coffee and cocktail culture.
Caption: That perfect foam top – the mark of a well-made espresso martini
Caption: Another angle of the evening’s caffeinated cocktailsThe Orangepresso and bulletproof coffee were interesting experiments too, but there’s something about that espresso martini that just hits different.
Social Moments: Friends, Food, and Good Times
Throughout the week, I captured several moments of friends gathering together. Whether it’s at a bar, in someone’s living room, or around a table full of food, these moments of connection are what make life rich.
Caption: Cheers! Good friends, good food, good times
Caption: Cozy evening gatheringsThese casual moments – the toasts, the laughter, the shared meals – they’re the fabric of a well-lived life. Saturday was particularly social, with 17 photos captured in just one day.
Honorable Mentions
A few other moments from the week:
- Pastpuzzle battles: Two attempts this week, with mixed results. Some days you nail it, some days… you don’t.
- Uckermark in the fog: “I set render distance to 20m #Uckermark” – when the weather gives you gaming jokes
- Music sharing: That Tyrone track on Spotify deserved a share
- Forest facts: Germany’s forests are only about 10,000 years old – fascinating tidbits from the datawrapper folks
Closing Thoughts
Looking back on this week, it’s been a delightful mix of creativity (that cheesecake!), humor (stabbility!), and connection (all those social gatherings). The fog that rolled through Uckermark this weekend feels like a fitting metaphor – sometimes we can’t see far ahead, but that doesn’t mean the journey isn’t worthwhile.
With 54 photos and 11 original posts, this week was more active than I initially realized. The best moments weren’t always the planned ones – sometimes they were the spontaneous wordplay about vaccinations or the casual photos of friends just being together.
Here’s to more baking experiments, more weird coffee drinks, and more moments worth capturing. Thanks for following along!
Generated with assistance from the Weekly Blogging Agent System
#espresso #foodporn #foodpornofmastodon #newyorkcheesecake #orangepresso #tasskaff #uckermark #weeklyreview
-
#weeklyreview 46/2025
I finally gave in and accepted the aging of my body. Went to an optometrist to get my eyes measured for glasses for work. I noticed that my arms are getting shorter and it’s harder to read at short distance.
First I had tried the cheap reading glasses from the grocery store. But these only work at really short distance for me. Like 30cm from my face. I need something that improves the readability at arms length for me.
The guy at the Augenoptik Mitte measured short sightedness of up to 1.25 dpt and also warped lenses. So compensation glasses were in order. I tried several frames and had family and friends give their opinion. Eventually settled for 0.75 dpt and warp correction glasses and this frame as a compromise. I would have also gone with a more prominent, Colin Farrell Gentleman style frame. But the majority vote was on this more subtle model.
And what shall I say … the make a difference. Much less stress on the eyes watching computer screens and mobile phones now.
one frame that I like very much. But that frame unfortunately was as expensive as the lenses and alternative frame combined …VHS
On Monday I held a little AI introductory course at the community college (VHS) in Templin. 9 people showed up and were eager to learn how the most common tools work and what are the caveats and risks with these tools. The audience was mostly 50+ of age. I guess that’s the normal VHS audience.
Sloppy preparation
On Tuesday we had our monthly gathering of ye old greybeards (I’m actually the only one with a beard in that group). Our usual spot is the Pratergarten Restaurant which is usually empty at that time. But not this Tuesday… as it was Saint Martins day, they had goose on the menu and were fully booked. So we had to find an alternative place in walking distance. Settle for an Indian restaurant that had to bear with our tech rambling.
Indian food … yummyRibs at last
The feast continued on Wednesday at Chicago Williams BBQ in Charlottenburg. My best friend @slamr invited me for dinner at my favourite rib place. And of course it was delicious and juice and lovely. We rounded it up with Espresso Martinis.
Weird coffee based drinks
Speaking of coffee … the Espresso Martini was a first for me. Not too bad I’d say. I’m embracing some variety in my coffee consumption and also had a bulletproof coffee (Ghee, MCT oil, Coffee) and an Orangespresso this week.
