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Author SHA1 Message Date
cd819be495 Halloween and more pics
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2024-11-03 16:09:24 +01:00
98b32c39ae Add Weds
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2024-11-03 15:09:18 +01:00
d17e1c62e5 Tuesday and pics
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2024-11-02 16:55:25 +01:00
a46c5aa736 Monday of the last week
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2024-10-30 11:52:23 +01:00
165ff26c7a Add a few headlines 2024-10-29 09:54:47 +01:00
483817c5d8 Sunday
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2024-10-28 14:05:24 +01:00
c6207aab15 Saturday
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2024-10-28 13:24:16 +01:00
ff61dd430d Add Friday, ESNOG day 2
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2024-10-28 11:59:55 +01:00
a7fb0ce7ec ESNOG day 1 and pics for the week 2024-10-28 10:08:49 +01:00
ac5faeff98 Add dollar-bag
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2024-10-28 09:11:27 +01:00
a61038d58e Critical review of KLARNA
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2024-10-27 16:56:12 +01:00
1fe13d7e0c Add Wednesday, travel to BCN
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2024-10-27 16:35:51 +01:00
255d699c78 Add Mon+Tue
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2024-10-26 11:57:54 +02:00
577fed4034 Add pics for Mon-Wed
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2024-10-23 17:23:58 +02:00
11dfd49d23 Add Sunday, COVID recovery day
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2024-10-22 13:33:03 +02:00
09d9b48e4c Saturday - vol au vent
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2024-10-21 12:37:13 +02:00
820058f5e1 Add some more headlines 2024-10-21 12:01:58 +02:00
81c37ebe32 Friday 2024-10-21 12:01:48 +02:00
6b4a0f119a Typo fix 2024-10-21 12:01:29 +02:00
170 changed files with 1496 additions and 43 deletions

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@ -73,7 +73,7 @@ Free-iX Remote and now things are getting real. I still need to complete the pro
this project. Currently, members and peers get the same prefixes, and it's the intent of Free-IX this project. Currently, members and peers get the same prefixes, and it's the intent of Free-IX
Remote, that members from Greece get propagated into the SpeedIX and SpeedIX prefixes are propagated Remote, that members from Greece get propagated into the SpeedIX and SpeedIX prefixes are propagated
to the members. I need to write this logic, but I'm fumbling. I mess around, and eventually abort to the members. I need to write this logic, but I'm fumbling. I mess around, and eventually abort
the mission because I'm not feeling to great... the mission because I'm not feeling too great...
## Pictures of the Day ## Pictures of the Day

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@ -1,7 +1,51 @@
--- ---
title: "Week 12, Friday:" title: "Week 12, Friday: COVID :("
date: 2024-10-18T21:55:00+02:00 date: 2024-10-18T21:55:00+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/kushsessions-08.png" alt="Credit: Kush Sessions, YouTube" >}}
In hindsight, I could've (should've?) seen this one coming. On Wednesday after coming home from
Geneva, I went to bed early and I wrote:
> _I'm feeling a bit tired so I turn in early for the night._
And on Thursday after partying with my DJ Roomba, I tried to write a little bit of code for my
FreeIX Remote project, but got stuck in a piece of BGP propagation logic that should not have been
all that difficult, and I wrote:
> _I mess around, and eventually abort the mission because I'm not feeling too great..._
So I woke up this morning with a headache and a soar throat. Also, shivering. Wruh, wroh. I took a
COVID test and wouldn't you know it: positive. Crap. Although both Quinn and Marina have picked up
the corona virus before, I have not once tested positive for it. Much to my surprise, I tested
positive today, first timer. Marina asks if she can do anything for me, and I suggest to make
chicken soup. It always cheers me up when I'm sick.
I took my temperature it started off as 38.5C (101.3F) so I go back to sleep. I woke up at around
14:00 or so, and took some of that chicken and vegetable soup. It tastes like water for some reason,
so I add some more chicken stock, and some more, and then some. Still nothing - my taste is gone,
but I've eaten something, so I go back to sleep.
I woke up at 16:30 with my entire day gone, and I'm bored of bed, so I go downstairs to couch-surf a
little bit, watching Rick and Morty episodes. I dose off, to be woken up just before dinnertime by
Marina, who had made a fabulous chicken and black bean casserole. I ate a little bit of it, but I am
now certain of it: either this casserole is very bitter, or I have no taste at all. Considering
Quinn and Marina are chomping away at it without comment, I'm going to decide my sense of taste has
simply taken the day off. I wonder how salty I made that soup in the end?
After dinner, I am instructed by Marina to isolate, which I think is a good idea. Later in the
evening, my temperature rose to 39.5C (103.1F) and time simply stood still for me, so I went back to
sleep.
Friday: poof, gone.
## Pictures of the Day
{{< gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-18/IMG_2142.JPG" caption="COVID Test: postive." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-18/IMG_2145.JPG" caption="Fever: check." >}}
{{< /gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-modal >}}
{{< gallery-script >}}

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@ -1,7 +1,64 @@
--- ---
title: "Week 12, Saturday:" title: "Week 12, Saturday: COVID :("
date: 2024-10-19T21:55:00+02:00 date: 2024-10-19T21:55:00+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/questionmarklp.png" alt="Credit: QuestionMark LP, YouTUbe" >}}
I slept reasnoably well in the guestroom last night. I woke up at 05:00, though. I think this is
what you get when your entire Friday consists of sleep. By my calculations, I was up and about for
about three to four hours yesterday, which means I have now slept for **twenty-nine** hours.
Overnight I woke up a few times, to pee (which is mildly reminiscent of eating chilly peppers, by
the way - if you know, you know), and to take an Advil PM or two.
Unfortunately for my journal, being bedridden is not terribly exciting. I can report that I spent
the entire day upstairs in isolation, monitoring my temperature and somewhat anxiously listening to
my wheezing breath. I cough from time to time, but it's a productive cough but I don't feel too bad
about it today.
Such a bummer: JC and Sandra are due for a dinner at our place tonight, but I have to cancel so I
send them the news on Signal. They're both good sports about it, but Marina sure as shit is not
going to cancel _making_ the food. She has been looking forward to a Belgian dish called [[Vol au
Vent](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vol-au-vent)], and she makes a killer one!
In the afternoon, I decide to binge-watch [[Young
Sheldon](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Young_Sheldon)], which I've watched up until season five, and
this means I get to live vicariously through Sheldon, Missy, Georgie and their parental addendums.
In the evening, I briefly go downstairs to say thanks to Marina for making this beautiful _patty
case_. I take mine upstairs, but I won't be able to write a review for it because all I get is the
texture of the meatballs and chicken bits. I can't really discern between the mushrooms and the
meat, and I'm afraid it's all wasted on me, this time. Marina sends a picture to our unfortunate
non-dinner-guests, who are sportive about it and wish me a speedy recovery.
On that front, my fever came down a fair bit and I'm back to my 38.5C (101.3F), with a fair amount
of phlegm, with apologies if that's too much information. I try to journal a bit, but unfortunately
I'm too lazy. I manage to assemble a few pictures, mostly of COVID tests and thermometers.
I decide it's time to call it, and I'm pretty disappointed about it: I need to cancel my talk at
NLNOG on Tuesday, and very likely ESNOG on Thursday. It's not responsible to join a large group of
folks in Amsterdam, nor to sit on an airplane from Kloten to Schiphol, even if I do feel better
tomorrow. So I write that note to Teun on IRC, and then to the program committee of NLNOG and ESNOG.
Out of an abundance of caution, I think it's better that I skip both, as I do not want to be
implicated in a super-spreader event in 2024.
Teun and I briefly discuss the possibility of remote participation, but truth be told - the
cancellation helps them decompress the schedule a little bit, I may still not be in the best of
health on Tuesday, not to mention my voice sounds pretty terrible, and my mouth consistently tastes
like the inside of a motorman's glove. It would also be putting the AV crew under a lot of pressure
so late in the game. Nope, we agree: there will be more VPP news next year!
I spend my evening taking turns dozing off, watching Young Sheldon, and drinking tea that tastes a
little bit like warm nothing. Being sick on my sabbatical sucks!
## Pictures of the Day
{{< gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-18/IMG_2143.JPG" caption="COVID test: definitely positive" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-19/IMG_2147.JPG" caption="The fever is still there, but I think I'm winning" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-19/volauvent.png" caption="Marina's Vol au Vent - I hear it was tasty :)" >}}
{{< /gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-modal >}}
{{< gallery-script >}}

