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Archive for June, 2026

Sites Longer Than Their Authors

THE other day I wrote about happiness and this morning I explained what that means to activists. I was checking for further input. “Money can’t buy happiness” goes the famous proverb, “but sometimes it can rent it…”

I derive much pleasure from writing. It hardly costs a thing.

“On a more practical note,” a friend told me, “there really is a minimal income necessary for comfort and health.”

Simple life reduces worry and reduced worry contributes to happiness. High-paying jobs are typically not compatible with simplicity in life. But there is an alternative way to look at it – and one who wrote about Om Malik perishing captured that when saying:

I had a tougher week than usual. Someone I deeply care about had a bad fall, followed by the passing of Om. It made me think again about the impermanence of life: the mundaneness of every day can seem like this can go on forever, but suddenly in just a moment everything may change.

I can’t help but keep thinking about Om and how he was writing so much till the end. Sometimes I feel like I take my writing for granted. It seems to be always there. But what if one day it wasn’t?

There is always some self-consciousness involved when publishing a public blog. Will I be flooding people’s rss readers if I post too much? Why would anyone read this obscure topic? Do people really want to know *my* opinion?? Omg people are going to get so tired of my posts on covid cautiousness.

But mortality has this ultimate clarifying effect. Pride, embarrassment, self-consciousness, etc – what are they in the face of mortality?

[...]

(of course, this website may not survive beyond my death, but that is another problem.)

It links to this older post about “website graveyards”, stating 6 years ago: “I am hence thankful to my partner – I have never understood how essential it is to have a witness until these recent years, or at least at this point in my life when everything seems so shaky and transient, how much it means to me that my ongoing existence is being witnessed. That all of this is real, someone is seeing my pain, my struggles. I think this is the outcome of feeling not being taken seriously my entire life. ”

It says: “Websites shouldn’t have to go offline once their creators are dead, yet they mostly will unless they are hosted on a free service that will likely sustain long-term into the future (i.e. wordpress.com or github)”

This did not age well because github is not doing well and wordpress.com shares a bed with sloppers.

The real solution might be friends who can help run a site for you, like Aaron Swartz did.

The above blogger (anonymous except in domain name) should know sites can outlast people by decades, as many have.

Two New Head Coaches

Today is the last day of the first half of 2026 and it has been a good year, except the heatwaves in May and June. They are too much.

We now have a new head coach for the local team. The other local team also had a new head coach confirmed a couple of months ago.

Football resumes (nationally, not internationally) about 1.5 months from now.

22 Years of “the Tux”, Still Going Stronger Than Ever

Crossposted from Tux Machines

When we say “the Tux” we mean Tux Machines

We’re only about two days away from July. The exquisite weather today (cool and sunny) is a fresh breath of air after a week(ish) of heatwave and even bursts of heavy rain last night. I’ve purchased Rianne many boxes of mochi, I’ve begun grinding down the coffee beans, and we’re now in a position to make it a fruitful summer with many editorial pieces, not just curated story picks.

2025 was a busy year for us due to lawfare (we received sound advice), but in 2026 we are catching up and we’ve already made several technical improvements to the site. Our development team enhanced some bits without adding bloat and we’re probably more robust to DDoS attacks this summer (after some attacks crippled us).

We are also grateful for the fact that we forged some new alliances with friendly groups that share similar goals. We help promote them like they help promote us.

Despite what may be claimed online (evil tongues), we have earned a lot of respect in the past few years and made a big leap since the site was 15 (my wife and I became chief curators when the site was 9).

Rianne is still the soul and motor of the site, even if she does not add many original editorials. Behind the scenes there are technical people who keep the site fast and perpetually available, fully patched, properly backed up etc.

DDoS Attacks: Tux Machines and Techrights Impacted

I AM not sure who is doing this and why, but the server of Tux Machines is under DDoS attack. It impacts Techrights as well. I wrote about this back in April when it began, then again ~3 weeks later.

The Web is so chaotic on so many levels.

CDNs are not the solution. Access gatekeeping with JS is not the solution either, it’s another new problem.

Lawfare Against Us Has Clearly Backfired

It raised awareness of the very things they were trying to suppress.

IN a lot of ways we have already won. What do I mean by that?

Well, first of all, we’re finally going to have our laws rectified, perhaps as soon as later this year.

Second, since we were defiant and ended up making sacrifices for the sake of the nation and for Software Freedom, among many other things such as real computer security (as opposed to American back doors), more people will get involved and are already getting involved.

The cat is out of the bag; lawfare does not always work – it has only backfired spectacularly.

If You Only “Shine” for One Night

Take That - Shine (Official Video)

When I was about 7 Take That was created right here in Manchester, just like Oasis, Simply Red, and many other excellent groups/bands/singers. Take That was modeled after the first so-called “boy band” (in the US) and rose to fame in the 90s. Then something went wrong (people pursuing solo careers, with only “Robbie” becoming the “Beyonce” or “Michael Jackson” or “Justin Timberlake” of the group). In the past 3 nights Take That performed the same old show (“the circus”) that goes back 1.5 decades and last night I could very well hear their performance of “Shine”, followed by fireworks, flares, and colourful smoke. They will be back here for another night on July 1 (Wednesday) and then return to their hiatus (early retirement at age 55).

The limelight (or “fame” more broadly) brings ups and downs because there are highs and lows (sharp contrast apart). One day you’re practising dance routines (choreography) for several months in a row, probably in some basement or small studio, days later you’re “a star” (not for long); it’s not like they spontaneously show up on stage in front of large stadiums and the promotions (marketing) of their concert cost a small fortune, set aside salaries for extras, cost of equipment, security and so on. So the “glory” associated with entertainment – including football – is typically short-lived and temporary. Many of these people end up gaining a lot of weight, doing illegal drugs, even dying young like Ricky Hatton. They brought his dead body to that same stadium only months ago.

As Hatton found out, “fame” is not the thing to strive for; what matters is consistent delivery of something valuable (his rival/friend Manny found out the same thing, then explored inroads or a dabble in national politics to no avail).

When bands perform in their (much) older days hits they had in the 80s and 90s it means they are trying to relive the past instead of offering something new. Very few bands or artists can accomplish this; the inertia is dependent on a cult-like followers’ “base”.

Fixing Things Instead of Chasing Money

Richard M. Stallman, RMS, The Last MIT Hacker

IT has been almost 43 years since Richard M. Stallman (“RMS”), “The Last MIT Hacker”, started GNU. He was about 30 at the time and he later quit his job to focus on GNU and avoid a conflict of interest.

I quit my job when I was 40 to focus on various endeavours and I have no regrets; if anything, there’s room to regret not doing so sooner. I could have done and written so much more (had I quit sooner), but at least I saved enough money to defend against lawfare.

Frugal lifestyles have earned credibility (resurgence) as the economies sank, energy became more scarce (or expensive), and political problems more profound. If you’re not seeking to become part of the solution you might be a passive component (or “cog”) of the problem.

The world needs more activists, not more capital.

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