Great stabbility
Thursday a “drama” unfolded. I was stabbed … in the arm… in a pharmacy.
But I had actually asked for it and eventually payed for it. It was my refresher for the COVID-19 vaccine that was conveniently offered at the pharmacy next door to the office.
That morning I did weight training in our gym. So my arms hurt evenly despite the vaccination was just on one side 😆
Party
On Saturday we had our annual year end party of the village society. Again friends offered their house to be the venue for the gathering and we enjoyed delicious food and conversations while reflecting on the past year. The society makes a difference in the village by taking an effort to bring people together at various events. This sparks conversations and often times brings new perspectives and a feeling of belonging.
My contribution to the buffet was a square version of my notorious New York Cheesecake. I caramelised the base with brown sugar and a torch on our terrace to make sure the filling doesn’t soak the base took quickly. It worked will.
Tinkering
I was playing around with Claude Agents this week. Idea was to help with generating a draft for my weekly blog posts. Normally I’d look at the photos I took in the last week to remember what was going on. Additionally I look at my Mastodon posts. That’s all stuff an agent could do for me and create a summarised draft. So I cobbled together some agents that would fetch my Mastodon posts, get my photos from my Immich instance, generate image descriptions for these images and out of that content generate a draft blog post.
I’m not posting these drafts verbatim as the LLMs are usually too chatty and not my style. But I might going to use it as an input for my own write up of the past week.
The state of the agent can be seen here: https://repos.mxhdr.net/maxheadroom/weekly-blogging-agent
The draft for this post that came out of the agent looks like this:
Drafttitle: “Week 46: November 9-16, 2025”
date: 2025-11-16
week: 46
year: 2025
author: Falko
tags:- weekly
- cheesecake
- coffee
- vaccination
- uckermark
- social
summary: “A week of baking experiments, caffeinated adventures, vaccination humor, and quality time with friends”
stats:
posts: 11
photos: 54
locations:
– Uckermark
Weekly Highlights
Welcome to this week’s roundup! It’s been a busy week here in Uckermark, filled with baking experiments, interesting beverages, social gatherings, and even a medical procedure that turned into a comedy routine. Let me walk you through some of the highlights.
This week brought together 11 original posts (plus 29 shares of interesting content I found), and my camera captured 54 moments worth remembering. From the fog-shrouded landscapes of rural Brandenburg to the warmth of friends gathering around food and drinks, it’s been a week rich with experiences.
The Great Stabbening: COVID Vaccination Edition
Wednesday brought what I can only describe as a medical thriller told in four acts. It started dramatically:
November 13, 2025 at 8:48 PM
I was stabbed today
The tension built:
November 13, 2025 at 8:49 PM
… in a pharmacy … in the arm… with a syringe.
The reveal:
November 13, 2025 at 8:50 PM
… To get my COVID vaccination. The doctor didn’t cry.
And the punchline:
November 13, 2025 at 8:51 PM
frankly I got great stabbility
This thread got some great engagement, with folks sharing their own vaccination stories and appreciation for the wordplay. Sometimes the mundane moments of life become the most entertaining when you approach them with the right attitude.
New York Cheesecake: A Square Adventure
Saturday morning brought the revelation of my baking experiment – my first attempt at making a square-shaped New York Cheesecake.
November 16, 2025 at 9:02 AM
Tried to make a square shape New York Cheesecake for the first time yesterday. It was meant to be shared at a party and I thought it would be easier to share in smaller pieces. It came out good I think. The base was solid enough to get the out of the pan. I also properly caramelized the top of the base so it doesn’t soak as quickly #NewYorkCheesecake #foodporn #foodpornofmastodon
This turned out to be my most engaged post of the week with 8 favorites! The square shape idea actually worked surprisingly well – easier to portion, and the caramelized base held up beautifully.
Caption: The finished product – note that perfectly caramelized base!From the Department of Weird Coffee-Based Drinks
Friday brought an exploration of unconventional caffeinated beverages:
November 14, 2025 at 6:46 AM
From the department of weird coffee based drinks we present: the #Espresso Martini, the #Orangepresso and a bulletproof coffee #tasskaff
The Espresso Martini stole the show this week. There’s something magical about the combination of coffee and cocktail culture.