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@ -1,7 +1,68 @@
--- ---
title: "Week 12, Sunday:" title: "Week 12, Sunday: Recovering COVID"
date: 2024-10-20T21:55:00+02:00 date: 2024-10-20T21:55:00+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/desiredvibes.png" alt="Credit: DesiredVibes, LoFi, YouTube" >}}
Good news, everybody! This morning I woke up (almost) completely free of fever at a 37.2C (98.9F)
and in good spirits. All that hanging out in the guest room watching Young Sheldon is paying off!
I haven't had a coffee in three days, so I wonder what it'll be like. Curious, I wander downstairs
to make myself a cup of Joe, and it tastes thick and rich. Yaay. Go, tastebuds!
I'm feeling really behind on ~everything right now. Of course rationally I understant that this is
not terrible because one has to be sick at some point, but at the same time it's quite out of
character for me to do nothing but sit in bed and watch time go by one episode at a time. As a note
to future work-returning Pim: **you need stuff to do, buddy :)**
Speaking of stuff, I have not had the energy to write my journal since Tuesday, what with the
all-day sleeping and all. But this morning, coffee on the tongue and caffeine raging through my
veins, I'm all for it. So I spend some time writing about my drive home from Geneva on
[[Wednesday]({{< ref wk12day3.md >}})] and my sugar run and bikeride to the airport on
[[Thursday]({{< ref wk12day4.nd >}})]. Writing these does make me feel a bit better as well, with a
feeling that I should do more stuff.
First, I assemble the _copious_ amount of pictures (by which I mean pretty much _none_) that I took
on Friday and Saturday. With those in hand, I decide to think a little bit about how I'm going to
write my COVID story. I've found that writing about my day is much easier if I have a visual aid:
where I've been, what I was doing, and so on. With pictures of the thermometer and the view from the
guestroom bed, and so much sleep going on, that becomes much more difficult. By the way, this bed is
super comfortable 🥰. So, I write about my weekend, and put that behind me.
The rest of the afternoon is spent binge-watching the rivitting story of George, Mary and their
kids. My heart dropped when I saw the episode of George's death, and I may have had a "Sterk spul
he, dat Fishermans Friend" [[moment](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_IzKuS18umM)] or two. By the
way, don't come to this place if you can't take spoilers.
After dinner, I watch some news with Marina, but even though my fever broke, I'm still going to stay
mostly upstairs. I decide to take another look at the FreeIX Remote project, which I got stuck on
this last week [[Thursday]({{< ref wk12day4.md >}})]. Thinking back, this will likely have been
because I was already coming down with COVID even on Wednesday and Thursday of last week. It would
explain my sluggishness (beyond my usual stupidity) and sleepiness (beyond my usual laziness).
One of the things I was planning on doing in Amsterdam is deploy a fiber cross connect between my
Coloclue hypervisor and the FrysIX switch, in order to run the AS112, IXPManager and possibly the
RS2 virtual machine there. The SSDs in the Equinix AM3 hypervisor are slow and may fail at any time.
However, I won't be going, and even if I would, I understand from Jelle that only Asimo and ERITAP
are allowed to do this. So I ping my buddy Max, who lives just down the road from me, and will be
going to NLNOG tomorrow, and ask him if he can mule this kit. He says yes (Thanks again, Max!) so I
mosy over to his and drop a baggie into the milkbox.
Looking back at my git commit history, the refactor took about two hours and was in at 21:45, and
generated the same configuration as it did before I started, which is good. A good fourtyfive
minutes later, the to-members filtering was done, and a first canary for my buddy Antonios' AS210312
was live. By midnight, I had set up a complete canary with Sam's AS35202, Jurrian's AS212635 and
Antonios in various configurations of propagation and inhibits. Tomorrow, I plan to write an IPng
article about the implementation. It was a fun puzzle!
## Pictures of the Day
{{< gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-20/IMG_2148.JPG" caption="Good Morning: I'm back in the green" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-20/IMG_2149.JPG" caption="The view from my bed: Young Sheldon on one laptop, Hugo website on the other." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-20/IMG_2151.JPG" caption="The after-dinner desert is a treat: stroopwafel! They barely fit on my tea mug :)" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-20/IMG_2152.JPG" caption="A package for Arend: 30m of fiber, 2x Intel branded SFP+, for Qupra" >}}
{{< /gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-modal >}}
{{< gallery-script >}}

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@ -1,7 +1,53 @@
--- ---
title: "Week 13, Monday:" title: "Week 13, Monday: Recovery and Relaxation"
date: 2024-10-21T21:55:00+02:00 date: 2024-10-21T21:55:00+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-02.png" alt="Credit: 9T9 DnB, YouTube" >}}
I took the time to sleep in late this morning, and I'm still upstairs in the guest room. There's
something quite relaxing about this bed and the room, and also not having small interruptions in the
night like bathroom breaks from Marina or alarm clocks from Quinn or the bustle of folks getting up
at 05:00 in the morning. It's great to be able to sleep in late!
In the morning I drink my first cup of coffee. Last night I started watching Lost In Space, a 1960s
television series depicting the Robinson family on their epic voyage through space. Looking back at
this stuff is nostalgic: the video quality, the story line, and the acting are all not great
compared to the slick production quality of a good TV show in the 2000s, and it's in black and
white. I don't remember this series being black and white growing up, but it turns out it's only
season one, because S02/S03 are indeed in _technicolor_.
In the afternoon I have a rerun bowl of soup from the weekend. Marina was so kind as to make me this
soup as it always helps me (my spirits at least, if not as well my body) when I am under the
weather. On Saturday, I added a lot of chicken stock, until the carton was all gone, and it was
_still_ watery. Today, I get to taste what I really made; a quite salty soup, indeed! I've added a
cup or two of water to it. It just reminds me how vivid the taste is, and how bland/removed the
taste was when I was battling COVID. Lunch is this chicken soup and a few soft-boiled eggs with
bread. They as well taste a treat.
After lunch, I further launch FreeIX Remote. I add a bunch of folks from Community IX and CHIX-CH
who could benefit, and who understand enough to be able to appreciate, what the project is doing.
This takes me a few hours of building, pushing, and testing. I'm still taking it easy because it's a
new configuration and I am not convinced I got all the details right. That said, things seem to
propagate just fine, so I consider it a win.
Marina made chicken and hoisin sauce with broccoli and cashews for the evening meal. Wow, that's
great. I appreciate that she's here for me and having home cooked meals (that I do not necessarily
have to cook myself!) is a huge help. The dinner was delicious, and I can tell that Quinn also likes
it, because at the end of the meal, almost the whole pan has evaporated.
After dinner I watch some news (there's not much going on in the world), and end up my evening with
a few more episodes of the Robinson Family in _Lost In Space_. I've canceled my trip to Amsterdam,
and instead will focus on Barcelona later this week. Considering I'm free of fever, tomorrow I'll
have a test and see if my viral load is sufficiently low such that I can visit ESNOG at least.
## Pictures of the Day
{{< gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-21/IMG_2153.JPG" caption="Lunch: Chicken soup, soft boiled eggs and bread" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-21/IMG_2154.JPG" caption="Dinner: Chicken with hoisin sauce, broccoli and cashews. Omm nom!" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-21/IMG_2155.JPG" caption="Lost in Space from 1965, 4:3, analog film, black and white" >}}
{{< /gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-modal >}}
{{< gallery-script >}}

