- Joined
- May 5, 2022
Back to what I wanted to whinge about, I've been seeing this kitsune neko loli DDOS mitigation attack thing on all things remotely Linux-related from the official Fedora bookmarks on Firefox to the WineHQ's AppDB. I don't like this at all, I hate weebshit when I don't consent to it, and may Allah bring dark hours and disaster upon whoever conceived this and proliferated it throughout vaguely Linux-related websites.
I just want to remind you this is a competition of who is more retarded. At least the depiction of Anubis' skincolor wise is accurate to the historical god and the program is named after him (ofc the anime is genderswapped...).My problem isn't necessarily just the attention thing or that it's anime, whatever; it's the distastefulness and getting me involved in your hobby that is so played out and has nothing to do with the thing that I want to use.
What do I get when I get Dtrace? A fucking MLP pony.
I wake up in the morning and gentoo devs once again prove that autism and degeneracy are positively correlated.
dev challenge to not be a degenerate, impossible:
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Even ftrace themselves aren't that retarded to use this as their official mascot...
On less retarded news, OSU's OSL was going to be kill and begging for donos (archive):
Yes, you read that right. They want 250k to keep going. Over half is to the 1 permanent employee tht runs this project and the eight studentFuture of OSL in Jeopardy
by Lance Albertson on Wed, Apr 30 2025
I am writing to inform you about a critical and time-sensitive situation facing the Open Source Lab (OSL). Over the past several years, we have been operating at a deficit due to a decline in corporate donations. While the Oregon State College of Engineering (CoE) has generously filled this gap, recent changes in university funding makes our current funding model no longer sustainable. As a result, our current funding model is no longer sustainable.
Unless we secure $250,000 in committed funds, the OSL will shut down later this year. I have reached out to our largest corporate sponsor and they are working to increase their support as we update our contract, but that still may not be enough.
For transparency, the $250,000 is broken down into the following roughly:
Other expenses include items such as hardware, travel, subscription services and other miscellaneous expenses needed to run the OSL day to day.
- Staff pay $150k (60%) (1 staff)
- Student pay $65k (26%) (8 students)
- Other expenses $35k (14%)
If any of you can assist or connect me with potential supporters, please reach out as soon as possible. I need to provide leadership with an update on any funding changes by Wednesday, May 14, 2025. Please reach out directly via donations@osuosl.org if you’re able to help us make it through this difficult time.
The OSU Foundation is an IRS 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation, which provides many donors a tax advantage. Please contact the OSU Foundation directly if you have questions about your eligibility. You can donate directly to us by visiting our donation page.
OSL provides hosting for over 500 Free and Open Source Projects from all over the world. Over the course of its 22-year existence, the OSL has mentored over 130 students, many of whom have gone on to create their own companies and work throughout the larger tech ecosystem.
Some notable milestones over the years include:
Your commitment is crucial for us to move forward. I am available to answer any questions you might have.
- Provided hosting for Mozilla Firefox when they needed help in the early days and hosted the release of 1.0
- Was the home of the Apache Software Foundation, Linux Foundation, Kernel.org, Mozilla for many years
- Offers fast and reliable software mirroring for projects
- Currently provides infrastructure hosting for projects such as Drupal, Gentoo Linux, Debian, Fedora, phpBB, OpenID, Buildroot/Busybox, Inkscape, Cinc and many more!
- Virtual machines for x86, aarch64 and ppc64le are used by many projects for CI and other hosted services
Thank you for your continued support!
Lance Albertson, Director
Well they got the money, and now they beg for more (archive)...
Forging Our Future: OSL's Path to Sustainability – A Call for Smart Solutions and Enduring Support
by Lance Albertson on Fri, May 09 2025
Following our OSL Future post, the community response has been incredible! Thanks to your amazing support, our team is funded for the next year. This is a huge relief and lets us focus on building a truly self-sustaining OSL.
To get there, we’re tackling two big interconnected goals:
- Finding a new, cost-effective physical home for our core infrastructure, ideally with more modern hardware.