Caption: That perfect foam top – the mark of a well-made espresso martini
Caption: Another angle of the evening’s caffeinated cocktailsThe Orangepresso and bulletproof coffee were interesting experiments too, but there’s something about that espresso martini that just hits different.
Social Moments: Friends, Food, and Good Times
Throughout the week, I captured several moments of friends gathering together. Whether it’s at a bar, in someone’s living room, or around a table full of food, these moments of connection are what make life rich.
Caption: Cheers! Good friends, good food, good times
Caption: Cozy evening gatheringsThese casual moments – the toasts, the laughter, the shared meals – they’re the fabric of a well-lived life. Saturday was particularly social, with 17 photos captured in just one day.
Honorable Mentions
A few other moments from the week:
- Pastpuzzle battles: Two attempts this week, with mixed results. Some days you nail it, some days… you don’t.
- Uckermark in the fog: “I set render distance to 20m #Uckermark” – when the weather gives you gaming jokes
- Music sharing: That Tyrone track on Spotify deserved a share
- Forest facts: Germany’s forests are only about 10,000 years old – fascinating tidbits from the datawrapper folks
Closing Thoughts
Looking back on this week, it’s been a delightful mix of creativity (that cheesecake!), humor (stabbility!), and connection (all those social gatherings). The fog that rolled through Uckermark this weekend feels like a fitting metaphor – sometimes we can’t see far ahead, but that doesn’t mean the journey isn’t worthwhile.
With 54 photos and 11 original posts, this week was more active than I initially realized. The best moments weren’t always the planned ones – sometimes they were the spontaneous wordplay about vaccinations or the casual photos of friends just being together.
Here’s to more baking experiments, more weird coffee drinks, and more moments worth capturing. Thanks for following along!
Generated with assistance from the Weekly Blogging Agent System
#espresso #foodporn #foodpornofmastodon #newyorkcheesecake #orangepresso #tasskaff #uckermark #weeklyreview
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#weeklyreview 46/2025
I finally gave in and accepted the aging of my body. Went to an optometrist to get my eyes measured for glasses for work. I noticed that my arms are getting shorter and it’s harder to read at short distance.
First I had tried the cheap reading glasses from the grocery store. But these only work at really short distance for me. Like 30cm from my face. I need something that improves the readability at arms length for me.
The guy at the Augenoptik Mitte measured short sightedness of up to 1.25 dpt and also warped lenses. So compensation glasses were in order. I tried several frames and had family and friends give their opinion. Eventually settled for 0.75 dpt and warp correction glasses and this frame as a compromise. I would have also gone with a more prominent, Colin Farrell Gentleman style frame. But the majority vote was on this more subtle model.
And what shall I say … the make a difference. Much less stress on the eyes watching computer screens and mobile phones now.
one frame that I like very much. But that frame unfortunately was as expensive as the lenses and alternative frame combined …VHS
On Monday I held a little AI introductory course at the community college (VHS) in Templin. 9 people showed up and were eager to learn how the most common tools work and what are the caveats and risks with these tools. The audience was mostly 50+ of age. I guess that’s the normal VHS audience.
Sloppy preparation
On Tuesday we had our monthly gathering of ye old greybeards (I’m actually the only one with a beard in that group). Our usual spot is the Pratergarten Restaurant which is usually empty at that time. But not this Tuesday… as it was Saint Martins day, they had goose on the menu and were fully booked. So we had to find an alternative place in walking distance. Settle for an Indian restaurant that had to bear with our tech rambling.
Indian food … yummyRibs at last
The feast continued on Wednesday at Chicago Williams BBQ in Charlottenburg. My best friend @slamr invited me for dinner at my favourite rib place. And of course it was delicious and juice and lovely. We rounded it up with Espresso Martinis.
Weird coffee based drinks
Speaking of coffee … the Espresso Martini was a first for me. Not too bad I’d say. I’m embracing some variety in my coffee consumption and also had a bulletproof coffee (Ghee, MCT oil, Coffee) and an Orangespresso this week.