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@ -1,7 +1,69 @@
--- ---
title: "Week 13, Tuesday:" title: "Week 13, Tuesday: NLNOT"
date: 2024-10-22T21:55:00+02:00 date: 2024-10-22T21:55:00+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/astralthrob.png" alt="Credit: Astral Throb, YouTube" >}}
Today I got up early so that I could join NLNOG, in spirit at least. It starts at 09:00 but the
content will be only half an hour later at 09:30. The NLNOG has a special place in my heart, as I've
been a member of this community since the 90s and well before it was an official _thing_. The board
are all staples and fixtures in the Dutch internet community, and I really enjoy re-connecting with
the group as I started working more on open source routers like [[VPP](https://fd.io/)].
After the opening, Yurii Polovyi of RETN discusses wavelength division multiplexing, CWDM/DWDM and
(R)OADM solutions in the industry. It's an interesting overview. Next, Leroy de Vos (from AMS-IX
NOC) gives a touching story about his own career from humble beginnings to the NOC of one of the
largest internet exchanges on the planet.
In the coffee break, I start up the flight simulator and decide to fly my Cessna 172S skyhawk from
Belp to Annecy in France. However, I'll plan a route over the alps this time, so I get to fly at
11'000ft. In the process, I learn about the fuel mixture settings (lean during taxy, rich during
takeoff <3'000ft, lean over 3'000ft). It's really amazing how well this simulator is programmed. As
I touch down in Annecy with a straight in final approach, the NLNOG conference has already
continued.
On stage are Ondrej (RIPE), Arjan (Event Infra), and my buddy Andrew (Cisco) talking about how to
make events networking uneventful. Each brings their own perspective, from outdoors venues (with
_Datenklo's_) to huge indoors venues and a single room with 6000+ people in it. I also learned that
the equipment sits in some storage room somewhere and weighs seven metric tonnes. Heh.
Teun Vink takes us to a serious topic - specifically for those of us who have aging family members -
and discusses our digital legacy. It's a presentation of pictures and the story it tells really
spoke to me. Teun leads us in to lunch, and I as well have a sandwich and a cup of tea. I also fly
my plane from Annecy to Dijon and I touch down on runway 02 and park the plane.
After lunch, Rudi van Drunen shares a view into critical Dutch infrastructure with Networks at Air
Traffic Control the Netherlands. On the heals of that, Bert Hubert brings 'part four of the
triology' of social life lessons with Life long learning: dealing with change. We all drink some
coffee, and I take a cup also, as I type away some of my e-mail backlog.
After the break, Robin Gilijamse has a story with A Case Against Automation - I feel a little bit
uncomfortable with the speaker venturing into aerospace investigations and drawing some conclusions
that I would not have necessarily drawn. After Robin, Ties de Kock of RIPE NCC shares details of the
key management of RPKI HSM. What is possibly my favorite story of the day is from Frank van Vliet,
Debugging the impossible: the bit-flipping story. After his talk, one of the folks who lined up at
the microphone was a senios engineer from KPN itself, saying thanks for the elaborate debugging :)
I do not participate in the kahoot quiz, as doing so remotely will give me a transmission delay and
I'll miss all of the questions. But, I do monitor it form afar, and I appreciate the quirky
questions Peter and Pieter put in. What happens next in Amsterdam, I will have to miss: the drinks,
food, hanging out and exchanging stories will all be for a next time.
Considering I will be traveling to Barcelona tomorrow, and I have a few minutes to spare, I drive
over to the Interxion datacenter and do some pending maintenance for IP-Max: the current 100G link
from Interxion to Frankfurt is suffering from what seems to be _electrical_ issues in the CFP cage.
So I move myself to the floor at 23:30 when traffic is calmer, drain the link, and move the
connection to both another optic and as well another port. I am successful: the occasional frame
corruption is entirely gone. So that's at lease one productive thing I did today :)
## Pictures of the Day
{{< gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-22/IMG_2160.JPG" caption="Flying from Bern to Annecy over the alps." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-22/IMG_2164.JPG" caption="I moved this 100G link from Zurich to Frankfurt to another router port and optic." >}}
{{< /gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-modal >}}
{{< gallery-script >}}

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@ -1,7 +1,84 @@
--- ---
title: "Week 13, Wednesday:" title: "Week 13, Wednesday: Zurich to Barcelona"
date: 2024-10-23T21:55:00+02:00 date: 2024-10-23T21:55:00+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/cosmicgate.png" alt="Credit: Cosmic Gate, YouTUbe" >}}
This afternoon we'll be on our way to Barcelona and I feel pretty good about that. Apart from a bit
of a stuffy nose and a nasal voice, I feel fine! After a quick breakfast with coffee, I take some
time to clean my basement. Although, now I have a Roomba so I can auto-clean, or at least
auto-vacuum my room, and IPng's serverroom too. As the iRobot, which I've called _Suckel_, is
zooming around, I clean up cables and optics and various bits and pieces from the maintenance I
performed for IP-Max yesterday.
After lunch, I connect a bunch of new users at [[FrysIX](https://frys-ix.net/)], a small internet
exchange that I operate together with my buddy Arend. The users come online in the quarantine VLAN
and start configuring their kit. Two of them have a bit of an issue, they are a _reseller_ customer,
with its supplier transporting the FrysIX via a switch to their router. Unfortunately, that switch
is sending ethernet frames (perhaps spanning tree, or LLDP, or some other traffic), so I cannot move
those two new members to the peeringlan. I'm sure the reseller will eventually figure it out, so I
move on.
Marina has some news - she (and I) are avid users of a program called _Stocard_, which allows us to
store our loyalty cards like from Migros, Coop, Safeway, and so on. When we walk into the store,
thanks to geolocation it pops up the card automatically. It's a lot easier (and leaner for your
wallet!) to make use of an app like this. And I liked _Stocard_ because it is _just an app_, by
which I mean: no need for complicated accounts, logins and all of that. An account in _Stocard_ is
optional, in case you want to make a backup of your cards in the cloud, which can be useful if you
change phones. I myself did not have that feature, because I still have the original card of course.
{{< image src="/img/dollar.png" float="left" width="6em" >}}
Stocard betrayed its users. It sold itself to _Klarna_, some Swedish fintech company that provides
online financial services. I'm sure the Stocard people made a lot of money. Klarna has now put a
butter bar on the Stocard app (both for Marina on Android and for me on iPhone) that you **MUST**
register with Klarna. They also inform us that our application will be destroyed in fourteen days.
When logging in, they want _waaaay_ too much personal data: phone number, e-mail, age, gender,
address, country, and what-not.
Hey assholes: I dont need another loan service, I dont want another credit card, I dont want
unnecessary ads for stores that I dont even know or use. And I have no idea why they decided it
would be a good idea to get rid of the option to add loyalty cards to my Apple wallet or a widget.
A good alternative is SuperCards, Catima, or the one I chose [[Mobile
Pocket](https://www.mobile-pocket.com/en/)] -- which, once again, is just an application for which I
do not need to hand over my entire online history to some random fintech jackass company. Just look
at this utterly embarrassing "privacy" statement from that fintech bank
[[ref](https://www.karmanow.com/privacy)]. I recommend you *never* use Stocard or any Klarna
application, if you value your online identity and privacy.
At 15:00 we make our way to the Zurich Airport. I'm still very pleased that we settled in
Br&uuml;ttisellen, which is to the NorthEast of Zurich city, and about 8km (5mi) away from the
airport. It's easy to get there by bus, train, car and bike. I've even jogged to and from it from
time to time, it's that close!
We have some time to kill before our flight at 18:55, but I make good use of it by writing my
journal entries for earlier this week. The flight boards on time, leaves roughly on time, and makes
it to Barcelona smoothly. We land there at 20:30. Instead of taking a car, Marina has scouted out
how we might use the metro. Our hotel is in _Upper Diagonal_, which is just a few minutes walk from
the terminal station of the T9 subway train, which goes from the airport directly to _Zona
Universaria_ without any changes.
It is a one hour commute though, and it seems SpongeBob is a bit nervous. He gently pops out his
face from within my shoe from time to time. There's nothing to fear, little spongebuddy, and we
arrive at 21:30, perfect time for a spot of dinner. We don't have to go far, because our hotel
itself has a little restaurant in it. We settle down and ask for just what the Doctor ordered:
tapas with red wine.
Our hotel room is gorgeous, a king bed with a terrace! We got lucky on this one, I think! Tomorrow
at 09:00, the ESNOG two day conferrence starts. Marina will be hanging out in the city as she has
(pre-)bought tickets for the Picasso museum. She will visit a few museums and take in the
architecture, while I nerd out and practice my Spanish a bit at ESNOG'32.
## Pictures of the Day
{{< gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-23/IMG_2165.JPG" caption="Zurich Airport as seen from the inside." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-23/IMG_2170.JPG" caption="Spongebob socks, he is so cute <3" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-23/IMG_2171.JPG" caption="Our hotelroom in Upper Diagonal is not too shabby!" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-23/IMG_2173.JPG" caption="Our dinner is tapas and wine - a staple for us when in Barcelona" >}}
{{< /gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-modal >}}
{{< gallery-script >}}