- Securing multi-year funding commitments to cover all our operations, including potential new infrastructure costs and hardware refreshes.
Pillar 1: The Data Center & Hardware Challenge
Our current data center is over 20 years old and needs to be replaced soon. With Oregon State University evaluating the future of this facility, it’s very likely we’ll need to relocate in the near future. While migrating to the State of Oregon’s data center is one option, it comes with significant new costs. This makes finding free or very low-cost hosting (ideally between Eugene and Portland for ~13-20 racks) a huge opportunity for our long-term sustainability. More power-efficient hardware would also help us shrink our footprint.
Speaking of hardware, refreshing some of our older gear during a move would be a game-changer. We don’t need brand new, but even a few-generations-old refurbished systems would boost performance and efficiency. (Huge thanks to the Yocto Project and Intel for a recent hardware donation that showed just how impactful this is!) The dream? A data center partner donating space and cycled-out hardware.
Our overall infrastructure strategy is flexible. We’re enhancing our OpenStack/Ceph platforms and exploring public cloud credits and other donated compute capacity. But whatever the resource, it needs to fit our goals and come with multi-year commitments for stability. And, a physical space still offers unique value, especially the invaluable hands-on data center experience for our students.
Pillar 2: Building Lasting Financial Resilience
The recent support was amazing for our immediate team needs. But for the OSL to thrive long-term, we need a sustainable financial foundation. This is crucial, as the university expects units like ours to become self-sufficient beyond this current year.
So, our big focus this next year is locking in ongoing support – think annualized pledges, different kinds of regular income, and other recurring help. This is vital, especially with potential new data center costs and hardware needs. Getting this right means we can stop worrying about short-term funding and plan for the future: investing in our tech and people, growing our awesome student programs, and serving the FOSS community. We’re looking for partners, big and small, who get why foundational open source infrastructure matters and want to help us build this sustainable future together.
An Evolving OSL: Still Critical, Still Growing
The OSL is actively evolving to meet new FOSS needs:
Yes, the OSL is absolutely still needed! A cost-effective new data center, refreshed hardware, and stable funding are key to our mission.
- POWER and ARM (aarch64) OpenStack clusters with IBM and Ampere Computing.
- Expanded x86 OpenStack and a robust Ceph cluster (now with S3 storage used by projects like OpenVox).
- GitLab CI runners across all architectures, with plans for GitHub Actions and more.
- Managed hosting for projects like PostmarketOS, including their recent GitLab migration.
How You Can Help Build Our Self-Sustaining Future
We need your help with these two pillars:
Reach out to donations@osuosl.org for any discussions on these fronts.
- Finding Our New, Cost-Effective Data Center Home & Hardware:
- Leads on Free/Low-Cost Space: Know of data center capacity (~13-20 racks) between Eugene and Portland?
- Hardware Donations/Leads: Can your org donate retired servers? Know data centers or refurbishers who might help?
- Connections & Spreading the Word: Introduce us to decision-makers and share our need!
- Securing Multi-Year Funding:
- Corporate Partnerships: Consider a multi-year sponsorship, especially if your company benefits from open source.
- Introductions & Advocacy: Connect us with CSR/OSPO contacts and champion sustainable funding for foundational infra.
Our Vision: Unlocked by Smart Solutions
With a secure, cost-effective data center (and updated hardware!) plus predictable multi-year funding, we can:
Finding economical solutions is key to making this vision a reality.
- Expand our student program.
- Broaden managed services for projects (GitLab, Discourse, Matrix, etc.).
- Introduce modern tooling like Terraform and Kubernetes for learning and efficiency.
- Engage more community volunteers.
Join Us in Building OSL’s Next Chapter
The recent encouragement has been fantastic. Now, help us build a truly sustainable foundation. Securing a cost-effective data center and robust multi-year financial partnerships are the critical next steps for the OSL’s future.
Thank you for your continued belief in the OSL!
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