Great stabbility
Thursday a “drama” unfolded. I was stabbed … in the arm… in a pharmacy.
But I had actually asked for it and eventually payed for it. It was my refresher for the COVID-19 vaccine that was conveniently offered at the pharmacy next door to the office.
That morning I did weight training in our gym. So my arms hurt evenly despite the vaccination was just on one side 😆
Party
On Saturday we had our annual year end party of the village society. Again friends offered their house to be the venue for the gathering and we enjoyed delicious food and conversations while reflecting on the past year. The society makes a difference in the village by taking an effort to bring people together at various events. This sparks conversations and often times brings new perspectives and a feeling of belonging.
My contribution to the buffet was a square version of my notorious New York Cheesecake. I caramelised the base with brown sugar and a torch on our terrace to make sure the filling doesn’t soak the base took quickly. It worked will.
Tinkering
I was playing around with Claude Agents this week. Idea was to help with generating a draft for my weekly blog posts. Normally I’d look at the photos I took in the last week to remember what was going on. Additionally I look at my Mastodon posts. That’s all stuff an agent could do for me and create a summarised draft. So I cobbled together some agents that would fetch my Mastodon posts, get my photos from my Immich instance, generate image descriptions for these images and out of that content generate a draft blog post.
I’m not posting these drafts verbatim as the LLMs are usually too chatty and not my style. But I might going to use it as an input for my own write up of the past week.
The state of the agent can be seen here: https://repos.mxhdr.net/maxheadroom/weekly-blogging-agent
The draft for this post that came out of the agent looks like this:
Drafttitle: “Week 46: November 9-16, 2025”
date: 2025-11-16
week: 46
year: 2025
author: Falko
tags:- weekly
- cheesecake
- coffee
- vaccination
- uckermark
- social
summary: “A week of baking experiments, caffeinated adventures, vaccination humor, and quality time with friends”
stats:
posts: 11
photos: 54
locations:
– Uckermark
Weekly Highlights
Welcome to this week’s roundup! It’s been a busy week here in Uckermark, filled with baking experiments, interesting beverages, social gatherings, and even a medical procedure that turned into a comedy routine. Let me walk you through some of the highlights.
This week brought together 11 original posts (plus 29 shares of interesting content I found), and my camera captured 54 moments worth remembering. From the fog-shrouded landscapes of rural Brandenburg to the warmth of friends gathering around food and drinks, it’s been a week rich with experiences.
The Great Stabbening: COVID Vaccination Edition
Wednesday brought what I can only describe as a medical thriller told in four acts. It started dramatically:
November 13, 2025 at 8:48 PM
I was stabbed today
The tension built:
November 13, 2025 at 8:49 PM
… in a pharmacy … in the arm… with a syringe.
The reveal:
November 13, 2025 at 8:50 PM
… To get my COVID vaccination. The doctor didn’t cry.
And the punchline:
November 13, 2025 at 8:51 PM
frankly I got great stabbility
This thread got some great engagement, with folks sharing their own vaccination stories and appreciation for the wordplay. Sometimes the mundane moments of life become the most entertaining when you approach them with the right attitude.
New York Cheesecake: A Square Adventure
Saturday morning brought the revelation of my baking experiment – my first attempt at making a square-shaped New York Cheesecake.
November 16, 2025 at 9:02 AM
Tried to make a square shape New York Cheesecake for the first time yesterday. It was meant to be shared at a party and I thought it would be easier to share in smaller pieces. It came out good I think. The base was solid enough to get the out of the pan. I also properly caramelized the top of the base so it doesn’t soak as quickly #NewYorkCheesecake #foodporn #foodpornofmastodon
This turned out to be my most engaged post of the week with 8 favorites! The square shape idea actually worked surprisingly well – easier to portion, and the caramelized base held up beautifully.
