The FOSSAsia 2026 event prioritized the friendly community interaction aspect of a free and open source software event by frontloading it on 08th March 2026 as a freely accessible event. This was surely a great example to learn from and implement at our flagship annual community conference, Flock To Fedora. I started the day by waking up as early as 0700am Indochina Time and giving Samyak Jain a wake-up call. As the timezone offset from Indian Standard Time was ninety minutes, I had to wait for some time before I could connect back home with my family members. Thankfully, the breakfast meal provided at Lumen Bangkok Udomsuk Station was a lot more flavourful and distinctive as compared to those that I was habituated to having at hotels in Europe. While there was a lot to be had for my dietary preferences, it was a tough time for Samyak in a mostly non-vegetarian selection of meals, so he had to request a custom vegetarian meal. Once we were through with breakfast, we started off for the FOSSAsia 2026 conference venue, True Digital Park West, at around 0930am Indochina Time.

As the venue was barely under a kilometer away from our stay, we were able to make it to the event on foot. While the summer season had not arrived in Thailand, it was still extremely humid, and we wanted to head indoors as soon as possible. Skipping the first couple of early sessions allowed us to get enough respite after a long yesterday, and that would mean that we could also last longer that day. After skipping through some floors of the True Digital Park Campus and connecting with the folks from the FOSSAsia Community Cycling Trip in the Telegram chat, we were finally able to make it to the right location. Following Mishari Muqbil's advice, we took the long escalator that skipped a couple of floors entirely to get us right in front of the event reception. The one thing that took me by surprise in Thailand was the fact that the ground floors were counted as the first floor, and there was no concept of a zero level. It was a pretty interesting observation that we had to mentally train ourselves to get used to, if we wanted to not get lost while visiting most (if not all) multi-storeyed buildings in Bangkok.


Collection #1
Walking through the premises, which astonishingly enough consisted of both student laboratories and shopping stores in equal measure, we entered the hall selection where FOSSAsia 2026 was organized. Surely, the volunteers could have done better at pointing folks to the correct place, but this feeling was quickly overridden when I ran into a bunch of acquainted and recent community friends. Getting to meet these people, mostly from APAC, at the event felt like making a victory lap to celebrate all the connections that I had painstakingly built throughout the last five years or so. Trying not to get swept away in all the interesting conversations, we were guided by an adjacent volunteer to get ourselves the badges, wristbands, and swag kits from the event reception. I was able to get those for myself as I was also participating in the conference as a speaker, but Samyak had to wait until the next day to obtain his badge. While we had the agency to join one of the running workshops at the time, we still decided to hang out at the hallway track a little longer to discuss open source strategies with the community.


Collection #2
After a brief catch-up with Ananthu CV from the Debian Project, whom I was meeting here after having done so during GNOME Asia 2024 and FOSDEM 2025, Samyak and I made it into the Eventyay Developer Workshop room at around 1045am Indochina Time. Although we initially thought that we were late, Norbert Preining, Srivastav Auswin, and Mario Behling were just getting started conducting a round of introductions for the folks present there. Since I was representing the Fedora Infrastructure in this workshop, I presented the case of how we used a similar event service platform, Pretalx, for our use case and how I was interested in learning all the various things EventYay had to offer. Amidst the feature run-through and tooling integrations, the workshop organizers had an interest in how the Fedora Project used Pretalx for running events like CentOS Connect and Flock To Fedora. Amidst the lack of proper seating in the room, I also got to meet Deepesh Nair briefly before agreeing to connect with Mario later for deeper discussions on how we could further collaborate in the future.


Collection #3
Hong Phuc Dang entered sometime later with an announcement for refreshments and some more seats for the workshop hall. This allowed the hall to be filled up a whole lot more as we headed back to the hallway track to meet with the likes of Aqsa Aqeel from DigitalOcean and Leon Nunes, who had begun his open source contribution journey. It was interesting to notice how the Fedora Project was the only RPM-based distribution on the scene there apart from our reliable downstream, Red Hat Enterprise Linux representatives. The distribution aspect of the event felt mostly occupied by the folks from Canonical and Debian, thus giving us the chance to capture some relevance. I briefly met up with Anuvrat Parashar and Shivani Parashar before having a conversation with Hong, who was surprised to note that the Fedora Project did not have a community booth. It turned out that there was another Call For Proposal form that was opened up closer to the commencement timeline, apart from the one for presentations and workshops, that I, as the event owner from the Fedora Project, was not even aware of.

