I've now configured a redirector within Google Cloud to handle redirects from the old blog and point them to the Wordpress-centric domain. Essentially doing what wordpress.com was doing while the domain was still with them.
I'll leave this in place until I decide what to do with the blog.
I've finally had a notification from Wordpress that my plan is coming up for expiry.
I won't be renewing it.
If you still want to view my posts after I kill the blog domain, it'll be at [blenderkitsune.wordpress.com](https://blenderkitsune.wordpress.com) (this currently redirects to [blenderfox.com](https://blenderfox.com) as the domain and hosting is still active)
It has come to my attention that Automattic is going to be selling of the data of its users for training AI.
This is unacceptable and I'm sure violates at least some data protection rules.
While I can't stop them using my past data, since they already have it and likely already HAVE trained their models on it, I can stop them using more of my Wordpress data.... by not giving them any more of my data.
As such, when my Wordpress plan here expires, I will not be renewing it. When the domain comes up for renewal, I'll transfer it off Wordpress entirely.
As for my blog? At the moment I'm looking at other options, including Medium, Blogger, and Ghost, and also self-hosted options.
My Wordpress domain is coming up for renewal soon. I might migrate the domain off Wordpress since I'm finding it very restrictive being unable to manage my DNS entries via the Wordpress UI. This may cause the blog to be unavailable for a while, but I'll drop a note here before I start.
The breakage of Wayland login seemed to be related to Problems with wayland after updating to fedora 39 - Fedora Discussion. And interestingly was fixed in the same way: removing ~/.config/dconf/user, logging out and then back in via Wayland. It completely reset my Gnome state, so all my custom docked shortcuts were gone and it offered to run me through the Gnome tutorial again
Running my ansible playbook to configure my machine again, seemed to run for the most part, but failed at installing a pip module -- but that looks like a module build failure, not the playbook.
And now I discovered that there's no F39 of VirtualBox yet, so I guess I'm rolling back for now....
After just over 3.5 years, the other side's insurance (Aviva) finally settled and the costs have been recovered. And I expect it was quite a lot of cost too. As mentioned in [wordpress.com/post/blen...](https://wordpress.com/post/blenderfox.com/8108:)
Total costs the other side will have to foot: Value of my car (written off): £3000 Value of the car next to me (written off): £2500 Value of the car that both our cars got shunted into (written off): £1500 Repair of the damaged car (sole survivor): £1500 Hire car (45 days @ £75 per day): £3375
Total Costs: £11875
And this is not including the other side's own car, which was likely also written off.
So last week, my boss and I had a one-to-one review going over things that had happened since the last review. Generally OK, but he was definitely not sounding right.
Turned out that he had picked up covid, and since I was both sitting next to him and had a face-to-face meeting with him, I decided to test myself, but gave it a day before doing so to make sure if I did have symptoms they would have enough time to manifest properly.
I was clear and tested negative.
However my boss was bedridden for about two days before he started answering some of his slack messages.
Now, over the weekend, his bad luck got even worse, and we found out his dad passed away. So not only is he recovering from Covid, he now has to deal with the end-of-life stuff for his dad.
There's an expression in Chinese which literally translates to "misfortune doesn't come alone"
Wishing him a speedy recovery and I'm sorry for his loss.
Okay, so I swiped the headline from the video, but it's pretty much a given.
Further to my previous blog entry about Hashicorp's decision to change Terraform's license, I mentioned how the OpenTF Initiative put a choice to Hashicorp: change the license back or we will fork Terraform.
Unsurprisingly, Hashicorp didn't comply, so now Terraform has (or will be) forked as OpenTF at [github.com/opentffou...](https://github.com/opentffoundation)
This story has been covered in several places including The Register and several videos on YouTube including a nice short summary by Fireship
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HzBA6FIn_Bo
If the fork goes ahead, I'm curious as to whether Hashicorp sees it as a competition and goes after the foundation, but if it does, what little reputation Hashicorp has left in the OSS community will be nigh on destroyed.
Meanwhile, I'm going to continue playing with Pulumi in case the OpenTF doesn't work, gets blocked or if we need another alternative.
Firstly, as suspected, I finally got the notification saying that Google Domains' registrations would be acquired by SquareSpace so all my registrations would be transferred over them should I not do anything. Obviously, I didn't want that, so I transferred them over to AWS (Route 53) so now my domains are registered with AWS, but are DNS managed by Cloud DNS. I had some weirdness when trying to migrate all my domains in bulk, with respect to the auth code not being accepted on one of the domains when doing the bulk migration, but it was accepted when I did the migration on that one domain alone, so... go figure.
Next update is Terraform. In case you didn't know, Hashicorp has changed the Terraform license and essentially made it no longer open source. This behaviour is similar to what Red Hat did with its RHEL offering and the backlash is just as bad.
Immediately I knew someone would fork it, and already, there's the OpenTF Initiative and this is the key part:
Our request to HashiCorp: switch Terraform back to an open source license.