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@ -1,7 +1,115 @@
--- ---
title: "Week 13, Thursday:" title: "Week 13, Thursday: ESNOG'32 Day 1"
date: 2024-10-24T21:55:00+02:00 date: 2024-10-24T21:55:00+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/kasger.png" alt="Credit: Kasger, YouTube" >}}
We have descended upon Upper Diagonal in the North of Barcelona. It's a beautiful neighborhood, I
can tell it's _upscale_ with large avenues lined with trees, big houses with well kept yards, and
it's super clean. Did we land in the posh neighborhood? Our hotel is top notch, and I slept really
well last night. Marina will be visiting the Picasso, Miro and maybe a few others today. I will be
joining the Spanish Network Operators Group _ESNOG_ for their 32nd rendition of a one and a half day
meeting to exchange ideas, projects, proposals and industry updates with one another.
I chose the hotel to be walking distance from the venue, which is the Barcelona university of
technology, called the _Universitaria Politecnica de Catalunya_ or _UPC_ for short. The organizers
have chosen a very handsome building which houses an auditorium for about two hundred people or so.
There's a good eighty people at the venue today.
I don't take breakfast at the hotel, and instead walk over to the UPC building through the park.
It's a nice stroll and the weather is gorgeous out: light blue skies with a bright yellow Sun that
is happy to see me. Once at the university, I am quickly checked in and take my seat. I've promised
Carlos that I would avoid the social activity later today, just out of an abundance of caution even
though I have tested negative for COVID'19 on the way out to Barcelona. Besides, Marina is with me
and having a nice quiet dinner is also fun.
The program is varied and quite interesting. We start off with Paolo Lucente of NTT who wants to
share some modernization in a talk entitled Network Telemetry - Exploring Technologies and
Advancements in Standardization. Eduardo Taboada is next - he literally _wrote the book_ on Proxmox:
The Open Code Virtualization Solution for the Future. His narrative goes into the purpose, features,
use cases and vision of virtualization.
During the break for coffee, I meet a few of the other participants and we talk about our network,
what we do, what we're working on. The coffee is outside in the back yard of the university, and
there's some scones and little tartelettes: breakfast! After the break, Victor Serrano of Nokia
disserts on "Lab as Code" with Nokia Containerlab. I realize that it may be a good idea to
contribute VPP images to _Containerlab_, so that folks can add these machines and learn from them.
Jose Antonio Montes is a telephony person - his talk is called "Put some FOSS on your VoIP". I'm
reminded of the [[FrysIX Barbecue]({{< ref wk7day6.md >}})where I met Joran Osinga, who has built
and shown/documented a fully working 5G radio network - we talked about it on (an upcoming episode
of the) Fusix Podcast. Michela Galante continues with a talk showing how to update the Ripe Database
information in an automated way using the API.
As I take a quick bathroom break, I bump into Nick of Nexgen and he offers me a coffee. We sit and
chat outside for a ltitle bit, talking about coherent optics, CWDM vs DWDM/OWDM and what new types
of transmission in the 400GE arena are up and coming. It's super interesting to hear from Nexgen,
and I'm sure IP-Max will be pleased as well as a new and very happy customer.
Lunch is served in the yard - it's sliders, little finger food, fizzy drinks, mate, coffee/tea
and water. I enjoy catching up with Luca Deri (the ntop tech-lead), and we talk about my current
project in VPP to add sFlow. He's pretty excited about it, and makes me a promise: he intends to
move the sFlow receiver to the open source [[ntopng](https://www.ntop.org/products/traffic-analysis/ntop/)]
and I think that would be a wonderful feature! We also talk about an upcoming conference he is
organizing in Zurich, for which he extends me an invitation to speak. Of course, Luca is still
active at [[FOSDEM](https://fosdem.org/)] and will be kicking off the CfP for the network devroom
soon. I may be interested to join - even though I find that FOSDEM is way too crowded and busy,
they have significantly outgrown the capacity of the university in Brussels, but they're not
interested in re-evaluating the attendee body "the more the merrier", but it's pretty clear to me
that the organizers have lost touch with the situation on the ground: almost invariably if you're
not _in_ a devroom at 08:30, you will be out of luck: moving between them is impossible, doors are
closed because they are (over)full, and you end up watching the same talk online in the hallway.
Really terrible user experience! But, joining the Network devroom and staying there the whole day, I
can do that :)
After lunch (which ends at 15:15, I still find that funny), Octavio Alfageme discusses a multicast
protocol in a talk titled "What do we see tonight? BIER and the evolution of multicast distribution
architectures.". I know that VPP has a BIER implementation - I should really look in to this a bit
more, as multicast always was just a little bit out of reach for me. Maybe IPng Networks is a nice
place to roll out some multicast or other.
A set of peering updates is next. Maria Isabel Gandia of CATNIX is joined by Javier Achirica of
ESPANIX. Although I've seen Isabel around, the DE-CIX slot remains empty. After these updates, we
are joined by Christian Adell [who once gave me a book!], Design-Driven Source of Truth, the
Complete Lifecycle which is a practical constraints-based automation to build and destroy network
sites and point-to-point networks.
Luca Deri closes out the day with a presentation (in English, _grazie mille_!) which showcases a
range of tools and traffic inspection techniques that we have developed over the years. These
innovations have been at the construction of a robust platform capable of delivering detailed
network visibility at high-speed using standard, commodity hardware.
At 18:15 or so I decide to take off - there's a beering session a little ways away from the
university, and a dinner at 21:00; but I have dinner plans with Marina. We decide on a place called
[[Casa Petra](https://www.casapetrarestaurante.com/menus)] which is not fancy, but very well done
tapas. Our absolute favorite is a tomato tartar, which has a thick and rich flavor. I also enjoyed
all the other dishes - boquerones (English: Anchovies) and Pan con Tomate (English: bread with
tomato), the Jam&oacute;n Iberico (English: Iberian cured ham), and a fried artechoke with snippets
of dried ham. And of course, the drop of wine from LaFou that went with the tapas.
At 22:30 we get back to the hotel and Marina wants to finish watching her movie on the iPad. So, I
decide to finish something I started a few days ago, and motivated by my conversation with Luca:
completing the API for the `sFlow` plugin. Until now, we had only a few _setters_. I refator the
code to rename them to `*_set()` calls, and accompany each with a pairing `*_get()` call. I also add
a dumper command, to enumerate either one or all sFlow enabled interfaces. With that, I should be
able to integrate the entire plugin cleanly in [[vppcfg](https://github.com/pimvanpelt/vppcfg.git)].
I wrestle a little bit with the unit tests, and end up committing patchset
[[#13](https://gerrit.fd.io/r/c/vpp/+/41680/12..13)] which still passes all integration tests.
Whoot, Vino-Coding rocks :)
Tomorrow morning there will be a tour of Mare Nostrum, a local barcelona supercomputer. Then at
10:00, the second day of ESNOG'32 will start. I go to sleep a happy camper.
## Pictures of the Day
{{< gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-24/IMG_2178.JPG" caption="A beautiful gate at the edge of Güell Pavilions in Barcelona, Catalonia." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-24/IMG_2179.JPG" caption="ESNOG'32 will be in the University of Technology - this building is stunning." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-24/IMG_2180.JPG" caption="The auditorium for ESNOG'32 which holds 200 or so, and has all the amenities one might wish for, including streaming capabilities" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-24/IMG_2182.JPG" caption="Eduardo's talk about ProxMox. I will receive a book from his hand tomorrow!" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-24/IMG_2196.JPG" caption="The vegan tomato tartar which was the best thing on the menu. Delish!" >}}
{{< /gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-modal >}}
{{< gallery-script >}}

