FOSDEM 2026: The Kid Who Dreamed of Hackers Found Them in Brussels
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FOSDEM 2026: The Kid Who Dreamed of Hackers Found Them in Brussels
Summary: A kid from a small Mexican town dreamed of finding real-life hackers. Two decades later, he flew his family to Brussels and spoke at one of the worldâs largest open-source conferences. This is that story.
âWe reject: kings, presidents and voting. We believe in: rough consensus and running code.â â David D. Clark
The Dream
When I was a young hackerâyeah, believe it or notâmy dream was to find other hackers in real life and just hang out together. Thatâs it. That was the whole dream.
It sounds modest now, but you have to understand the context. I come from a very small town in Mexico, the kind of place where internet was a luxury, Linux was a word nobody recognized, and âWindowsâ was mostly what you opened to let the heat out. The idea of attending a tech conference was absurd. Attending one in English? In another country? That was pure science fictionâlike telling my block friends about Dragon Ball Z spoilers Iâd read online, except even less believable.
But with time, and a painfully slow DSL connection, I found my people. I stumbled into the local Linux user groupâfewer than ten of us in a city of thousandsâand we built something from nothing. A hackerspace. Community events. Workshops with maybe a dozen attendees if we were lucky. Eventually, I found my way to national conferences and even talked at a few of them. Each one felt like a small victory, a tiny crack in the wall between where I was and where I wanted to be.

The Shot
So when the opportunity to submit a talk to FOSDEM 2026 appeared, I just shot my shot.
I did it almost by instinct, without overthinking it. FOSDEMâthe Free and Open Source Software Developersâ European Meetingâis one of the largest open-source conferences in the world. Thousands of developers, hundreds of talks, legendary project booths. It had always been a place that existed on the other side of a dream for me. But hereâs the thing: Iâm more financially stable now, Iâve traveled to Europe for both leisure and work, and I speak comfortable (but still heavily accented) English. Iâve made peace with my accentâitâs part of the package, take it or leave it.
So, why not? The real surprise was that I hadnât applied before.
The Logistics of Madness
When my proposed talk was accepted, my first reaction wasnât joyâit was panic. The kind of panic you feel when you push to main and then read the diff. The real problem was logistics.
I already had a trip to Mexico planned for personal reasons. Going to FOSDEM meant extending the family travel by a week, rerouting flights, and solving the kind of logistical puzzle that makes your brain hurt. Tepic, a small city in the mountains of western Mexico â Mexico City â London â Brussels. With a seven-year-old. And a monthâs worth of luggage packed for both the scorching Mexican beach and a freezing European winterâflip-flops sharing suitcase space with thermal jackets, sunscreen next to wool scarves. And sanity (debatable).
After my wifeâbless her patienceâsaid âjust go for it,â and after numerous conversations with both AI and non-AI advisors about how to make it less stressful, we committed. At the end of January, I found myself at the tiny airport of Tepic, eating the most amazing torta de pierna, beginning an absurd journey to Belgium.

We crossed through London, hopped on the Eurostar to Brussels, and somewhere between countries, we lost a pillowâa bear-shaped one my kid had shamelessly stolen from his grandma. Rest in peace, little bear pillow. You survived a Mexican grandmotherâs house only to perish somewhere in the English Channel.
The Candy Store
And then, there I was. At FOSDEM. With my kid. In Brussels.
The place was electric. People from every imaginable background wandered through the halls of the UniversitĂ© libre de Bruxelles. Iâll be honestâthereâs still a noticeable lack of diversity, especially in gender representationâbut the energy was undeniable. It felt like a living, breathing monument to what open source can be.
Seeing the project booths was like being a kid in a candy storeâexcept I literally had a kid with me in this candy store. Mozilla, Thunderbird, Letâs Encrypt, SUSE, and of course Mastodon, to name a few. I couldnât help myself; I told my son that when I was young, one of my first dreams was to work for SUSE. He listened carefully, the way seven-year-olds do when theyâre filing away information for later use (probably to embarrass me at dinner).

Keeping a seven-year-old entertained at a developer conference is its own extreme sport. Thankfully, a friend I hadnât seen in over a decade was thereâwith his kid. Heâs a no-gringo, a Dutchman who happens to have worked at Innox in Mexico. Our kids hit it off, and suddenly the conference had a parallel track: unsupervised childrenâs chaos edition.
The Talk
When the time came for my talk, I walked in, set up, and delivered something far from perfectâbut unmistakably mine. I stumbled on a couple of words, my accent was thick, and Iâm sure I made at least one joke that only landed for me. But thatâs the style. Thatâs always been the style.
Just before stepping up, Elena handed me the most fabulous FOSDEM sweater in existence. People noticed. People asked where to get one. But noâonly I could have it. Exclusive distribution, zero units available. (Okay fine, I was just lucky, but let me have this moment.)