Caption: The finished product – note that perfectly caramelized base!From the Department of Weird Coffee-Based Drinks
Friday brought an exploration of unconventional caffeinated beverages:
November 14, 2025 at 6:46 AM
From the department of weird coffee based drinks we present: the #Espresso Martini, the #Orangepresso and a bulletproof coffee #tasskaff
The Espresso Martini stole the show this week. There’s something magical about the combination of coffee and cocktail culture.
Caption: That perfect foam top – the mark of a well-made espresso martini
Caption: Another angle of the evening’s caffeinated cocktailsThe Orangepresso and bulletproof coffee were interesting experiments too, but there’s something about that espresso martini that just hits different.
Social Moments: Friends, Food, and Good Times
Throughout the week, I captured several moments of friends gathering together. Whether it’s at a bar, in someone’s living room, or around a table full of food, these moments of connection are what make life rich.
Caption: Cheers! Good friends, good food, good times
Caption: Cozy evening gatheringsThese casual moments – the toasts, the laughter, the shared meals – they’re the fabric of a well-lived life. Saturday was particularly social, with 17 photos captured in just one day.
Honorable Mentions
A few other moments from the week:
- Pastpuzzle battles: Two attempts this week, with mixed results. Some days you nail it, some days… you don’t.
- Uckermark in the fog: “I set render distance to 20m #Uckermark” – when the weather gives you gaming jokes
- Music sharing: That Tyrone track on Spotify deserved a share
- Forest facts: Germany’s forests are only about 10,000 years old – fascinating tidbits from the datawrapper folks
Closing Thoughts
Looking back on this week, it’s been a delightful mix of creativity (that cheesecake!), humor (stabbility!), and connection (all those social gatherings). The fog that rolled through Uckermark this weekend feels like a fitting metaphor – sometimes we can’t see far ahead, but that doesn’t mean the journey isn’t worthwhile.
With 54 photos and 11 original posts, this week was more active than I initially realized. The best moments weren’t always the planned ones – sometimes they were the spontaneous wordplay about vaccinations or the casual photos of friends just being together.
Here’s to more baking experiments, more weird coffee drinks, and more moments worth capturing. Thanks for following along!
Generated with assistance from the Weekly Blogging Agent System
#espresso #foodporn #foodpornofmastodon #newyorkcheesecake #orangepresso #tasskaff #uckermark #weeklyreview
-
#weeklyreview 46/2025
I finally gave in and accepted the aging of my body. Went to an optometrist to get my eyes measured for glasses for work. I noticed that my arms are getting shorter and it’s harder to read at short distance.
First I had tried the cheap reading glasses from the grocery store. But these only work at really short distance for me. Like 30cm from my face. I need something that improves the readability at arms length for me.
The guy at the Augenoptik Mitte measured short sightedness of up to 1.25 dpt and also warped lenses. So compensation glasses were in order. I tried several frames and had family and friends give their opinion. Eventually settled for 0.75 dpt and warp correction glasses and this frame as a compromise. I would have also gone with a more prominent, Colin Farrell Gentleman style frame. But the majority vote was on this more subtle model.
And what shall I say … the make a difference. Much less stress on the eyes watching computer screens and mobile phones now.
one frame that I like very much. But that frame unfortunately was as expensive as the lenses and alternative frame combined …VHS
On Monday I held a little AI introductory course at the community college (VHS) in Templin. 9 people showed up and were eager to learn how the most common tools work and what are the caveats and risks with these tools. The audience was mostly 50+ of age. I guess that’s the normal VHS audience.
Sloppy preparation
On Tuesday we had our monthly gathering of ye old greybeards (I’m actually the only one with a beard in that group). Our usual spot is the Pratergarten Restaurant which is usually empty at that time. But not this Tuesday… as it was Saint Martins day, they had goose on the menu and were fully booked. So we had to find an alternative place in walking distance. Settle for an Indian restaurant that had to bear with our tech rambling.
Indian food … yummyRibs at last
The feast continued on Wednesday at Chicago Williams BBQ in Charlottenburg. My best friend @slamr invited me for dinner at my favourite rib place. And of course it was delicious and juice and lovely. We rounded it up with Espresso Martinis.