We ask HashiCorp to do the right thing by the community: instead of going forward with the BUSL license change, switch Terraform back to a truly open source license, and commit to keeping it that way forever going forward. That way, instead of fracturing the community, we end up with a single, impartial, reliable home for Terraform where the whole community can unite to keep building this amazing ecosystem.
Our fallback plan: fork Terraform into a foundation.
If HashiCorp is unwilling to switch Terraform back to an open source license, we propose to fork the legacy MPL-licensed Terraform and maintain the fork in the foundation. This is similar to how Linux and Kubernetes are managed by foundations (the Linux Foundation and the Cloud Native Computing Foundation, respectively), which are run by multiple companies, ensuring the tool stays truly open source and neutral, and not at the whim of any one company.
OpenTF Initiative (https://opentf.org/)
Essentially, make Terraform open source again, or a fork from the MPL version will be made and maintained separately from Hashicorp's version. This will essentially lead to two, potentially diverging versions of Terraform, one BUSL and one MPL licensed
I'm already looking at alternatives and the two currently that I'm looking at are Ansible and Pulumi
Ansible I've had experience in , but there's two main issues with it:
It's underused compared to Terraform and the providers are woefully undersupported and undermaintained
It's Red Hat
Pulumi I've heard lots of good things about, but its a new technology, and I don't know if it is can "Import" existing infrastructure.
It's been quite a long time since I did any updates on this blog so a couple of updates are in order
House
I've now been living in the new place for just over a year. Generally everything is good, we've started putting in a lawn and currently letting it get its roots in before we try to cut it
Twitter
Oh, boy, what an absolute train wreck. I've tolerated Elon's presence at Twitter because most of the stuff he did wasn't far off what Jack was doing prior. But cutting off all third party clients, forcing everyone onto the new TweetDeck (which likely will be paywalled too) has literally driven users away. Twitter has been losing users and revenue constantly, and it is totally unsurprising.
I've disabled my two TweetDeck profiles (a professional one, and a casual one) from Ferdium. But I doubt I will be going back any time soon.
Red Hat
Another train wreck of a situation. Red Hat's decision to first kill CentOS's stability, then for RHEL sources to only be accessible behind a subscription has pissed of a lot of users, even if it's not strictly speaking against license.
The only one left in its sights will be Fedora so that leads me onto the next update
Manjaro & Archlinux
I've been tinkering with Manjaro more and more lately, with its rolling release schedule meaning I never need to upgrade from a major version to another major version.
It's downside I'm finding is that some packages, especially those in the AUR are essentially "compile from source" packages which does the build on your machine during the install. This can take a varying amount of time depending on the code. With my RSS reader of choice: QuiteRSS, this build takes a mind numbing 2.5 hours to do, even on a high spec machine.
That's where I found out about setting up your own Arch repo. I've been tinkering with that, setting it up on GCP and fronted by a CDN. This works pretty well, but I still need to find how I can do scheduled builds to keep that up to date, but it looks like I'll be switching to Manjaro at some point in the near future. Sound works fine, using lyncolnmd's work.
Another downside with Manjaro, however is that its btrfs filesystem, my home directory backup, and CloneZilla don't seem to want to work well together
Wordpress & Domains
One final update, I will likely be transferring out the blenderfox.com domain out of Wordpress, while I had this registered as part of the blog, I'm finding it much harder to maintain this domain using Wordpress's very limited DNS management tools. I will likely transfer it out to Google Domains, even though there's talk of them shuttering that service. Secondary service would be AWS.
I paid for the premium version of Citymapper primarily because I need to use their "speak directions" option while on public transport. Something that used to be free, and then they put it behind a paywall.
Now they only went and made it FREAKING FREE again, after I'd gone premium and paid for the year >_<
This weekend was the coronation of King Charles III, the first new monarch for most of the people in the UK. Some may have been alive for the late Queen Elizabeth II's coronation but the are few now.
I was working coronation support cover on the Saturday from around 6:30am to about 3pm. Fortunately no major issues. One alert towards the tail end of the day, but that was about it.
Sunday were the street parties. Our local one was relatively small compared to the one during the Jubilee celebrations. Was great for the local kids though, and the weather was perfect for it.
Monday is a Bank Holiday so no-one was working in the London office, although the other offices were still working.
I chose today to retry doing my Manjaro file copy, and again it failed with checksum errors when I tried to back it up (even the btrfs check didn't manage to fix it)
I guess I'll have to restart my Manjaro attempts and not use btrfs -- probably return to using ext4 and lvm.
The final issue with the post-upgrade is now fixed (dependency issue) and it self-resolved by a new package update that came through this morning
I did fine one new issue -- a new kernel dropped and installed successfully, but did the same thing as the upgrade and did not generate an initrd line, but did generate the initrd line once I regenerated the grub configs.