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@ -1,7 +1,99 @@
--- ---
title: "Week 13, Friday:" title: "Week 13, Friday: ESNOG'32 Day 2"
date: 2024-10-25T21:55:00+02:00 date: 2024-10-25T21:55:00+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/relakzone.png" alt="Credit: Relak Zone, YouTube" >}}
A few months ago, on Mastodon one Eduardo Collado approached me and he was asking about the FrysIX
pins that I had made. If I could maybe send a couple to him, he'd gladgly distribute them at an
upcoming ESNOG event. Upcoming event you say? How's about I come and bring them!? So I mailed the
program committee and suggested to bring a presentation on VPP's ability to run Babel and OSPFv3
without the need for IPv4 or IPv6 transit networks. They accepted, and here I am :)
Yesterday, I lined up two opportunities to share my ongoing work on sFlow in VPP: one at FOSDEM'25,
for which Luca Deri invited me to submit a _call for papers_; and another one about network
telemetry and observability which Luca is organizing in Zurich. And so, it is proven once again,
that NOGs are self-perpetuating. There's always somebody intersted in hearning nerdy stories and I'm
always interested in telling them!
This morning, a bunch of the participants went to visit the
[[Marenostrum](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MareNostrum)] supercomputer at the _BSC_ (Barcelona
Supercomputer Center). It is the most powerful supercomputer in Spain, one of thirteen
supercomputers in the Spanish Supercomputing Network and one of the seven supercomputers of the
European infrastructure PRACE (Partnership for Advanced Computing in Europe). It has ~166K CPU,
390TB of memory and 14PB of storage and is rated to 1.3MWatt of power. The coolest thing ever: it's
built into a former chapel named _Torre Girona_, at the Polytechnic University of Catalonia, where
our event is being hosted.
At 10:30 the program kicks off with Ismael Castell's thoughtful presentation about Discovering
databrokers - Bringing to light hidden companies. This presentation resonated with me, as there's so
much data gathering and inappropriate use of my (and our) personal data on the Internet. This is
also why I've taken to _selfhosting_ (Mastodon, Peertube, NextCloud, Immich, Plausible, Roundcube,
and several more).
After a coffee break, Gerhard Stein of Flexoptix brings us some theory and practice about Coherent
optical transceivers current capabilities and future capabilities. Then, Jovana Palibrik of Kentik
talks about the adoption of RPKI ROV - in particular a huge step-function jump after last year
Orange misplaced its password and found its prefixes rerouted and hijacked. Manuel Mendez shared an
industry update from Arista with a gazillion different flavors of 400GE optics.
Then we had lunch - very similar to the one yesterday, and I had a chat with the Flexoptix folks. We
talked about _Return to Office_, my sabbatical (and Andrea's too!); and the state of optical
engineering. I personally would never have thought in the 90s when I studied this stuff, that it
would become such a huge industry!
After lunch, I was invited on stage to bring my presentation entitled VPP: A 100Gbps/100Mpps+
BGP/OSPF router with a single IPv4 address. It was fun to present here - in English and at a
reasonably slow pace - and answer a few questions at the end. It was
[[recorded](https://video.ipng.ch/w/i4ibtvEkUmEE39mkCNeDzQ)] and the slides are
[[online](https://go.ipng.ch/esnog32)] as well. I also lay out a set of IPng ntag-pins which find
new homes with the participants of ESNOG'32 at the University of Technology.
After my talk, Maria Isabel Gandia of CATNIX and Amadeo Beck-Pecoz of ESPANIX give some tips and
tricks on how to peer _correctly_ in a talk entitled _Como sacar el máximo provecho de los puertos
de peering en nodos neutros_ (English: How to make the most of peering ports in neutral nodes),
after which there's one more social-cultural activity: a kahoot!
The kahoot is a quiz with fifteen questions about technology and cultural references from the
spanish internet industry and its pioneers. I participate in the kahoot and, despite my Spanish
sucking (and delays due to having to translate ES->EN and then my answer back EN->ES), I manage to
make the podium together with a player called _Edu_ (_Eduardo Taboada_ who was gracious to give me
his book on Proxmox!) and a player called _IPv6_. I am over the moon that I managed to win here! I
take the time to thank the ESNOG organizers, as they did a fantastic job with the logistics and the
varied program. I really enjoyed myself!
Then just like that, ESNOG'32 is over. It's 17:00 or so and I make my way back to the hotel, where
Marina is already lounging and ready for an ap&eacute;ro. First, we take a little walk through the
park and I call my Dad, who is celebrating his birthday today. My parents are doing good, they just
got their flu and corona shots (good for them!) and they ask me about my COVID episode last week. We
have a good conversation and say our goodbyes - they will be visiting us in Switzerland in December.
At 20:00 we make our way to the city for dinner. It's a bit of a puzzle to find a place that has
good tapas, is not too far away, and is affordable. We find a place, honesty not that great though,
and we have our food and a bottle of _Arienzo_ wine from the house of Marques de Riscal. On the way
back we see a local sight: _Zurich_, the insurance company, as well has an office in the Diagonal
area of Barcelona.
Back at the hotel it's 22:00 and we're both a bit tired. Marina has done a tonne of walking and
museum-visiting today, and I spent the day up and about at ESNOG. Interestingly, my Apple watch
informs me that I have closed all three rings (12h of standing, 30min of exercize, 950kCal of
activity). I would not have thought that!
## Pictures of the Day
{{< gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-25/marenostrum.png" caption="Picture of Marenostrum 4 in the chapel at UPC, Barcelona" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-25/IMG_2203.JPG" caption="A heart-shaped formation of a bunch of IPng ntag-pins, almost all of which got a new owner today." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-25/IMG_2205.JPG" caption="A selfie at the podium of the University of Tech, Barcelona, Catalunya." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-25/group.png" caption="A gorup picture of the ESNOG'32 participants." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-25/IMG_2209.JPG" caption="A selfie at the front door of the UPC Edifici Vertex building of UPC in Barcelona." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-25/kahoot.png" caption="I am giggly because I did not expect to win a Spanish spoken kahoot!" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-25/IMG_2210.JPG" caption="The Pedralbes Royal Palace in Pedralbes quarter of Barcelona, Catalunya." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-25/IMG_2211.JPG" caption="A bottle of Rioja called Arienzo, from Marques de Riscal" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-25/IMG_2214.JPG" caption="A selfie of Marina and I in front of the Zurich insurance company in Diagonal, Barcelona." >}}
{{< /gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-modal >}}
{{< gallery-script >}}