Weird coffee based drinks
Speaking of coffee … the Espresso Martini was a first for me. Not too bad I’d say. I’m embracing some variety in my coffee consumption and also had a bulletproof coffee (Ghee, MCT oil, Coffee) and an Orangespresso this week.
Great stabbility
Thursday a “drama” unfolded. I was stabbed … in the arm… in a pharmacy.
But I had actually asked for it and eventually payed for it. It was my refresher for the COVID-19 vaccine that was conveniently offered at the pharmacy next door to the office.
That morning I did weight training in our gym. So my arms hurt evenly despite the vaccination was just on one side 😆
Party
On Saturday we had our annual year end party of the village society. Again friends offered their house to be the venue for the gathering and we enjoyed delicious food and conversations while reflecting on the past year. The society makes a difference in the village by taking an effort to bring people together at various events. This sparks conversations and often times brings new perspectives and a feeling of belonging.
My contribution to the buffet was a square version of my notorious New York Cheesecake. I caramelised the base with brown sugar and a torch on our terrace to make sure the filling doesn’t soak the base took quickly. It worked will.
Tinkering
I was playing around with Claude Agents this week. Idea was to help with generating a draft for my weekly blog posts. Normally I’d look at the photos I took in the last week to remember what was going on. Additionally I look at my Mastodon posts. That’s all stuff an agent could do for me and create a summarised draft. So I cobbled together some agents that would fetch my Mastodon posts, get my photos from my Immich instance, generate image descriptions for these images and out of that content generate a draft blog post.
I’m not posting these drafts verbatim as the LLMs are usually too chatty and not my style. But I might going to use it as an input for my own write up of the past week.
The state of the agent can be seen here: https://repos.mxhdr.net/maxheadroom/weekly-blogging-agent
The draft for this post that came out of the agent looks like this:
Drafttitle: “Week 46: November 9-16, 2025”
date: 2025-11-16
week: 46
year: 2025
author: Falko
tags:- weekly
- cheesecake
- coffee
- vaccination
- uckermark
- social
summary: “A week of baking experiments, caffeinated adventures, vaccination humor, and quality time with friends”
stats:
posts: 11
photos: 54
locations:
– Uckermark
Weekly Highlights
Welcome to this week’s roundup! It’s been a busy week here in Uckermark, filled with baking experiments, interesting beverages, social gatherings, and even a medical procedure that turned into a comedy routine. Let me walk you through some of the highlights.
This week brought together 11 original posts (plus 29 shares of interesting content I found), and my camera captured 54 moments worth remembering. From the fog-shrouded landscapes of rural Brandenburg to the warmth of friends gathering around food and drinks, it’s been a week rich with experiences.
The Great Stabbening: COVID Vaccination Edition
Wednesday brought what I can only describe as a medical thriller told in four acts. It started dramatically:
November 13, 2025 at 8:48 PM
I was stabbed today
The tension built:
November 13, 2025 at 8:49 PM
… in a pharmacy … in the arm… with a syringe.
The reveal:
November 13, 2025 at 8:50 PM
… To get my COVID vaccination. The doctor didn’t cry.
And the punchline:
November 13, 2025 at 8:51 PM
frankly I got great stabbility
This thread got some great engagement, with folks sharing their own vaccination stories and appreciation for the wordplay. Sometimes the mundane moments of life become the most entertaining when you approach them with the right attitude.
New York Cheesecake: A Square Adventure
Saturday morning brought the revelation of my baking experiment – my first attempt at making a square-shaped New York Cheesecake.
November 16, 2025 at 9:02 AM
Tried to make a square shape New York Cheesecake for the first time yesterday. It was meant to be shared at a party and I thought it would be easier to share in smaller pieces. It came out good I think. The base was solid enough to get the out of the pan. I also properly caramelized the top of the base so it doesn’t soak as quickly #NewYorkCheesecake #foodporn #foodpornofmastodon
This turned out to be my most engaged post of the week with 8 favorites! The square shape idea actually worked surprisingly well – easier to portion, and the caramelized base held up beautifully.
