Even though it was not as good a sleep as I would have gotten at my home, I ended up having a far better respite than the day before. Well rested as I was, I woke up at around 0600am Central European Summer Time on 15th June 2026 and had Tomáš Hrčka pick up the snacks and spices that I got for him from my hotel room. After all, the last thing I would want to do was haul them all the way to the venue only to hand them over to him so that he could bring them back to the hotel. He was grateful to have the Meat Masala and the Sabzi Masala that I got from Pune. I headed downstairs at Ibis Praha Mala Strana's dining area for breakfast with the likes of Lenka Segura and Cristian Le at around 0730am after hearing back from Michal Konecny about his possible delay in arriving at the event venue that day.

It was a fun conversation to know how Cristian had been a globe trotter just like another friend of ours, Matthew Holmes, and had been all over from Romania to Japan, and from Vietnam to the Czech Republic. I found it to be an interesting point of view to add to my experience of jumping countries only when I had to participate in or organize free and open source events around the globe. When it came to breakfast though, I found myself to be just as disappointed with the food choices as the day before, so I instead focused on the conversation about Lenka's talk on Forgejo Runners on that day. Sticking to barebones lettuce salad, a warm cappuccino and scrambled eggs allowed me to stay energized for the rest of the day, or until the Lunch And Learn Matching afternoon event at the very least.

Fetching our conference backpacks from our hotel rooms, the three of us marched to the conference venue. As we had checked in to the event on the day before, I had a quick chat with Jef Spaleta, checking on his keynote preparation, while he talked with me about Fedora Mindshare's proposed experiment of using a trusted service funding platform for sourcing/distributing event funding. We also touched base on the ratification of the responsibilities of representatives to the Fedora Council. It included two folks, one from the Fedora Engineering Steering Committee and one from the Fedora Mindshare, and we agreed upon just how this had been entirely dependent on the representatives themselves so far. Having documentation could establish a baseline expectation for these liaison reps during their elected terms.

While Jef wanted to first understand the perspectives of the current liaisons, I emphasized just how important it is to have a documented baseline to begin from. As I was Fedora Mindshare's elected representative to the Fedora Council at that point in time, I remarked just how important it was to use the momentum to build the foundation that could then be iterated upon. After wishing him luck for his talk and sharing some Indian snacks with him, I moved away to chat with Tomáš. Since I was also part of the Fedora Council Townhall Session that was scheduled right after the keynote presentation, I knew that the second day was just as occupied for me as the first one. On Tomáš' (rather impromptu) request, I glanced through the draft post that conveyed the Pagure service retirement announcement, slated later.

With just how far Pagure had a reach as a general-purpose collaborative project hosting service, Tomáš chose to publish this on the Fedora Magazine. We wanted to provide a last-minute grace period for the straggling repositories before we rendered the Pagure service read-only for the foreseeable future. We wanted to avoid pushing back the decommissioning process until the end of the year 2026 and instead keep a local copy of the repositories that could be acquired on explicit request. After providing my approval, I went on to chat with Jona Azizaj inside the Plenary Hall about the Fedora Mentor Summit Contributor Recognition Awards announcement planning, and how it had to be done right before the Closing Notes were delivered by Justin Wheeler on the next day at the tail end of the conference.

Following Justin's quick event opening announcements, Jef followed through with his community and userbase metrics on the Fedora Project's growth since the last Flock To Fedora conference at around 0915am Central European Summer Time. I know how he worked with Michael Winters to attain those statistical findings, and this session was swiftly followed by the Fedora Council Strategic Proposals session at around 1000am Central European Summer Time. After a quick round of intros from the Council members, we addressed questions from attendees – both those who were attending in person and remotely. Finishing up with the session allowed me to connect with Carol Chen and Matthew again, with whom I shared some Indian snacks too, before being pulled aside by Cornelius Emase in his discussion.

During the coffee break, Cornelius and I briefly discussed the state of open source mentorship programmes with the rise of AI-assisted contributions. I looped Justin into the conversation as well, as the tireless low-quality contributions had finally pushed me into not wanting to participate as a formal mentor in free and open source software projects for the foreseeable future. My mentoring experience with the Fedora Badges Revamp Project had been the last straw, and it only made us mentors want to reinforce regulations around incessant AI tooling usage. While munching on the cookies, Justin also mentioned that he wanted to keep some time aside for having a conversation about my recent experience and discover pathways to prevent burnout occurring to selfless mentors in free and open source software.

