Dr. John, Doe
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376b78fc7223.bsky.social
Dr. John, Doe
@376b78fc7223.bsky.social
El Doctor.
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
«On n’a pas la réponse» : le contrat à plusieurs milliards de dollars entre ST Micro et Amazon suscite autant d’espoirs que de doutes à Tours ⤵️
«On n’a pas la réponse» : le contrat à plusieurs milliards de dollars entre ST Micro et Amazon suscite autant d’espoirs que de doutes à Tours
l.lanouvellerepublique.fr
February 12, 2026 at 2:28 PM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
#firefox (since v145) #quic stack marks and reflects IP Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN).

~60% of send paths are ECN capable (i.e. reflect ECT0 and CE). ~40% of send paths bleach the ECN signal. Some small percentage of send paths blackhole the entire […]

[Original post on mastodon.social]
February 8, 2026 at 10:45 AM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
February 12, 2026 at 8:31 AM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
DORIANE IS BACK
THIS IS NOT A DRILL
DORIANE IS BACK
February 9, 2026 at 10:07 AM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
😎 @esa.int's Sophie Adenot and #Crew12 arrive at NASA Kennedy 👍 (pic: ESA/S.Corvaja)

@exploration.esa.int @cnes.fr @fr.esa.int #εpsilon
February 7, 2026 at 12:51 PM
Too many people last week on @freecad.org booth at the FOSDEM, but they should be thanked for allowing me to commit that kind of atrocities
February 6, 2026 at 8:22 PM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
Mais @lefinnois.bsky.social t'as capturé notre serge ?
January 30, 2026 at 6:59 PM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
La communauté @mozilla.org  et @thunderbird.net  côte à côte lors du @fosdem.org  #fosdem2026 stand bâtiment F level 1 (group A) https://blog.mozfr.org/2026/01/Fosdem-2026,-on-vous-attend-des-demain
blog.mozfr.org
January 30, 2026 at 5:03 PM
#TGV8320 direction #FOSDEM ...
January 30, 2026 at 5:25 PM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
“It’s time to move from the discussion” about sovereignty and open source. Super relevant panel now at the European Policy Summit
January 30, 2026 at 2:19 PM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
GregKH awarded the Prize for Excellence in Open Source 2026
I had the honor and pleasure to hand over this prize to its first _real_ laureate during the award gala on Thursday evening in Brussels, Belgium. This annual award ceremony is one of the primary missions for the European Open Source Academy, of which I am the president since last year. As an academy, we hand out awards and recognition to multiple excellent individuals who help make Europe the home of excellent Open Source. Fellow esteemed academy members joined me at this joyful event to perform these delightful duties. As I stood on the stage, after a brief video about Greg was shown I introduced Greg as this year’s worthy laureate. I have included the said words below. Congratulations again Greg. We are lucky to have you. ## Me introducing Greg Kroah-Hartman There are tens of millions of open source projects in the world, and there are millions of open source maintainers. Many more would count themselves as at least occasional open source developers. These are the quiet builders of Europe’s digital world. When we work on open source projects, we may spend most of our waking hours deep down in the weeds of code, build systems, discussing solutions, or tearing our hair out because we can’t figure out why something happens the way it does, as we would prefer it didn’t. Open source projects can work a little like worlds on their own. You live there, you work there, you debate with the other humans who similarly spend their time on that project. You may not notice, think, or even care much about other projects that similarly have a set of dedicated people involved. And that is fine. Working deep in the trenches this way makes you focus on your world and maybe remain unaware and oblivious to champions in other projects. The heroes who make things work in areas that need to work for our lives to operate as smoothly as they, quite frankly, usually do. Greg Kroah-Hartman, however, our laureate of the Prize for Excellence in Open Source 2026, is a person whose work does get noticed across projects. Our recognition of Greg honors his leading work on the Linux kernel and in the Linux community, particularly through his work on the stable branch of Linux. Greg serves as the stable kernel maintainer for Linux, a role of extraordinary importance to the entire computing world. While others push the boundaries of what Linux can do, Greg ensures that what already exists continues to work reliably. He issues weekly updates containing critical bug fixes and security patches, maintaining multiple long-term support versions simultaneously. This is work that directly protects billions of devices worldwide. It’s impossible to overstate the importance of the work Greg has done on Linux. In software, innovation grabs headlines, but stability saves lives and livelihoods. Every Android phone, every web server, every critical system running Linux depends on Greg’s meticulous work. He ensures that when hospitals, banks, governments, and individuals rely on Linux, it doesn’t fail them. His work represents the highest form of service: unglamorous, relentless, and essential. Without maintainers like Greg, the digital infrastructure of our world would crumble. He is, quite literally, one of the people keeping the digital infrastructure we all depend on running. As a fellow open source maintainer, Greg and I have worked together in the open source security context. Through my interactions with him and people who know him, I learned a few things: * Greg is competent. a custodian and maintainer of many parts and subsystems of the Linux kernel tree and its development for decades. * Greg has a voice. He doesn’t bow to pressure or take the easy way out. He has integrity. * Greg is persistent. He has been around and done hard work for the community for decades. * Greg is a leader. He shares knowledge, spreads the word, and talks to crowds. In a way that is heard and appreciated. He is a mentor. An American by origin, Greg now calls Europe his home, having lived in the Netherlands for many years. While on this side of the pond, he has taken on an important leadership role in safeguarding and advocating for the interests of the open source community. This is most evident through his work on the Cyber Resilience Act, through which he has educated and interacted with countless open source contributors and advocates whose work is affected by this legislation. We — if I may be so bold — the Open Source community in Europe — and yes, the whole world, in fact — appreciate your work and your excellence. Thank you, Greg. Please come on stage and collect your award. In addition to the medal, Greg was given this funky-looking award “thing” with the tree symbol of the European Open Source Academy. Daniel to the left, Greg Kroah-Hartman on the right
daniel.haxx.se
January 30, 2026 at 11:33 AM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
Roberto Di Cosmo & @zacchiro just received an #eosawards26 for @swheritage - congratulations to them, very proud to be part of their team!
January 29, 2026 at 6:36 PM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
Mozilla sera présent à l'édition 2026 du #Fosdem2026 les 31 janvier et 1ᵉʳ février. Tout apprendre dans notre article @fosdem.org  https://blog.mozfr.org/2026/01/Fosdem-2026,-on-vous-attend-des-demain
blog.mozfr.org
January 30, 2026 at 7:02 AM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
If you happen to be at #FOSDEM2026 come and see us Saturday at 15:50 at the BSD devroom! fosdem.org/2026/schedul... witness the fastest booting BSD UNIX!
FOSDEM 2026 - smolBSD: boots faster than its shadow!
fosdem.org
January 29, 2026 at 10:02 PM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
STCC4 is a CO₂ Sensor That Fits Where-ever It’s Needed 🌬️
This breakout quietly solves a problem that has annoyed hardware folks for years. True CO₂ sensing usually means bulky NDIR modules like the SCD-30 (www.adafruit.com/product/4867).
January 29, 2026 at 3:57 PM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
FOSDEM 2026 - Guided sightseeing tours
Brussels / 31 January & 1 February 2026
fosdem.org
January 28, 2026 at 10:22 AM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
I started a documentation repo for #fosdem advise - for new and old visitors, attendees and speakers. I figure we can crowdsource it so bring your pull-requests. I will greatly appreciate help.