This was also hinted at by Mishari in one of our conversations from the day before about the community booths being made available for free while the commercial booths were being charged a reasonable payment. In our discussions, Hong assured community support, and I discussed strategic collaboration before we had some quick photograph clicks to end the conversation. While not being able to have a community booth during FOSSAsia 2026 felt like a missed chance, I wanted to make the most of my participation as a community prospector for the Fedora Project's future participation in the event. We did not really have concrete plans on which workshops we would want to attend that day and were making our agenda on the fly. Making it back to the hallway track at around 1100am Indochina Time, I met up with the likes of Rajan Shah, Shivraj Patil, Veerkumar Patil, and Gaurav Kamathe from Red Hat, who were just arriving at the conference venue. It was hilarious to catch up with them here barely a couple of weeks after meeting them at the DevConf.IN 2026 conference in Pune, India.


Collection #4
At around 1130am Indochina Time, Samyak and I headed back into the rooms to attend presentations delivered not just in English but in a variety of languages. It was interesting to see just how open the FOSSAsia conference was to folks wanting to present their work in their own language, and when paired with a technology that live-transcribes it to a more generally known language, this could significantly lower the barrier of entry for these conferences. Most sessions, if not all, were bite-sized portions of fifteen minutes, and depending on who you are, the time management aspect of the presentation could be difficult. After exchanging the coffee coupon for a Dunkin-branded cold coffee and the meal coupon for a packed lunch, we headed out to chat with one of Samyak's friends from the Debian Project. We were able to make it back to Wendy Ha's talk on her experiences as an APAC Kubernetes Community Contributor, followed by Punsiri Boonyakiat's talk on balancing motherhood responsibilities with open source, which became a key highlight for International Women's Day.


Collection #5
On the second half of the community day, the host was doing absolutely terrific work keeping the audience entertained while the volunteer team looked into the technical problems that had crept in. Her fantastical oration with a deadpan expression did not allow our spirits to sour when the fixes were taking a little while longer. Contrary to my belief, the community day was not as occupied as I thought it would be due to its free-of-charge participation, but we were able to make the best of whoever was present on the ground. We also ran into Aaditya Singh from the GNOME Foundation and Mishari, who were just arriving at the conference venue in the afternoon, both of whom we were quite pleased to catch up with. After a quick conversation with Tamhant about the technological industry, I met up with Mario again to discuss how the Fedora Project evolved from a fragile ticket-based system to a robust dedicated event platform. It helped me understand how EventYay's Developer Preview Service could be accessed without having to establish the project environment locally.


Collection #6
As the Fedora Infrastructure's CommuniShift Project allowed for getting these deployments up and running in no time, I suggested the same to the EventYay developers, as they could find it handy to demonstrate this to the Fedora Project community. After running into Hong again, Samyak and I talked about how we could further push the adoption of the community day using interactive activities for folks hanging out on the hallway track. This would allow for greater participation on the community day, not just by those who have their talks planned but also by visitors. At around 0120pm Indochina Time, we made it to Peter Zaitsev's talk on Percona Project's attempts to make MySQL Community stronger. Apart from the obligatory jabs hurled at Oracle, there were also some tricky questions around the choice between MariaDB and MySQL if PerconaDB was not an option, addressed. We went on to attend Michael Meskes' talk on Open Source Business Models, which felt quite at home for us working with the Fedora Project as part of our responsibilities.