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@ -1,7 +1,78 @@
--- ---
title: "Week 13, Saturday:" title: "Week 13, Saturday: Barcelona to Zurich"
date: 2024-10-26T21:55:00+02:00 date: 2024-10-26T21:55:00+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-02.png" alt="Credit: Soulful Liquid, YouTube" >}}
Ahhh what a wonderful few days in Barcelona. Yesterday when we went to bed, it started raining. Then
at 02:00 or so, we both got abruptly woken up by a thunderclap just overhead. There was a bright
flash of white and a very loud and immediate thunder. Wowza! I fell alseep pretty quickly after the
excitement, but Marina spent a bit longer before being able to fall asleep. Stupid weather!
This morning it's still raining, so we decide to take our breakfast in the hotel. It's a nice
spread, Marina takes an _Americano_ and I take a _Mediterraneo_, and all sorts of yummy food is
presented. We take our time eating it, as our checkout is only at noon, and we are not super keen on
walking through the rain to the metro and then the airport.
Marina sees an Aeronautical museum at the airport, but unfortunately it's open only until 13:00 on
Saturdays. Not to worry, I have not seen much of the city on this particular trip, so I offer
perhaps to go check out this little Gaudi wall a few blocks up from us. We find the wall and the
statue of _Antoni Pl&agrave;cid Guillem Gaud&iacute; i Cornet_, as his full name rings. From here,
we take our time walking through a light drizzle and decide to take a look at the museum for
forbidden art - these are all artworks that were displayed at some point, but due to pressure,
typically from old, straight, white, christian dudes, were demanded to be removed. I find some of it
curious, other pieces are a bit pushy, and overall I think that old straight white christian dudes
should just chill out more.
After this small (but in my opinion, very cool) museum, it's still raining. So we walk over to a
small cafe and have a cup of cappucino and share a red velvet cupcake. My body is sluggish and slow.
My favorite activity would be curling into a ball and sleeping some more right now, so Marina goes
easy on me. We slowly walk East to the _Arc de Triomf_ and from there through the promenade and into
the park and towards the Equestrian statue of General _Joan Prim_.
We have a drink at a small greek bar/restaurant, and from there it's pretty close to catch the metro
at _Barceloneta_. We decide to minimze the rainy walk and take the metro L4 up to _Verdaguer_,
where we descend like twelve escalators (not even kidding!) to catch the L5 metro to _Collblanc_ and
from there it's easy: just jump onto the L9S directly to the airport. And all of this for a EUR 5.50
train ticket. The public transport in this city is **excellent**!
We are at the airport at about 17:30 for a 18:45 planeride. That means we should probably have some
dinner before boarding. Marina insists that we eat Tapas, and since our buddy Ram&oacute;n had
previously suggested we drink a wine from Priorat, we oblige. "One of everything!", is the order,
and soon after there are seven dishes on our table.
The food is really good - not just by "airport"-standards, but just in general: great preparation,
nice and moist _tortilla_, crispy braised _padrones_, thinly sliced _jamon_, and six units of
_croquetta_. We also enjoy the Priorat red wine and report back to the _Hardship Brotherhood_ on our
progress.
We finish our dinner and hop-skip to the gate, where the boarding has already started. We get into
the plane, there is a bit of a kerfuffle on airplane seats - our assigned seat does not exist
because they changed the aircraft. We are not alone, and one set of people even got assigned _the
same_ seat. Hilarity ensued but in the end, everybody managed to sit. Our flight home is
_tranquillo_, and we land at Zurich airport at about 21:20, and are home at about 22:00 or so.
We catch up with Quinn who has enjoyed the time 'off of parents', probably more so than I enjoyed
the time 'off of son', and we open up the gazillion packages in the mail. Marina went to town on
Aliexpress it seems. I also may have ordered a package or two :)
## Pictures of the Day
{{< gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-26/IMG_2215.JPG" caption="The breakfast spread at Upper Diagonal on Saturday morning - yummy!" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-26/IMG_2216.JPG" caption="This small wall with gate made by Gaudi is a lesser known treasure of the city" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-26/IMG_2218.JPG" caption="Gaudi's artwork in the city landscape cannot be ignored in Barcelona, Catalonia." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-26/IMG_2220.JPG" caption="The museum of Forbidden Art shows all sorts of pieces that had been previously banned" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-26/IMG_2221.JPG" caption="We shared a red velvet cupcake at a local bakery" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-26/IMG_2225.JPG" caption="The Arc de Triomf in Barcelona, Catalonia" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-26/IMG_2226.JPG" caption="Quinn loves pibbins, so I sent him a picture of a few we found in Barcelona, Catalonia" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-26/IMG_2228.JPG" caption="The train station of Francia just north of Barceloneta, Barcelona, Catalonia." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-26/IMG_2229.JPG" caption="In the subway we took twelve escalators down into the core of the Earth, to get to the L5 train" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-26/IMG_2230.JPG" caption="At the airport, we go 'Baby, one more time', and drink a wine from Priorat." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-26/IMG_2233.JPG" caption="Our tapas at the airport is delicious, and we thoroughly enjoy it, albeit quickly" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-26/IMG_2237.JPG" caption="Our Vueling airplane has changed, so lots of folks including us no longer have valid seats" >}}
{{< /gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-modal >}}
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@ -1,7 +1,89 @@
--- ---
title: "Week 13, Sunday:" title: "Week 13, Sunday: Padel!"
date: 2024-10-27T21:55:00+02:00 date: 2024-10-27T21:55:00+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/kasger-02.png" alt="Credit: Kasger, YouTube" >}}
I woke up at 08:30 after a tremendous sleep. I love sleeping in my own bed, the difference between
its comfort is most apparent just after I return from a trip abroad. This morning I have a sportsing
date with Johhny and Mari. A while ago, maybe half a year by now, Johnny mentioned that he's into
[[Padel](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Padel)], a racket sport of Mexican origin, typically played
in doubles on an enclosed court slightly smaller than a doubles tennis court.
It feels fitting to play this game precisely today, as I understand it's the second most popular
game in Spain, second only to football. Seeing as I just got back from Spain, I may as well :) I
drive over to _Milandia_ and enter the Padel hall to find a jolly Mari and Johnny already there. I
have never played this game before, but I have played both tennis and squash, so I think I will get
the jist of it 🎾. Mari and I have to go rent a racket, and it becomes apparent that Johnny hasn't
played particularly often with his: the price tag is still on his racket :)
It's a super fun game! We are only three, so we take turns ganging up on a singleton. The trick
seems to be moderating power. It's very easy to whack the ball against the back wall (it has to
bounce on the court first), or thwack it out of the court, and onto the next team's court. This
happens to us a few times, but we are not alone. We also sometimes welcome a foreign ball onto our
court as well.
We have the court for one hour and trust me: that's plenty. I am still coughing a bit from the cold
remaining after my long week of travels (NLNOT and ESNOG). My heart rate goes up to 160 at times,
but is usually in the 130s which is tolerable. After the 55min of game time, I seem to have burned
680kCal and my body is super happy. Well, it also hurts like a _mofo_, but it is thankful that I
have put it through its paces. And I am not alone: we set a date for next week Sunday 3rd and the
10th as well. Mari and I debate buying a racket, but we both think we should maybe play a little bit
more first. I make her a deal: I will buy her a racket if we play ten times. She reciprocates and
offers to buy me a racket also. Deal!
At home, Quinn is gathering a box of stuff from the basement. Next week is Hallowe'en, and we are
practicioners. Remember we bought a few metric tonnes of candy last [[week]({{< ref wk12day4.md >}})]?
Well, we'll be making little baggies for the kids who come to trick-or-treat at our door. Quinn
makes quick work of decorating the front yard with spider webs, our Elza ghoul and a bunch of
stay-out tape. I add copious amounts of spiders to the webbing and overall think it looks wonderful.
Back inside, I am reminded of a chore I gave myself: tending to my geocache called
[[Schüracherstutz](https://coord.info/GC657NY)], the container of which has gone missing a while
ago. I create a new one and add a logbook to it, and make my way over to the little one. Marina asks
me on the way out to get a bottle of milk in case she needs it for tonight's dinner. I bike over to
GZ and replace the geocache, then to the Coop Pronto to get some milk, and then through a light
afernoon Sun back home where Marina has started making a second helping of _Vol au Vent_.
Last week, we were supposed to have Jan-Christiaan and Sandra over for dinner and they were very
much looking forward to this _Vol au Vent_. In the end, I ate some in our guest room during
isolation when I was in the full-on [[sick period]({{< ref wk12day6.md >}})]. I couldn't taste a
thing, and as such, had to report that I did not enjoy it. But lucky me! I get a second chance :)
I prepare for us a soup of butternut pumpkin. This soup has only the pumpkin, one onion and a few
cups of vegetable stock. I will season it with home made croutons and roasted pumpkin seeds with
salt. It'll be great. Marina mean while makes little meatballs and cuts the chicken for the sauce.
She will also be making mocca ice cream with little pieces of Oreo. I'm sure JC and Sandra can
appreciate that, being the proud owners of oreo.nl.
Our guests arrive at 17:00, on the dot. You can tell we're not the only ones that are _Swissing_! We
catch up over a suitable _ap&eacute;ro_ of Mattei Cap Corsa, a corsican drink which we first enjoyed
at their place a few months ago. Before dinner, I show them the flight simulator and take a little
loop flight from LSMD to LSMD, showing lakes of Greiffensee and Pfaffikersee before turning around
and landing again. It's a quick tour sharing what I've learned so far of the controls and cockpit.
Dinner is enjoyed. The main course is to die for: I definitely missed out last week, as Marina says
it tastes exactly the same [no, it doesn't]. The _Vol au Vent_ is fantastic. We chat about work,
travel, the vacation to the northern american continent that Sandra and JC made, as well as the city
trips that Marina and I have made over this last Fall. The desert is a mocca ice cream which Marina
has made herself with her trusty rusty ice cream machine: a good investment!
We agreed not to make it too late today; Sandra and Quinn both have to go to work tomorrow morning
and JC will be traveling to Dublin. So we go easy on the sauce and by 21:00 or so, we say our
goodbyes. Marina and I watch one episode of _Lilyhammer_ (my favorite episode by the way, the one
which takes place in Gjendesheim): Roar gets saved, the brittons take a swim in lake Gjende, and you
can just see Memurubu and [[Besseggen](https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Besseggen)] (which is my
favorite place on Earth) and Jonny thugs his way through Muriburiland
## Pictures of the Day
{{< gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-27/IMG_2239.JPG" caption="Johny, Mari and me after an hour's worth of Padel. That was good fun, let's do it again!" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-27/IMG_2241.JPG" caption="Quinn has decorated our front yeard, inviting the kids over for a trick-or-treat later this week" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-27/IMG_2243.JPG" caption="I'm doing geocaching container maintenance and need to replace my Schuracherstutz one" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-27/IMG_2245.JPG" caption="The Vol au Vent is delicious - thank you, Marina!" >}}
{{< /gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-modal >}}
{{< gallery-script >}}

