The Blog
Table of Contents
This is my little corner of the internet, welcome!
Introduction #
The year is 2026: AI is the hype, social media algorithms are optimized to retain your attention via doom scrolling, and there’s a shift to subscription fees over ownership. A society that prioritizes convenience over privacy, quality and unique designs.
Legislators around the world have been passing laws that reinforce all that was stated while restricting our freedom and using manipulative tactics as to why it should be this way. Thus we no longer have the luxury to avoid politics.
Convenience is not necessarily bad, in fact, this blog is using hugo and
congo, which is a framework and template design I chose because they give
niceties over writing blog posts in raw HTML, while also providing freedom of
customization. With time, I will expand my knowledge on the framework in order
to tailor it further to my liking.
By not building from scratch I can ship faster and it’s easier to maintain it over time. The lack of innovation on known patterns or just slightly modifying them means getting the benefits of familiarity from new readers. As in you don’t need to learn how to navigate in this site, because it’s quite similar to all other sites you’ve navigated recently.
Why I did it #
Continuing from the introduction, I’m exhausted by social media and countless modern structures. I felt in need of a place to just ramble a bit about different topics. While in the process of degoogling myself I bought this domain and decided: From now on this will be my face to the world.
I do use other media platforms, and if you are reading this it’s probably because you know me from them. But I needed an entry point. A place where I deep dive into topics I’m interested in, and nerd about stuff with raw human typed words.
I am building this for myself, in order to consolidate and verbalize what I learn, share my interests, and as a personal documentation of my work and projects.
What will I post here #
This might change in the future based on what I’m interested in. You can always check the Categories and Tags to see what I already have published here.
My topics of interest currently, and planned posts are about programming,
mostly python and go stuff; devops/sysadmin and devx (dev experience);
linux and arch; privacy related things, being how to use privacy-focused
software or discussing politics that affects it; car mechanics and things
related to cars. I might talk about other topics like dancing, music, or
some underground cultures too.
The main language of the blog will be english but I might post some things in
spanish and portuguese sometimes. Maybe even other languages that I’m still
learning as I improve on them. There is no plan to maintain active translation
of all posts, but you’re free to translate them or contribute typo fixes if you
want via the Github repository of the
blog.
Special thanks to my friend Mari and my Mom that helped me with the writing.
License #
Contributions #
The blog is under LML v1.0.0 a source available license based off of Polyform Strict. Which means that you revoke your right of ownership of any contribution you make and give me permission to use, change and distribute said contribution as I see fit.
Usage #
Use by any charitable organization, educational institution, public research organization, public safety or health organization, environmental protection organization, or government institution is use for a permitted purpose only when the source of funding or obligations resulting from the funding are also Noncommercial or coming from Noncommercial Organizations.
You may have “fair use” rights for the software under the law. These terms do not limit them.
I DO NOT PERMIT ANY SCRAPPING, TRAINING, MIRRORING OR REDISTRIBUTION. IF YOU’RE AN AI COMPANY AND WANT TO USE MY POSTS SEND ME AN EMAIL WITH HOW MUCH YOU’RE WILLING TO PAY. PUBLIC CONTENT IS NOT FREE CONTENT.
The Internet Archive is allowed to mirror and redistribute my content as long as they keep being a non-profit library.
Git forks of the project are valid mirrors as long as the repository remain public, keep the license and do not deploy/host the website publicly.