The "free" in a free and open source software project always comes with an asterisk marked hidden condition about the price being paid by someone else. The price is also usually not in the form of monetary payment, and that is what ends up hurting the longevity of these communities the most. After an insightful conversation on onboarding and retaining contributors, we headed out at around 0200pm Indochina Time to get another round of caffeine. We had discussions around the state of the warring world and how multiple cancelled flights through the Middle East affected selected speakers at FOSSAsia 2026. Aaditya welcomed us to station Fedora Project folks at the GNOME Foundation community booth since there would be enough space for both. As Samyak had stickers saved up from DevConf.IN 2026's Fedora Project community representation, we could use those here. Unfortunately, we could not meet Asmit Malakannawar, who planned to tag along with Aaditya, as his flights through the Middle East were also cancelled, and there were zero provisions made for remote talks.


Collection #7
Samyak and I headed back into the presentation rooms to attend Louis Yoong's talk on Building AI-Powered Interactive Maps with Open Data at around 0300pm Indochina Time, before attending a series of lightning talks from the Women In Tech category. After attending Velia Dang's informative talk on the reviewer's point of view when using EventYay and obtaining learnings to apply for Flock To Fedora, we decided to depart from the conference after the closing notes. While there were some activities planned at Lotus' Eatery for the Pre-Event Community Gathering, we wanted to use the remaining time of the day to explore what Bangkok had to offer. We were able to make it back to Lumen Bangkok Udomsuk Station by 0445pm Indochina Time before leaving again for the BTS SkyTrain after around forty-five minutes. With a rigid agenda to go with, we planned to visit Masaru, an anime collectible franchise store located near BTS Phra Khanong, which was barely four stops away from BTS Udomsuk. Ten minutes of train ride and five minutes of walking got us where we wanted to be.


Collection #8
We spent a little too long there than we could care to admit as Samyak got himself busy finding figurines while I was hunting for some Genshin Impact branded collectibles. Surprisingly enough, I was able to get a brokered change for the 1000 Thai Baht note that I was carrying while we were booking BTS SkyTrain tickets from BTS Phra Khanong to BTS Siam once we were done with our purchases at Masaru. It was going to be a comparatively longer ride with around eight stops and then a ten-minute walk to the world-famous MBK Center. At around 0800pm Indochina Time, we made it to BTS Siam station, but we kept getting sidetracked by the sprawling independent weekend market that we wanted to explore. With Samyak and me splitting again to find our pickings, I could not help but purchase some gifts for my family, including Hawaiian shirts, tourist hats, ornamental pendants, and much more. I was glad to have my wits about me while driving a hard bargain for making all these purchases because that would allow me to eventually purchase some more things in the end.


Collection #9
The humidity was making it tough, but we were finally able to push through to the indoors of the MBK Center by around 0845pm Indochina Time. Coincidentally, this is where we ended up finding one of the best independent handicraft stores, where Samyak and I got ourselves a wide assortment of personalized keychains and magnets for our friends and families. As our order was a massive one, with six for myself and six for him, we decided to depart after placing the order to see if we could make it to the anime café in time. The sprawling layout of the MBK Center only made it difficult for us to find our way - apart from, of course, getting sidetracked into purchasing Thailand incenses and local handicrafts. Splitting from Samyak again, who got busy with his purchases, I was able to make it to the place. To my utter disappointment, the shop had already closed by 0830pm Indochina Time, and I reached almost an hour late. I backtracked to where I last saw him, and we decided to head back to the handicraft store as we had to retrieve our orders right before the operations wrapped up for the day.

The enormous mall could be a treasure trove for those who know what they are looking for, but for the two of us exploring, it felt like an overwhelming labyrinth with similar looking pathways and deeply confusing corridors. We were finally able to make it to the handicraft store by around 0945pm Indochina Time, right at the time of the last handicraft being finalized. Since we had already cleared the bill, we headed back to BTS Siam while clicking pictures and discussing plans, only to end up boarding a rather crowded BTS SkyTrain on a weekend. By around 1045pm Indochina Time, we made it back to BTS Udomsuk, but after exploring the surrounding places to see where we could dine, we decided to order some food from the convenience of our hotel rooms using the Grab application. I got myself freshened up after requesting the hotel reception to retain the order, and I was glad to have ordered a carton of mineral water too. After a quick bite for dinner, I decided to call it a day with multiple precautionary alarms enabled to ensure that I woke up early the next day for the group photo.





















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