If not, I will populate it myself slowly over time but it won't be as good […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
January 27, 2026 at 7:44 AM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
Brussels, here we come! 🦊🇧🇪

Mozilla will be at @fosdem.org next weekend. Swing by our stand to meet our staff and volunteers, and join the "Browser and Web Platform" devroom on Saturday!

Track schedule: fosdem.org/2026/schedul...
FOSDEM 2026 - Browser and web platform
fosdem.org
January 26, 2026 at 4:19 PM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
🎂 19 yrs ago on this day, the legendary FireBug v1.0 launched, and had significant impact enabling debugging of a webpage in ways many had not seen. Here's the original blogpost:
web.archive.org/web/20070129...
January 24, 2026 at 8:13 PM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
Washington’s 3D Printing Bills Are Bad for STEM, Bad for Business, and Bad for Open Source 🖨️⚠️

blog.adafruit.com/2026/01/25/w...
January 25, 2026 at 4:37 PM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
Create a smolBSD image using a Dockerfile github.com/NetBSDfr/smo...
January 23, 2026 at 5:26 PM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
STL Editing with FreeCAD
STL Editing with FreeCAD
Hackaday Article
hackaday.com
January 22, 2026 at 4:34 PM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
biskits, imaginons que je veuille bouger ma gateway (t4g.nano, 2 cores/512M, $5 par mois, wireguard+nginx+iptables en gros) de AWS vers ${truc_europeen}, vous pencheriez vers quoi ?
J'ai pas entendu beaucoup de bien d'Online / Scaleway récemment, on va pas parler de Gandi, et OVH je suis allergique.
January 21, 2026 at 9:08 AM
Reposted by Dr. John, Doe
Guide on installing and using FreeBSD on Framework systems (Laptop 12/13 and Desktop): Hardware support for Intel/AMD mainboards and expansion Cards, Known issues #FreeBSD github.com/FrameworkCom...
January 19, 2026 at 8:05 AM