Skip to main content

Fête du village

 Cette année, j'avais décidé de participer au Comité des fêtes et d'aider à l'organisation de la fête du village, cela consiste en :

- un repas festif le vendredi soir

- les concerts et buvettes des samedi et dimanche soir

- le concours de pêche et de pétanque


Comme on ne peut pas laisser tireuse, frigo et un certain nombre de choses sur la voie public (pour pas se les faire voler), il faut en partie ranger et installer. On est lundi, je suis sur les rotules. J'ai commencé à aider vendredi vers 9:00, pour monter le stand, aller chercher ce dont on avait besoin :

  • moules
  • frites
  • boissons

Ensuite mise en place de la friteuse (qui fait disjoncter), puis la cuisson des moules. On a utilisé des poêles à paella. Quand les friteuses ont sauté, on a utilisé une des poêles pour faire les frites. Fin du concert vers 1:00 du matin, fin des rangements vers 3:00.

Reprise tranquillement durant le concert de l'excellent Jean Ribul, puis fin des rangements vers 3:00 pour moi et 5:00 pour celui qui a attendu que l'orchestre ait tout rangé.

Dimanche, concours de pétanque et sa tireuse, puis repas des volontaires et rangement de tout ce beau bordel, fin des opérations à 2:00.

On a clairement manqué d'organisation et avec un peu plus d'organisation ça aurait été moins fatiguant, mais je serais quand même lessivé. Berf vivement l'année prochaine.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Firefox OS's story from a mozilla insider not working on the project

  I clearly remember, but can't date it. I was working for Mozilla messaging at the time ( momo ), being the QA lead for Thunderbird. It was at the end of one of the Mozilla All-hands, maybe in 2011 or 2012. At one of the ending keynotes, we were introduced to Boot 2 Gecko. A hack that would let US - Mozilla own the platform to run a mobile browser on. At the time, the iPhone was going strong and Google was trying to catch up with Android. MeeGo had been in development at Nokia for a while but was going nowhere even when Intel tried to help. Blackberry was slowly starting to die. In the Silicon Valley everything was about mobile, mobile, mobile and the emerging South Easter Asian market, where people would skip computers and use smartphones to join the internet revolution. We were struggling with Chrome and the massive investment by Google to take market share. Our Firefox port on Android was having loads of issues. We were denied by Apple's policies to be present on iPhones....

Key signing party at fosdem 2024

I'm organizing a GnuPG key signing party in order to bolster our web of trust , since there is no official ksp this year. I have organized a few in the past using tools like biglumber (website is gone, if someone know of a replacement or where the source code of site is, I might end up running one again) and others tools . I've also run once the KSP at FOSDEM and helped running it a few other times.    === Details below === When, Where   We'll meet in front of the infodesk stand in building K around 12:00 Sunday Feb 4th 2024. I'll have a sing of some sort with KSP and or Key Signing Party . Once enough participants show up we will move outside to proceed with the party. What to Bring Warm cloths as the party will happen outside this year, like in the good old days. I hope it won't rain, but it might. Piece of papers with your fingerprint written on them. Each piece should look like below:  $ gpg --fingerprint 34246C61F792FBCC1F23BFF296BD1F38FEA32B4D pub ...

Are mozilla's fork any good?

To answer that question, we first need to understand how complex, writing or maintaining a web browser is.  A "modern" web browser is : a network stack, and html+[1] parser,  and image+[2] decoder, a javascript[3] interpreter compiler, a User's interface, integration with the underlying OS[4], And all the other things I'm currently forgetting.   Of course, all the above point are interacting with one another in different ways. In order for "the web" to work, standards are developed and then implemented in the different browsers, rendering engines. In order to "make" the browser, you need engineers to write and maintain the code, which is probably around 30 Million lines of code[5] for Firefox. Once the code is written, it needs to be compiled [6] and tested [6]. This requires machines that run the operating system the browser ships to (As of this day, mozilla officially ships on Linux, Microslop Windows and MacOS X - community builds for *BSD do ex...