If I have one regret, itâs not spending more time in other talks. Itâs not that I didnât tryâI didâbut balancing a seven-year-oldâs attention span with a conference schedule is a negotiation no diplomacy course prepares you for. I caught fragments, glimpses, enough to know I was missing incredible stuff. But thatâs the thing about FOSDEM: itâs not a one-time event. Iâll be back. And next time, I want to do more than speakâI want to listen, linger, and actually have those hallway conversations that everyone says are the best part of any conference.

The Kid and the Dream
Hereâs what got me, though. The part I didnât expect.
My kid watched me speak at FOSDEM. He didnât fully understand the contentâheâs seven, and ActivityPub isnât exactly bedtime story materialâbut he saw his dad on a stage, in front of a room full of people, in another continent, talking about something he built. When the Q&A started, he wanted to raise his hand. He got shy, though, and didnât. Later, visibly upset about his missed opportunity, he told me what he wanted to ask: âDo you play Minecraft?â In front of an auditorium full of open-source developers discussing federation protocols, my kidâs burning question was about Minecraft. I love this human being more than I can express.

He asked questions the entire trip back: âWhat does SUSE do?â âWill you talk at another one?â âCan I have my own desk computer?â
He saw the booths, the projects, the people. He kept posing for photos with each open-source mascot like a tiny celebrity on a press tour. His favorite was the PostgreSQL elephant, though we were genuinely concerned about its health. Based on the state of that costume, I think he might be rightâPostgreSQL could use your donations, folks. That elephant has seen better days.

And the trip back was no less insane than the trip there. Brussels â Iceland â Seattle. Because apparently, when youâre already doing something absurd, you might as well add a layover near the Arctic Circle. We landed in ReykjavĂk with our beach-and-winter Frankenstein luggage, stepped outside into wind that felt personally offended by our existence, and my kid asked if the land was actually made of ice. Close enough, kid. Close enough.

A week later, during a conversation with his teacher, my son was asked about the most memorable thing from the trip. He didnât say the beach in Mexico, or the train through Europe, or the wind in Iceland, or even the lost bear pillow. He said the most memorable thing was seeing his dad talk at a university. That it made him proud (Iâm not going to pretend I didnât need a moment after hearing that).
I thought about my own childhood. About the kid who couldnât find a single hacker in his town. About the dusty streets and half-built houses. About how representation works in mysterious waysâhow seeing someone like you doing something impossible makes it feel possible. My son doesnât know what itâs like to not see a path. For him, this is just what dad does. And maybe thatâs the whole point.
Full Circle

Twenty years ago, I was a teenager in a small Mexican town, writing code in paper notebooks and dreaming of a world I could barely imagine. Today, I stood in Brussels and spoke to a room full of open-source developers about a project I created.
The path from there to here wasnât straight. It was messy, full of detours, broken English, lost pillows, and more coffee than any doctor would recommend. But every stepâevery hackerspace meetup with eight people, every local conference talk, every late night wrestling with codeâwas a brick in the road that led to that stage.
And yeah, I get it, talking for half an hour at a conference with hundreds of talks may seem like a small feat. One slot among many. But it wasnât small to me. For the kid who couldnât find a single hacker in his hometown, standing in front of that room was enormous.
FOSDEM wasnât just a conference for me. It was proof that the kid from Tepic who dreamed of finding hackers in real life finally did. They were in Brussels all along, waiting for him to show up.
And he brought his kid.
Also readable in: https://maho.dev/2026/02/fosdem-2026-the-kid-who-dreamed-of-hackers-found-them-in-brussels/ by @mapache:
#fosdem #open-source #conferences #community #travel #personal-growth #europe #public-speaking
-
FOSDEM 2026: The Kid Who Dreamed of Hackers Found Them in Brussels
Summary: A kid from a small Mexican town dreamed of finding real-life hackers. Two decades later, he flew his family to Brussels and spoke at one of the worldâs largest open-source conferences. This is that story.
âWe reject: kings, presidents and voting. We believe in: rough consensus and running code.â â David D. Clark
The Dream
When I was a young hackerâyeah, believe it or notâmy dream was to find other hackers in real life and just hang out together. Thatâs it. That was the whole dream.
It sounds modest now, but you have to understand the context. I come from a very small town in Mexico, the kind of place where internet was a luxury, Linux was a word nobody recognized, and âWindowsâ was mostly what you opened to let the heat out. The idea of attending a tech conference was absurd. Attending one in English? In another country? That was pure science fictionâlike telling my block friends about Dragon Ball Z spoilers Iâd read online, except even less believable.
But with time, and a painfully slow DSL connection, I found my people. I stumbled into the local Linux user groupâfewer than ten of us in a city of thousandsâand we built something from nothing. A hackerspace. Community events. Workshops with maybe a dozen attendees if we were lucky. Eventually, I found my way to national conferences and even talked at a few of them. Each one felt like a small victory, a tiny crack in the wall between where I was and where I wanted to be.

