Now its time to move forward
It was interesting to read through my old blog and pick out some of my favorite posts. Some of it was great stuff a lot of it was nonsense but it is interesting how the work as a whole has come together over the few years that it has been around.
I love how a blog is so dynamic. It is a living breathing thing, if you view each individual post in relation to that month’s posts in relation to that year’s posts in relation to the whole entire blog you can truly see the identity of the author. The exposed soul of the writer. It is a beautiful thing. The blog learns, grows, laughs, cries, and lives along side the author.
Now that I got that out of my system, I am looking forward to more blogging and learning, and growing. So If I ever decide to move to another blogging platform I will have plenty of material that I can pick and choose from this one! :)
Thank you for reading! Share your thoughts with me on bluesky, mastodon, or via email.
Check out some more stuff to read down below.
Most popular posts this month
- 2025
- Ladybird on Debian Stable
- My Custom Miniflux CSS Theme
- Setting up ANTLR4 on Windows
- SQLite DB Migrations with PRAGMA user_version
Recent Favorite Blog Posts
This is a collection of the last 8 posts that I bookmarked.
- Pluralistic: bunnie's piggyback hack (09 Jan 2026) from Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
- Clicks Communicator from Chris Hannah
- A Year Of Vibes from Armin Ronacher's Thoughts and Writings
- Pluralistic: A perfect distillation of the social uselessness of finance (18 Dec 2025) from Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
- Moving from WordPress to Substack from charity.wtf
- Grow, Like a Tree Not a Cancer from Jim Nielsen’s Blog
- Pluralistic: All the books I reviewed in 2025 (02 Dec 2025) from Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
- DEP-18: A proposal for Git-based collaboration in Debian from Optimized by Otto
Articles from blogs I follow around the net
Go Read a Book
There's a lot of shitty news happening lately, and I've been having trouble holding space for it all.
via flower.codes January 24, 2026ROSCon Korea 2026 Review
After attending my first ever ROSCon in Singapore 3 months ago, I had a chance to participate in the first ever regional ROSCon in (South) Korea! Physical AI is here I had an interesting discussion with a team lead at ROBOTIS, a major Robotics company , o…
via Junwoo Hwang January 24, 2026[RIDGELINE] Eras
Ridgeline subscribers — I like “eras.” That is, named chunks of time. Japanese history tends to periodicize based on locus of power. The Tokugawa Shogunate reigned for hundreds of years, and so: Edo, where the power was, becomes the period (a big sweeping o…
via Craig Mod — Writer + Photographer January 24, 2026Generated by openring