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--- ---
title: "Week 14, Monday:" title: "Week 14, Monday: Last Week!"
date: 2024-10-28T21:55:00+02:00 date: 2024-10-28T21:55:00+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/noraenpure-12.png" alt="Credit: Nora en Pure, YouTube" >}}
I have to say I'm a little bit melancholic seeing that today, week fourteen of my sabbatical, has
started. My journal is going to be perhaps a bit of an anti climax because I have promised myself
that in the last week I would not do very many things, but just recompress after having been able to
let my mind roam free for so many days.
In all my years as an adult, I've never had a vacation longer than three weeks. Ever since working
at Google, and I started in 2006 mind you, I have mostly spent school vacations traveling with my
family - in the before times this was to the San Francisco Bay Area, sometimes as well to Sydney
Australia. I would work mostly, and in the weekends we'd do fun stuff together as a family.
I'm now looking back at the time I spent off-corp, and it's difficult to overstate how valuable it
has been for me. I've gotten to finish a few projects that have been quietly and patiently waiting
for my attention in the dusty corner of my work room. I've traveled quite a bit and enjoyed the
company of many friends, family and network engineers. I also finally cleaned my room&trade;, and I
got a Roomba vacuum robot called _Suckel_ to help me keep my room tidy. I played wiht lego, although
not as much as I would've liked. Marina and I drank many martini's in the back yard while the Summer
was blessing us with good weather, but I did not get to re-design and work on our garden. Tim helped
me, as an emotional support animal and subject matter expert, to get my flight simulator up and
running, and I've clocked 20hrs or so of flight time in it. Yesterday I ordered two 31.5" screens
which will serve as the left and right window. I find VFR difficult without having a lateral view
out the window of my little simplane. Would you believe those screens were only CHF 120,- apiece?
Unbelievable!
In the morning I cut a new release of my KVM image for VPP, Bird2 and FRR 10.1. I've included the
`sFlow` plugin, a working `hsflowd` and some tools like `psampletest` and `sflowtool` in the image.
While testing, I started an [[Akvorado](https://github.com/akvorado/akvorado)] instance to validate
that things work. I think there's still a few small things we need to take care of, notably around
SNMP information and perhaps a few fields in the sFlow counters (such as interface state and speed).
And for the Akvorado data model, I'll want to feed it some BGP information using
[[BMP](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc7854)] so that things like prefixes and
source/destination AS numbers are known. But, it's a start, and it works.
In the afternoon I spent some time with the simulator. My buddy Luuk pinged me on Signal, and he'll
be renting a plane this week, intending to fly it up from Lugano where he lives, to Wangen-Lachen,
airport [[LSPV](https://www.flugplatzwangen.ch/)]. All we need is a bit of good weather, and today
it's gorgeous out! In the sim, I'm doing attitude control, controlled turns and flying patterns. I
find it very difficult to keep my altitude, perhaps also because there is no motion feedback in the
simulator (ie, I don't feel myself going up or down). But I'll get the hang of it, eventually.
There's still a flurry of requests for FreeIX Remote. Lancom in Greece has offered capacity on their
100G wave from Thessaloniki to Amsterdam, and will be giving all of their local FreeIX Greece
members (there are half a dozen for the moment), free access to the NIKHEF exchanges. FreeIX Remote
is slowly growing, with currently 210K IPv4 prefixes and 64K IPv6 prefixes. Not bad for a peer :)
Marina makes a non-typical but delicious meal! She takes butternut squash and onions roasted in the
oven, with goat's cheese and cured ham on a bed of arugula with a light vinaigrette. She asks me if
I can fry a beef _Limousin_ steak, which I happily oblige. Together, this makes for a very tasty
dinner indeed! After dinner, we watch some news and settle down on the couch for a few episodes of
Lilyhammer.
## Pictures of the Day
{{< gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-28/akvorado.png" caption="Akvorado on a testbed with four VPP machines" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-28/IMG_2247.JPG" caption="Marina's delicious dinner: ham, goat cheese, squasch and rocket" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-28/IMG_2248.JPG" caption="To accompany Marina's salad: Limousin filet mignon with Chicago rub" >}}
{{< /gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-modal >}}
{{< gallery-script >}}

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@ -1,7 +1,69 @@
--- ---
title: "Week 14, Tuesday:" title: "Week 14, Tuesday: Patches Galore"
date: 2024-10-29T21:55:00+02:00 date: 2024-10-29T21:55:00+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/dreamscape-03.png" alt="Credit: Dreamscape, Kush Sessions, YouTube" >}}
This morning my buddy Arend sends me a message on Telegram - and asks me if I can check the port in
Qupra. Oh my deity, it's finally happening! After the general assembly of Coloclue approved a
member's petition to allow members to install cross connects at Qupra, a few months of "kastje, muur"
happened, and the networking committee and association board reached an agreement on how this would
happen.
A few months after that, Arend tried to install a crossconnect but we weren't ready paper-wise. I
brought it back to the attention of the networking committee and we identified the missing pieces: a
patch panel with keystones needed to be installed in each rack (and it was only available in two of
the racks at the time), and a change to the administrative database needed to be added to document
which members had which crossconnects.
Tim took care of the first thing - he ordered the panels and keystones and went to the datacenter to
install them. I offered to take careo f the second thing - but since the administrative database has
need-to-know information, our treasurer Arjan preferred to add the records himself. Once these two
things were taken care of, all I had to do is wait for a practical moment :) I had planned to deploy
the fiber myself last week, but I had to cancel my trip to Amsterdam due to the COVID situation.
So I was surprised and delighted that Arend pinged me. The Qupra FrysIX switch was pre-configured,
and all that was left was to plug things in. Arend made quick work of it, and as well put in the
cross connect for a few other members at Coloclue, he's such a sweetheart! For me, this link will be
used to alleviate the hypervisor at Equinix AM3, as it is running low on disk throughput due to me
using Samsung consumer SSDs. I shipped Arend a few enterprise SAS SSDs before, but he hasn't gotten
around to deploying them yet. More importantly, the AM3 hypervisor runs FrysIX routeserver, LibreNMS
and IXPManager.
After the Qupra gig, Arend made his way to NIKHEF where he installed the FrysIX patch for FreeIX
Remote, directly into the VPP router `nlams0.net.free-ix.net`. That router now has LSIX, SpeedIX,
and FrysIX connected. I spend some time bringing FreeIX Remote AS50869 into quarantine and then into
the production VLAN. That's a benefit of running the IXP: I get to expedite my own connections :)
Now that the FreeIX Remote router is connected to FrysIX, I allocate a private VLAN between it and
IPng's infrastructure. This allows me to create a VPWS (L2VPN, Ethernet over MPLS) on IPng's MPLS
switches `msw0.nlams0` and `msw1.chrma0` from this router in Amsterdam to the one I already installed
in Zurich. iBGP comes up, and there are now three routers in play (`nlams0`, `chrma0`, and
`grskg0`), and amongst them, they know about 207K IPv4 prefixes and 64.7K IPv6 prefixes, and all of
them can be reached via direct or routeserver peering. How cool is that?
```
pim@nlams0:~$ birdc show route count
BIRD v2.15.1-4-g280daed5-x ready.
800934 of 800934 routes for 207438 networks in table master4
449754 of 449754 routes for 64696 networks in table master6
1501107 of 1501107 routes for 500369 networks in table t_roa4
364077 of 364077 routes for 121359 networks in table t_roa6
Total: 3115872 of 3115872 routes for 893862 networks in 4 tables
```
In the evening I send a maintenance announcement out to FrysIX members: in the night of Wednesday to
Thursday of this week, I will move the routeserver RS2 and the IXPManager over to the hypervisor
at Qupra, which now sports a 10G connection to the FrysIX peering switch there. I have plumbed the
management VLAN 264 and the Quarantine 2605 and the Peering LAN 2604 through to the hypervisor.
I practice by moving `nms.frys-ix.net` over - this is a non-intrusive change. Using ZFS block device
replication, I can pump over the boot disk with about 110MB/s, because the hypervisor itself has
"only" a one gigabit connection. I boot the VM, and it comes up cleanly. Nice. I spend a few hours
preparing the move of the other two machines (RS2 and IXPManager), which are service impacting. But
I can start by making a snapshot of the block devices, copy their data over ahead of time, and then
copy a final snapshot incrementally.
Today was a good day for FrysIX :)

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@ -1,7 +1,77 @@
--- ---
title: "Week 14, Wednesday:" title: "Week 14, Wednesday: Candy and FrysIX Moves"
date: 2024-10-30T21:55:00+02:00 date: 2024-10-30T21:55:00+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/aurora.png" alt="Credit: Aurora, YouTube" >}}
Today I did pretty much nothing :) I spent a bunch of time in the flight simulator flying circuits
and trying to keep my altitude. Also I did about twenty (flyby) approaches where I would try to have
a sink rate of 400ft/min and 60kts with flaps at 10 degrees. The airplane is sluggish at this speed,
so there's a bit of a delay before the correct attitude is reached. Think of it as a really slow PID
controller. I'm still pretty terrible at it, but at least I am putting the airplane down in one
piece. Doing visual approach is really difficult by the way, because looking left and right is a bit
awkward. Seeing as my spiffy video card has four monitor outputs, I think I'll try to get my hands
on some cheap screens that could serve as left and right windows.
After lunch I take another look at the `sFlow` plugin - for some reason it is emitting large
interface IDs (1e9 + hw_if_index), but Neil has written it such that if a Linux Control Plane pair
exists, it'll use the Linux vif_index. Clearly that isn't happening, and I have a pending call with
him tonight to try to get to the bottom of it.
In the late afternoon, Quinn Marina and I draw smiley faces on our halloween candy baggies, and fill
them with an inordinate amount of candy. We make 120 baggies, as in previous years, we've often been
able to offload 100+ of these things to the neighborhood kids, the weather is going to be good
tomorrow, and Quinn decorated our front porch in a very inviting way: I'm sure the kids will enjoy
it, but not as much as we will, methinks :)
After dinner, Marina and I watch some news, and then I retire to the basement for my call. I futz a
bit with the audio, but eventually am able to greet Peter and Neil. We talk about a few operational
details, notably:
1. the ability of the `hsflowd` to send its update traffic from a network namespace different to
the main one (because VPP wants to run in a `dataplane` netns). The tool already supports this,
yaay!
1. if samples are received before the interface counters (with their respective interface IDs
mapped to the Linux Control Plane vif_index'es, then those samples will arrive at the collector with
these if_index values of 1000000001 and so on. This will make tools like Akvorado try to retrieve
SNMP indexes with that - but they won't exist and this is a bug. Neil agrees, and will inhibit
sending of samples until after the first counter for an interface is found
1. a propose the large numbers, they are repeatably and permanemently `1e9+idx` for me, while they
should really be the LCP vif_index. We add some debug logging, but it doesn't trigger. Then we run
out of time and we promise each other we'll both look into it offline.
All in all, a super productive meeting, and once again I learned a tonne.
At 23:00 I need to complete the move of the FrysIX virtual machines from my hypervisor at Equinix
AM3 to another one at Qupra, which Arend connected to FrysIX infrastructure yesterday. This move is
important, because the SSDs in the AM3 hypervisor are crappy, while the ones in Qupra are enterprise
SAS-12 SSDs from NetApp: much faster, must higher write rate, much longer durability (famous last
words).
I take a snapshot copy of `rs2.frys-ix.net` first, and copy that VM to its new spot, but disconnect
the FrysIX port, by moving the virtio network card from the FrysIX bridge group to an empty bridge
group. I boot it, and upgrade it from Debian Bullseye to Debian Bookworm while I'm here. I have it
download its config and at 23:00 exactly, I shutdown the old `rs2` and connect the virtio network
interface to FrysIX in the new spot. Finally, I add VLAN 2604 (production) and 2605 (quarantine) to
the port in Qupra, and a few seconds later we're fully online. The migration of `rs2` took about 150
seconds of downtime. Not bad, eh??
The IXPManager virtual machine is a bit larger, but thanks to ZFS block device snapshots I can make
an incremental ZFS transfer, halt the old `ixpmanager` VM, quickly `zfs send | zfs recv` the last
bits from the penultimate snapshot to HEAD, and boot the VM on its new spot. The IXPManager comes up
within 10 minutes or so. All in all, the maintenance window lasted from 23:00-23:35 and I was quite
happy with the results.
## Pictures of the Day
{{< gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-30/IMG_2249.JPG" caption="The MS Flight Simulator with an ad-hoc righthand side window, easier to see the airport when doing righthand patterns. Need another screen :)" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-30/IMG_2250.JPG" caption="We are filling candy baggies for the trick-or-treat'ers tomorrow. We expect one hundred or so kids." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-30/IMG_2253.JPG" caption="The amount of sugar we are pumping into the youth in Bruttisellen is .. significant." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-30/IMG_2254.JPG" caption="The empty distribution-sized bags from Aligro. That's ... a lot of sugar." >}}
{{< /gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-modal >}}
{{< gallery-script >}}

