Christiano Haesbaert

@haesbaert
84 Followers
47 Following
307 Posts
Raising the most adorable dudes, from womb to tomb, in kindness and crime.
Environmentalism without class struggle is just gardening.
@mcc in our defense, librarians have an unfair advantage here (they understand things about history and we don’t)

We lost a major infrastructure sponsor, but reached out to the community and gained several new ones. We are thankful for the companies who provided us with servers and bandwidth and everyone who donated financially.

https://alpinelinux.org/posts/2026-01-18-new-sponsors-strenghten-infrastructure.html

#AlpineLinux #FOSS

Follow-Up: New Sponsors Strengthen Alpine Linux’s Infrastructure and CI Ecosystem | Alpine Linux

Alpine Linux

The flood of #enshittification that #Broadcom unleashed upon #VMware and its customers after acquiring it, and its seismic waves in the whole IT supply chain, are a testament of how bad managers who seek for short-term revenue hikes without thinking of the long-term are walking ticking bombs for the tech industry.

https://www.theregister.com/2026/01/15/dell_vmware_claim_tesco_case/

We all know what Broadcom did to VMware after acquiring it. VMware was turned overnight into Broadcom’s cash cow, they hiked prices by 3x in some cases, scrapped perpetual licenses, forced all customers into more expensive subscriptions, said that they only wanted to focus on the most profitable customers and fuck everyone else, all while worsening customer support and providing literally zero added value and features to the product.

Basically a parasitic acquisition solely focused on sucking all the vital lymph out of another product - pure Oracle textbook.

When you play such stunts with individual customers, unfortunately, it works most of the times. Individuals don’t have much leverage, nor choice if there is too much concentration in a certain market. They may complain, but often they swallow the bitter bite.

Things are different when you play them in huge corporate products that are an integral part of the IT infrastructure we all use.

It turns out that among the businesses who were disgruntled when Broadcom suddenly cancelled their VMware perpetual licenses there was Tesco.

But Tesco didn’t acquire VMware licenses directly from Broadcom, of course. They acquired them through a reseller of hardware and software licenses - Computacenter. So Tesco sued them instead for failing to provide them the licenses that they were contractually bound to provide.

Computacenter, on its hand, didn’t acquire VMware licenses directly either. They were provided with the Dell servers they sold, as Dell was an authorized VMware reseller. So Computacenter sued Dell.

Dell, on its hand, says that it has no fault if Broadcom has suddenly changed VMware’s pricing model, and that they are the ones who broke contracts with the whole downstream supply chain. So Dell sued Broadcom.

And there we go. A chain of 3 lawsuits between 4 giants across the whole IT supply chain in order to call a parasitic company accountable.

What a mess. But I guess that the manager who proposed to squeeze annual recurring revenue got his/her fat quarterly bonus home after things seemed to work for the first year.

This is also your daily reminder that as a sysadmin you must use only FOSS products supported by the community and by strong foundations - and contribute back to them once their success becomes your success too.

Enough with the “but stability - but support - but licenses - but my manager” corporate bullshit.

The cost of writing your own little qemu CI/CD pipeline to spin up your virtual machines is much lower than the risk of your corporate subscription getting suddenly enshittified by chains of wrong financial incentives at any place in your upstream supply chain, and having to spend years of tears on expensive long-chain lawsuits.

And, even if things go bad, the cost of migrating out of proprietary and non-standard implementations is usually much higher than the cost of migrating to a compatible fork.

Dell wants £10m+ from VMware if Tesco case goes against it

Exclusive: Retail giant's disty, reseller, and vendor all say they can't and won't sell

The Register
I've added the missing i2c bridge(fixes touchpad on thinkpads) and bluetooth devices for Lunar Lake on Alpine Linux, now you can haz proper battery and proper distribution at the same time! Must use linux-stable and not linux-lts as there's a bug that breaks audio introduced in 6.18 that was only backported to 6.18.5.
Do us a favor, if you see anyone parking in a spot reserved for people with disabilities without the proper paperwork and/or without a disabled person: tell them to get out, take a picture, call the authorities. There is nothing more screwed up than taking the rights of a disabled person because you don’t want to walk another 10m.
It’s always the same kind of person “it’s just for a little while”, “I’m just waiting for X”.
Help us being able to use the rights we have.

The main reason people aren’t moving to a cheaper place is

You’ve moved to a cheaper place with your remote job. Cool

Your company reduces your salary 20% because of cost of living adjustments (they will).

Cool, now you live in the sticks, make less money. Maybe somewhere you don’t know anyone. Maybe somewhere you’re a minority.

You get laid off, because layoffs

Now you’re looking for a job in a place that doesn’t have jobs, and you can’t move back to California. With a ton more jobs, but harder to move back into.

That’s the real tradeoff.

But some people think success means owning a huge house in a place they don’t know anyone and have no community.

I'd like to thank the folks at Lenovo for finally shipping me a laptop that works, since the first two were broken.
Lunar Lake is truly something.
SysVinit vs systemd on #Debian #Linux 13 Trixie. #ThinkPad T480. It's a default install with KDE Plasma.
Recently I ordered a Thinkpad T14s, came with dead pixels, so I sent it back.
Then I ordered a Thinkpad x9 15, what a wonderful machine, really everything I wanted.
First day: gave me a suspicious segfault. Second day: can't even boot a usb disk anymore, it's dead, random segfaults everywhere.
Fuck me, how hard it is to have a laptop that works.

RE: https://mastodon.social/@rubenbolling/115691564369915601

By shifting to 98% renewable energy "The total cost of electricity production [in Uruguay] decreased by roughly half ... About 50,000 new jobs were created in construction, engineering, and operations, roughly 3% of the labor force … Its economy has been growing at 6% to 8% annually, and its poverty rate has fallen from 30% to 8%."