We reflected on just how unfair it all had been - both for the applicants genuinely trying their best to make the cut and for the mentors wasting their human hours reviewing thoughtless contributions. Since Cornelius had continued to contribute to our community beyond his Outreachy mentoring participation cohort, I shared my appreciation for everything he did as a volunteer contributor. Carol joined in to cheer the conversation up as she shared just how hard her first formal mentoring experience would have been, had it not been for the likes of Justin and myself. Her Outreachy intern had been proactively participating in the mentoring programme even while using AI tooling, and that honestly felt like the correct pathway towards regular contributions to the Fedora Project, or any community for that matter.

At around 1130am Central European Summer Time, the townhall session for the Fedora Engineering Steering Committee began. As compared to that of the Fedora Council's, a smaller number of elected members were able to make it to the event. I decided to volunteer as fallback session chair personnel while the Matrix chat was being handled by someone else. All I had to do was signal Aoife Moloney, who was hosting the Ask Me Anything Session, to inform her about the time left. This was followed by Stef Walter's fancy presentation on Fedora Linux Hummingbird Linux at around 1230pm Central European Summer Time. I finished the first half of the day with a lively chat with Ankur Sinha and Kashyap Chamarthy around Two Factor Authentication Enablement for effectively securing the packager workflow.

Just like the day before, Michael Scherer and Ankur decided to help Jona and me out with the Lunch And Learn Matching social event. I was glad to note that our move to the earlier partition helped significantly as we eventually ended up having more folks. The topics on that day were Interpersonal Skills, Packaging, Events, and Infrastructure. I invited Stef and his associate into the event as well, and Kevin Fenzi followed soon after. Jona and I went around the tables to click photographs and to inform folks about the Fedora Badges, they could get when they scanned the QR code on the printed menu. Since Michael could not join the interactive workshop on Fedora Badges on the previous day, he was greatly impressed when I shared with him what the staging Fedora Badges deployment looked like at lunch.

Once we were able to establish a respectable presence at the dining tables, Jona, Ankur, and I finally decided to get something to eat. The queue had subsided by that time, and we could calmly march out with our food plates. After a brief chat with Jiri Konecny, who barely arrived at the event just that afternoon, I wished him well for his onward journey to DevConf.CZ 2026. We chanced upon Debarshi Ray in the queue as well, and finishing up a (much improved from the day before) meal allowed us to head into Lenka's talk on Forgejo Runners. I tried my best to salvage the presentation progress, which was dreadfully haunted with intermittent audio video issues. While acting as the microphone runner, I also diagnosed the audio reception by checking in with the remote attendees on the Matrix chat.

As there were a pair of wireless microphones in the Sapphire room, passing one over to Lenka allowed her to have a more hands-on approach with the talk. To add to that, it also helped improve the voice reception since the microphone on the podium was having issues. What baffled me to no end was that the scheduled talk at 0200pm Central European Summer Time managed to "rickroll" all of the folks, both in-person and remote ones - Well played, Lenka haha! Ankur and I headed in the talk on The EU CRA vs Community by Jaroslav Reznik and Roman Zhukov at around 0230pm Central European Summer Time. In the little time before the talk began, Carol reflected on how 2026 was her first time attending the Flock event, even though she usually visited many conferences and events around the globe.

Besides Michael's chat on how the Fedora Mindshare's proposed experiment had previously had auditing challenges, I decided to onboard Carol into my grand plan for the Fedora Project's APAC presence at FOSSAsia 2027. That made her the next person I reached out to, apart from jokingly mentioning it once to Cristian, who also belonged to the APAC region. As I said during the Fedora Council Townhall Session, I felt that it was crucial to meet the community members where they were and hence, intra-regional travel was a logistically feasible and cost-effective way. I spent the remaining time of the session taking notes on the policy exchange, while talking with the audio video engineering personnel to attempt fixing the YouTube livestream that broke due to the inadvertent swapping of the streaming keys.

