Add last 3d, change .drone.yml for new location of website
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2025-08-09 12:34:21 +02:00
parent cd819be495
commit 4ee75f8973
4 changed files with 129 additions and 10 deletions

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@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ steps:
port: 22
args: '-6'
source: public/
target: /var/www/sabbatical.ipng.nl/
target: /nginx/sites/sabbatical.ipng.nl/
delete: true
recursive: true
secrets: [ drone_sshkey ]

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@@ -1,7 +1,52 @@
---
title: "Week 14, Friday:"
title: "Week 14, Friday: Got screens?"
date: 2024-11-01T21:55:00+02:00
draft: true
---
{{< image frame="true" width="17em" float="right" src="/img/headline/todo.png" alt="Credit: " >}}
{{< image frame="true" width="17em" float="right" src="/img/headline/eclipse-sound-syndicate.png" alt="Credit: Eclipse Sound Syndicate, YouTube" >}}
In the morning I spent some time tidying up my basement. I really want to make sure it doesn't
revert to the pigsty it was three months ago. I spent a almost week cleaning it up! Today marks the
start of my last weekend before shipping back off to a dayjob. In the morning, I play with the newly
created Microsoft flightsim and cruise around over the Zurich metropolitan area with my trusty
Cessna. This is going to go down as one of the small wins of this sabbatical - I learned a new
thing, and thanks to my buddy Tim invested in reclaiming an old project that had been on the wayside
for north of 12 years!
For lunch, Marina and I make delicious _Smos Gezond_ [healthy sandwich] with tomato, salad, ham,
cheese on a ciabatta bread. It's absolutely delicious. But then after lunch, the doorbell rings and
there's a guy with a truck. He doesn't speak English or German or Dutch or French or Swedish (heh),
the languages in which perhaps we might converse. I think maybe he's polish but he is babbling and
simply shows me a screenshot of an address in Frankfurt. Oh crap! It's the guy picking up IP-Max's
ASR9010 which is still in my garage. The problem is however, that the company said that this router
would _not_ be picked up today. Seeing as an ASR9010 is not the cheapest (or lightest of kit), I
need to test this dude.
We walk to the truck, which has Polish plates. But the guy turns out to be Russian, and I'm on the
phone with Fred. Fred is having lunch with the crew there in Geneva, and that's my break. Anastasia
is there also, so I put her on the phone with a simple mission: "Nastia, get this guy to confirm he
is legit, and that you are OK with him taking your router to Frankfurt". Such a wonderful human
thing happens next - I put my phone on speaker and she speaks to the guy, who is visibly relieved
that he can now communicate. They babble in their weird cyrillic tongue, and after a while he hands
me the phone with a smile. Anastasia confirmes: "we're all good!" so I let him take the pallet with
the router. отличная работа!
In the evening we watch a terrible movie called _The Substance_ (2024). The film stars Demi Moore as
a TV host who is fired and given a "substance" that allows her to create a younger, more beautiful
version of herself. However, she must take the serum regularly, and the older version of herself
begins to rapidly deteriorate. The climax of the film involves the older version transforming into a
grotesque, multi-headed creature. It's a body horror film that explores themes of aging, beauty
standards, and the pressure on women in the entertainment industry.
## Pictures of the Day
{{< gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-11-01/IMG_2305.JPG" caption="The flightsim in its final configuration" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-11-01/IMG_2306.JPG" caption="Got smos?" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-11-01/IMG_2308.JPG" caption="IP-Max ASR9010 ready for shipping" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-11-01/IMG_2309.JPG" caption="This ASR9010 is headed for NTT Frankfurt" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-11-01/IMG_2312.JPG" caption="Don't do drugs, mmkay" >}}
{{< /gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-modal >}}
{{< gallery-script >}}

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@@ -1,7 +1,24 @@
---
title: "Week 14, Saturday:"
title: "Week 14, Saturday: Bami Goreng"
date: 2024-11-02T21:55:00+02:00
draft: true
---
{{< image frame="true" width="17em" float="right" src="/img/headline/todo.png" alt="Credit: " >}}
{{< image frame="true" width="17em" float="right" src="/img/headline/9T9_DnB-03.png" alt="Credit: 9 To 9 DnB, YouTube" >}}
Today I spent the whole day kind of just ... hanging out. I need to decompress from this wonderful
experience, so I potter around a little bit in the sim, trying to practice soft landings.
In the evening, I made Bami Goreng, but I don't feel like writing about my day today.
## Pictures of the Day
{{< gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-11-02/IMG_2313.JPG" caption="Landing at 0.92G but -211fpm is OK but not great" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-11-02/IMG_2314.JPG" caption="I make us a fresh batch of Bami Goreng" >}}
{{< /gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-modal >}}
{{< gallery-script >}}