Caption: The finished product – note that perfectly caramelized base!From the Department of Weird Coffee-Based Drinks
Friday brought an exploration of unconventional caffeinated beverages:
November 14, 2025 at 6:46 AM
From the department of weird coffee based drinks we present: the #Espresso Martini, the #Orangepresso and a bulletproof coffee #tasskaff
The Espresso Martini stole the show this week. There’s something magical about the combination of coffee and cocktail culture.
Caption: That perfect foam top – the mark of a well-made espresso martini
Caption: Another angle of the evening’s caffeinated cocktailsThe Orangepresso and bulletproof coffee were interesting experiments too, but there’s something about that espresso martini that just hits different.
Social Moments: Friends, Food, and Good Times
Throughout the week, I captured several moments of friends gathering together. Whether it’s at a bar, in someone’s living room, or around a table full of food, these moments of connection are what make life rich.
Caption: Cheers! Good friends, good food, good times
Caption: Cozy evening gatheringsThese casual moments – the toasts, the laughter, the shared meals – they’re the fabric of a well-lived life. Saturday was particularly social, with 17 photos captured in just one day.
Honorable Mentions
A few other moments from the week:
- Pastpuzzle battles: Two attempts this week, with mixed results. Some days you nail it, some days… you don’t.
- Uckermark in the fog: “I set render distance to 20m #Uckermark” – when the weather gives you gaming jokes
- Music sharing: That Tyrone track on Spotify deserved a share
- Forest facts: Germany’s forests are only about 10,000 years old – fascinating tidbits from the datawrapper folks
Closing Thoughts
Looking back on this week, it’s been a delightful mix of creativity (that cheesecake!), humor (stabbility!), and connection (all those social gatherings). The fog that rolled through Uckermark this weekend feels like a fitting metaphor – sometimes we can’t see far ahead, but that doesn’t mean the journey isn’t worthwhile.
With 54 photos and 11 original posts, this week was more active than I initially realized. The best moments weren’t always the planned ones – sometimes they were the spontaneous wordplay about vaccinations or the casual photos of friends just being together.
Here’s to more baking experiments, more weird coffee drinks, and more moments worth capturing. Thanks for following along!
Generated with assistance from the Weekly Blogging Agent System
#espresso #foodporn #foodpornofmastodon #newyorkcheesecake #orangepresso #tasskaff #uckermark #weeklyreview
-
From the department of weird coffee based drinks we present: the #Espresso Martini, the #Orangepresso and a bulletproof coffee #tasskaff
-
From the department of weird coffee based drinks we present: the #Espresso Martini, the #Orangepresso and a bulletproof coffee #tasskaff
-
From the department of weird coffee based drinks we present: the #Espresso Martini, the #Orangepresso and a bulletproof coffee #tasskaff
-
From the department of weird coffee based drinks we present: the #Espresso Martini, the #Orangepresso and a bulletproof coffee #tasskaff
-
From the department of weird coffee based drinks we present: the #Espresso Martini, the #Orangepresso and a bulletproof coffee #tasskaff
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Ice orb cold brew #tasskaff #coldbrewcoffee
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paar Minuten inna Balkontür gestanden und #tasskaff sippend und Schrippe kauend und Menschis zusehend rausgeglotzt, wie so n alter Mann ☀️ #transparenzpost
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My daily coffee gear: AeroPress with a Corretto permanent filter. Hario travel grinder and Hario mill stick. Subminimal milk frother. Steel jug. Not in the picture: the kettle with temperature selection to 95°C
#tasskaff #hariogrinder #hario #AeroPress #Subminimal #coffee -
Dracula is the name #OrangeEspresso #Bloodorangespresso #Wacaco #picopresso #tasskaff (mind the GDR "Allesschneider" in the back)
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Endspurt vor dem Wochenende #tasskaff #SolinoCoffee
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Moin ihr Puschels! #coffee #tasskaff #picopresso #wacaco
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@echox @wneessen @maxheadroom Wie verschwunn?! https://wandzeitung.xyz/about/more #200 #tasskaff #hashtagism (gleich mal n ☕ machen!)