I was informed by the engineering staff that applying corrective measures would require the livestream to be stopped. I advised them not to do so, at least until the session was finally over, as that would be an effectively less destructive method to resolve the issue. Thankfully, Gregory Sutcliffe jumped right in to swap the stream names, thereby providing an expedient workaround for the same that did not need us to stop the livestreaming then. After a Matrix chat with Michael, I slipped out at around 0330pm Central European Summer Time to discuss with him on how we could join forces in leveraging the Project Hatlas into discovering useful Fedora Badges. For a conversation that was supposed to last for thirty minutes or so, we did not realize how more than an hour had already passed by in the blink of an eye.

While the initial conversations were about how the Fedora Data Work Group and the Fedora Badges Revamp Project could help each other, we delved deeper into what ideas drive each of us towards contributing selflessly to free and open source software communities. I remarked on just how his hands-on approach towards solving effective community health metrics allowed the community to trust him with what he did and the approaches he took to get there. He also shared a great deal of informative resources that guided his core ideas and his motivation to keep pushing on with Project Hatlas. Upon deciding to connect later on the actual topic, I found myself (quite literally) swiftly ambushed by Jean-Baptiste Holcroft and Michael, who wanted to pick my brains on their needs with Fedora Messaging.

They wanted to understand just how easy (read, difficult) it would be to import retroactively about 14.6 million event messages into the Fedora Messaging service by implementing the webhook support for the Weblate platform. To make matters worse, he also wanted Fedora Badges to be awarded based on the events from these many messages. Given the limitations of the application platform, we had to write a one-shot script to process these requests retroactively first before resuming the automated consumption of messages using the webhook support. It most likely was not an easy task to achieve, but as I wanted to help him out with the same, I requested that an issue ticket be created with Fedora Infrastructure so that it could be investigated further and developed upon once we got back from the conference.

Justin quickly dropped in to provide information on the social event, which was to begin 0600pm Central European Summer Time onwards. After finishing the chat on adding approximately 14.6 million messages to the count of 3.5% of the stored Datanommer messages, I had a quick followup with Justin and Michael. I was also able to provide some snacks to both Matthew Miller and Justin when we were just about to leave for the Manifesto Culture Zone Prague for the Flock To Fedora 2026 Official Party. Joined by Carol, our group walked from the event venue, and after a quick round of instructions from Dorka Volavkova and receiving some meal coupons with the drinks, I was seated in a dedicated area with Sarah Julia Kriesch, Michael, Carol, and two more attendees, enjoying starter meals and soft drinks.

With the upper limit of 400 CZK on the meal coupon and a wide variety of cuisines to try out, the official party ended up being quite the culinary experience for us all. Do not get me wrong though - I surely miss being on a cruise boat like the previous time, but this felt like an equivalent tradeoff for someone like me who was easy to please. I stepped out along with Toshio Kuratomi, Carol, and Michael to find some bites for dinner. Being the indecisive folks that we were, Carol and I finally settled for Korean food while Michael got himself an Italian dish. While we were offered a refund for the remaining amount of the coupon price, we declined and were even offered a grape-flavoured soft drink as an appreciative gesture. I fairly struggled wondering how they ran their business with such amazing selfless thoughtfulness.

After informing the organizing committee about a potential mishap, we returned to our tables to have our dining fills. With Toshio sharing with me about new folks coming for the Dancing With Toshio Fedora Badges achievement and a little chat with Michael, the two of us were called back in by Justin and Shaun for a round of commemorative photographs. The three of us went for some gelato after the photo shoot was done, and I settled for a double scoop of raspberry and mango in a dark-coloured edible cone. This is where I met up with Nicolas Chauvet and Dominik Mierzejewski, striking chat on the Fedy project for installing third-party software applications from RPM Fusion repositories. I was surprised that he did remember my progress on the (now deprecated) NVIDIA Auto Installer for Fedora Linux.

Carol checked in with me on whether or not I wanted to leave, and as it was getting darker, it was not that bad of an idea to leave soon. As much as I wanted to stay back for a little while longer, at 0900pm Central European Summer Time - I was better off preparing for the next day of the Flock event. After finishing off the chat with the two and sharing this magical full circle moment with Justin, Carol and I walked back to the Anděl crossing before going our separate ways. I briefly came back to TESCo at around 0930pm Central European Summer Time to purchase some items for my family and friends. Deciding not to extend my activity longer, I headed back to Ibis Praha Mala Strana after around an hour to rest up and prep for the Fedora Mindshare Townhall Session that I had scheduled on the next day.





































































Poland.