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@@ -1,7 +1,64 @@
---
title: "Week 14, Sunday:"
title: "Week 14, Sunday: Archiving Sabbatical"
date: 2024-11-03T21:55:00+02:00
draft: true
---
{{< image frame="true" width="17em" float="right" src="/img/headline/todo.png" alt="Credit: " >}}
{{< image frame="true" width="17em" float="right" src="/img/headline/soulfulliquid-03.png" alt="Credit: Soulful Liquid, YouTube" >}}
## Pictures of the Day
Well, I guess that's it for this blog. I will spend one more day care-free and then tomorrow, I will
start work again, in a different building, with a different manager and team, and with a
significanly different mission.
I will say that I really really needed this. I didn't know how much I needed it fourteen weeks ago
when I started my break. I've been doing Site Reliability Engineering for 18+ years at this company,
and very strongly identify with the discipline of reliability engineering. I've built some of the
most high performing SRE teams at Google, possibly the planet, in my first 10 years of tenure as a
manager. I'm looking at you, Geo SRE and Identity SRE. Then, I spent the next ~8 years as an
individual contributor working on _Production 2020_, the re-imagination of the internal control and
management plane of Google services, where I got to help teams in the areas of observability
(Automon!), change management (Annealing!), capacity (Autocap!), and incident response (OMG!)
through initiation, childhood and adolescence. I am incredibly proud of those teams, their ambition,
drive, and most importantly their unique subject matter expertie. These are some of the most
talented and dedicated software and systems engineers I have ever met.
Next week, I'll fly to New York to properly integrate into a new (software engineering) team at
Google: Core Developer. If I compare it to the P2020 stuff, it's a natural fit in a way. Google has
a huge amount of infrastructure to facilitate the software development life cycle with thing that
come _to the left of_ devops or SRE. It starts all the way to the left with editors and IDEs (like
Cider with its upcoming AI functionality), but also think about the source versioning control
(Piper), or the build system (Blaze and Forge), or Google's Continuous Integration systems (TAP,
Guitar, ITS), and the release tool that hands over the fully tested and ready-to-rock binary
artefacts to our P2020 Rollouts tool.
My move into Core Developer will be an exploration of the lefthand side of this SDLC, and a specific
mission together with Brian and his leadership team to advance the state of the art in software
development in two ways. Firstly, we have an existing private cloud at Google called Borg. It's
hugely popular and hosts most all of Google's products inside of it. I've grown up in Borg, and
designed and operated largs parts of the tooling ecosystem that manipulates it. But we have a
second, more rapidly growing environment: Google Cloud. The look-and-feal of GCP is different, in
many ways superior (and in some ways inferior) to Borg. Secondly, I think there's no stopping the AI
revolution. I am seeing interesting trends in software engineering, the industry is starting to move
more towards a set of tools that can generate the code from _other artefacts_, such as for example a
_Product Requirements Document_. I don't know yet if we'll truly be successful, but I do see that
if we are, that the SDLC will drastically change.
I celebrated my last day in the morning with Johnny at Milandia playing Padel. On the way back, I
took a long bikeride to mentally prepare myself for this new part of my journey. I will be
dedicating the next few years of my life figuring out, together with Core Developer and SRE's
Production 2020 teams, how to evolve our tools to be both _Cloud Native_ as well as _Agentic_. And
that's going to be a lot of fun.
Melancholically, I will say that this is the last of ninety-eight short stories about my day.
Knowing that I've done this before (for example on many roadtrips with my best friend WEiRD), I am
confident that I will be re-reading this story from time to time. Wish me luck!
{{< gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-11-03/IMG_2315.JPG" caption="My Trusty Stromer at Milandia" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-11-03/IMG_2317.JPG" caption="Johnny and I are playing Padel" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-11-03/IMG_2318.JPG" caption="I bike home past the airplane museum at Dubendorf airport" >}}
{{< /gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-modal >}}
{{< gallery-script >}}