The Shot
So when the opportunity to submit a talk to FOSDEM 2026 appeared, I just shot my shot.
I did it almost by instinct, without overthinking it. FOSDEMâthe Free and Open Source Software Developersâ European Meetingâis one of the largest open-source conferences in the world. Thousands of developers, hundreds of talks, legendary project booths. It had always been a place that existed on the other side of a dream for me. But hereâs the thing: Iâm more financially stable now, Iâve traveled to Europe for both leisure and work, and I speak comfortable (but still heavily accented) English. Iâve made peace with my accentâitâs part of the package, take it or leave it.
So, why not? The real surprise was that I hadnât applied before.
The Logistics of Madness
When my proposed talk was accepted, my first reaction wasnât joyâit was panic. The kind of panic you feel when you push to main and then read the diff. The real problem was logistics.
I already had a trip to Mexico planned for personal reasons. Going to FOSDEM meant extending the family travel by a week, rerouting flights, and solving the kind of logistical puzzle that makes your brain hurt. Tepic, a small city in the mountains of western Mexico â Mexico City â London â Brussels. With a seven-year-old. And a monthâs worth of luggage packed for both the scorching Mexican beach and a freezing European winterâflip-flops sharing suitcase space with thermal jackets, sunscreen next to wool scarves. And sanity (debatable).
After my wifeâbless her patienceâsaid âjust go for it,â and after numerous conversations with both AI and non-AI advisors about how to make it less stressful, we committed. At the end of January, I found myself at the tiny airport of Tepic, eating the most amazing torta de pierna, beginning an absurd journey to Belgium.

We crossed through London, hopped on the Eurostar to Brussels, and somewhere between countries, we lost a pillowâa bear-shaped one my kid had shamelessly stolen from his grandma. Rest in peace, little bear pillow. You survived a Mexican grandmotherâs house only to perish somewhere in the English Channel.
The Candy Store
And then, there I was. At FOSDEM. With my kid. In Brussels.
The place was electric. People from every imaginable background wandered through the halls of the UniversitĂ© libre de Bruxelles. Iâll be honestâthereâs still a noticeable lack of diversity, especially in gender representationâbut the energy was undeniable. It felt like a living, breathing monument to what open source can be.
Seeing the project booths was like being a kid in a candy storeâexcept I literally had a kid with me in this candy store. Mozilla, Thunderbird, Letâs Encrypt, SUSE, and of course Mastodon, to name a few. I couldnât help myself; I told my son that when I was young, one of my first dreams was to work for SUSE. He listened carefully, the way seven-year-olds do when theyâre filing away information for later use (probably to embarrass me at dinner).

Keeping a seven-year-old entertained at a developer conference is its own extreme sport. Thankfully, a friend I hadnât seen in over a decade was thereâwith his kid. Heâs a no-gringo, a Dutchman who happens to have worked at Innox in Mexico. Our kids hit it off, and suddenly the conference had a parallel track: unsupervised childrenâs chaos edition.
The Talk
When the time came for my talk, I walked in, set up, and delivered something far from perfectâbut unmistakably mine. I stumbled on a couple of words, my accent was thick, and Iâm sure I made at least one joke that only landed for me. But thatâs the style. Thatâs always been the style.
Just before stepping up, Elena handed me the most fabulous FOSDEM sweater in existence. People noticed. People asked where to get one. But noâonly I could have it. Exclusive distribution, zero units available. (Okay fine, I was just lucky, but let me have this moment.)

If I have one regret, itâs not spending more time in other talks. Itâs not that I didnât tryâI didâbut balancing a seven-year-oldâs attention span with a conference schedule is a negotiation no diplomacy course prepares you for. I caught fragments, glimpses, enough to know I was missing incredible stuff. But thatâs the thing about FOSDEM: itâs not a one-time event. Iâll be back. And next time, I want to do more than speakâI want to listen, linger, and actually have those hallway conversations that everyone says are the best part of any conference.

The Kid and the Dream
Hereâs what got me, though. The part I didnât expect.
My kid watched me speak at FOSDEM. He didnât fully understand the contentâheâs seven, and ActivityPub isnât exactly bedtime story materialâbut he saw his dad on a stage, in front of a room full of people, in another continent, talking about something he built. When the Q&A started, he wanted to raise his hand. He got shy, though, and didnât. Later, visibly upset about his missed opportunity, he told me what he wanted to ask: âDo you play Minecraft?â In front of an auditorium full of open-source developers discussing federation protocols, my kidâs burning question was about Minecraft. I love this human being more than I can express.