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--- ---
title: "Week 14, Thursday:" title: "Week 14, Thursday: Hallowe'en"
date: 2024-10-31T21:55:00+02:00 date: 2024-10-31T21:55:00+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/nicky-havey.png" alt="Credit: Nicky Havey, YouTube" >}}
Today is Hallowe'en! When we moved to Br&uuml;ttisellen in 2006, it was _not_ a thing. Over the
years, a few of us would decorate our houses, but most of the kids were not really with the program:
no trick or treating, no dressing up in scary costumes, nothing. But when we bought our place in
2015, we we decided to really decorate in the week of Hallowe'en. These days, kids will come round,
sometimes in small groups, sometimes in very large ones, parents and all. Many of them still don't
really know what they are doing: ring doorbell --> get candy. The German way to say _trick or treat_
by the way is _s&uuml;sses oder saures_ (English: sweet or sour) which I find hilarious because if
you say "well I choose sour!", the kid will look at you as if you're crazy: "Sir, this is where you
hand over the candy?!".
> You have much to learn, Switzerland, but I love you!
We have lots of candy in our baggies, we have Elza (our door-ghoul), spiders and lots of spider
webs, and some UV lights to give them a spooky glow-in-the-dark feeling. I will be dressing up in a
black hoodie with a _zipperface_, which takes a while to prepare for, but really hits the spot with
freaking out the children.
In the morning, the doorbell rings at 09:00 and oh look, a package! It's a rather huge package, the
size of a small refridgerator... in it are two 32" curved screen displays, which I bought for the
low low price of CHF 120,- apiece! It's amazing how affordable this stuff is! I unpack them, which
takes actually quite a long time, and take care of the cardboard and styrofoam carnage that ensues.
After my hard work, two screens are available for the flight sim.
OK, this thing will need to move, because hanging off a screen on the left and right hand side of
the main screen will make the simulator a lot wider. Luckily, I have a spot, sort of, in the server
room. There's an unused desk there which I move out of the way. I then move the simulator into the
room and Marina helps me measure how high the left/right screen need to be. It turns out, 96cm is
the sweet spot.
I have a few hours left before I need to change my appearance, so after a quick lunch I go to the
Ikea, as they happen to have a 60cm x 96cm x 30cm cabinet called _Spiksmed_. Did you know that
almost all the IKEA product names are fake Swedish words? My IKEA in Dietlikon has exactly two of
these _Spiksmed_ units, so I grab them! The trip takes me only twenty minutes, because I don't have
to go through the whole maze of the store, rather I can just purchase these items and move to the
_Warenausgabe_ (English: Goods Distribution), and these little ones are quickly in hand.
At home, the cabinets are pretty quickly assembled, and while I don't have time to play with the
simulator, I do manage to connect it all and project a left- and righthand door + window on these
two screens. It looks ... absolutely stunning. Very, very immersive!
Marina interrupts my fun in the basement and suggests that I shave before dressing up, because the
zipper-face uses latex to glue onto the skin, and I don't want to feel the burn of a brazilian
face-wax later when removing it. So I shower and shave and put some skin lotion on my face. The plan
is:
* 15:00-15:45 Marina gives Pim a Zipper Face
* 15:45-16:15 Pim goes to get Quinn. Marina converts into Sally (from the Nightmare before Christmas)
* 16:15-17:00 Pim and Quinn return.
* 17:00-18:00 Marina turns Quinn into Tate Langdon (from American Horror Story)
* 17:30-18:00 Pim makes dinner
* 18:00-18:15 Dinner had
* 18:15-22:30 Freak out the neighborhood kids.
For dinner I make baked beans, potatoes and a chicken schnitzel, it's a simple meal but we don't
have much time to eat. Most of the younger kids will want to be in bed at 19:00 or so, as it's a
school night (remember those? School nights, heh). I apply some extra bloody gore after dinner, and
drink water through a straw. Marina puts on her Sally-wig and grabs Zero, the floating ghost-dog.
It's fair to say we freak the kids out. It's funny to me because I've seen grownups, teens and
toddlers all keep their distance and kind of refuse to approach the door. They don't know what's
going to happen. One set of teenage girls stood a good three meters (ten feet) from the door, and
when Marina said they had to come get their candy, one of them said - I kid you not - "Oh, no I'm
good over here, you can throw us the bag of candy, kthx". But we made them approach, anyway :)
Marina and I take an evening stroll through the neighborhood. There's about ten houses or so that
really put themselves out there; and about twenty houses that are approachable (although, honestly:
if you want to participate in trick or treating, you really should decorate your house!). It's
pretty clear to find our house, and many kids do. Some even twice. Or three times.
Quinn and I also take a walk and I often ask him: "Hey Quinn, can I eat that kid over there?", and
Quinn plays his part too, walking with a cane but then lunging at kids screaming at them. So many
heart attacks were had. I love it.
At about 22:00 we call it a night. A cute thing about Switzerland is the so called _Nachtruhe_
(English: night rest), which is a federal law to avoid street noises after 22:00. So we turn off the
lights and UV, and finish watching the _Adam's Family_ movie that Marina put on while Quinn and I
were out taking a walk and scaring the neighborhood kids.
We had so much fun today - I'm glad.
## Pictures of the Day
{{< gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-31/IMG_2257.JPG" caption="All the baggies of candy for tonight's trick-or-treating. We expect many kids." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-31/IMG_2258.JPG" caption="The Digitec package is big enough to hold a fridge. In it: two 32 inch monitors for my flight simulator." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-31/IMG_2262.JPG" caption="I've set up these monitors as left- and right facing doors + wings in the cockpit. I line up the horizon so that it's a smooth transition from left to center to right." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-31/IMG_2265.JPG" caption="Marina is starting to apply the zipper to my face. The latex stinks (really bad, of ammonia, and it burns the skin We suffer for our art)." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-31/IMG_2285.JPG" caption="Zero is ready to float around with Marina, who is going as Sally." >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-31/IMG_2286.JPG" caption="My Zipper-face and Quinn's Tate" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-31/IMG_2287.JPG" caption="Marina's Sally and my Zipper-face" >}}
{{< gallery-photo fn="2024-10-31/IMG_2292.JPG" caption="Our front porch has spider webs and lots of creepy crawlies. The webs are illumated with UV light which makes them glow in the dark" >}}
{{< /gallery-category >}}
{{< gallery-modal >}}
{{< gallery-script >}}

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