He asked questions the entire trip back: âWhat does SUSE do?â âWill you talk at another one?â âCan I have my own desk computer?â
He saw the booths, the projects, the people. He kept posing for photos with each open-source mascot like a tiny celebrity on a press tour. His favorite was the PostgreSQL elephant, though we were genuinely concerned about its health. Based on the state of that costume, I think he might be rightâPostgreSQL could use your donations, folks. That elephant has seen better days.

And the trip back was no less insane than the trip there. Brussels â Iceland â Seattle. Because apparently, when youâre already doing something absurd, you might as well add a layover near the Arctic Circle. We landed in ReykjavĂk with our beach-and-winter Frankenstein luggage, stepped outside into wind that felt personally offended by our existence, and my kid asked if the land was actually made of ice. Close enough, kid. Close enough.

A week later, during a conversation with his teacher, my son was asked about the most memorable thing from the trip. He didnât say the beach in Mexico, or the train through Europe, or the wind in Iceland, or even the lost bear pillow. He said the most memorable thing was seeing his dad talk at a university. That it made him proud (Iâm not going to pretend I didnât need a moment after hearing that).
I thought about my own childhood. About the kid who couldnât find a single hacker in his town. About the dusty streets and half-built houses. About how representation works in mysterious waysâhow seeing someone like you doing something impossible makes it feel possible. My son doesnât know what itâs like to not see a path. For him, this is just what dad does. And maybe thatâs the whole point.
Full Circle

Twenty years ago, I was a teenager in a small Mexican town, writing code in paper notebooks and dreaming of a world I could barely imagine. Today, I stood in Brussels and spoke to a room full of open-source developers about a project I created.
The path from there to here wasnât straight. It was messy, full of detours, broken English, lost pillows, and more coffee than any doctor would recommend. But every stepâevery hackerspace meetup with eight people, every local conference talk, every late night wrestling with codeâwas a brick in the road that led to that stage.
And yeah, I get it, talking for half an hour at a conference with hundreds of talks may seem like a small feat. One slot among many. But it wasnât small to me. For the kid who couldnât find a single hacker in his hometown, standing in front of that room was enormous.
FOSDEM wasnât just a conference for me. It was proof that the kid from Tepic who dreamed of finding hackers in real life finally did. They were in Brussels all along, waiting for him to show up.
And he brought his kid.
Also readable in: https://maho.dev/2026/02/fosdem-2026-the-kid-who-dreamed-of-hackers-found-them-in-brussels/ by @mapache:
#fosdem #open-source #conferences #community #travel #personal-growth #europe #public-speaking
-
FOSDEM 2026: The Kid Who Dreamed of Hackers Found Them in Brussels
Summary: A kid from a small Mexican town dreamed of finding real-life hackers. Two decades later, he flew his family to Brussels and spoke at one of the worldâs largest open-source conferences. This is that story.
âWe reject: kings, presidents and voting. We believe in: rough consensus and running code.â â David D. Clark
The Dream
When I was a young hackerâyeah, believe it or notâmy dream was to find other hackers in real life and just hang out together. Thatâs it. That was the whole dream.
It sounds modest now, but you have to understand the context. I come from a very small town in Mexico, the kind of place where internet was a luxury, Linux was a word nobody recognized, and âWindowsâ was mostly what you opened to let the heat out. The idea of attending a tech conference was absurd. Attending one in English? In another country? That was pure science fictionâlike telling my block friends about Dragon Ball Z spoilers Iâd read online, except even less believable.
But with time, and a painfully slow DSL connection, I found my people. I stumbled into the local Linux user groupâfewer than ten of us in a city of thousandsâand we built something from nothing. A hackerspace. Community events. Workshops with maybe a dozen attendees if we were lucky. Eventually, I found my way to national conferences and even talked at a few of them. Each one felt like a small victory, a tiny crack in the wall between where I was and where I wanted to be.

The Shot
So when the opportunity to submit a talk to FOSDEM 2026 appeared, I just shot my shot.
I did it almost by instinct, without overthinking it. FOSDEMâthe Free and Open Source Software Developersâ European Meetingâis one of the largest open-source conferences in the world. Thousands of developers, hundreds of talks, legendary project booths. It had always been a place that existed on the other side of a dream for me. But hereâs the thing: Iâm more financially stable now, Iâve traveled to Europe for both leisure and work, and I speak comfortable (but still heavily accented) English. Iâve made peace with my accentâitâs part of the package, take it or leave it.
So, why not? The real surprise was that I hadnât applied before.
The Logistics of Madness
When my proposed talk was accepted, my first reaction wasnât joyâit was panic. The kind of panic you feel when you push to main and then read the diff. The real problem was logistics.
I already had a trip to Mexico planned for personal reasons. Going to FOSDEM meant extending the family travel by a week, rerouting flights, and solving the kind of logistical puzzle that makes your brain hurt. Tepic, a small city in the mountains of western Mexico â Mexico City â London â Brussels. With a seven-year-old. And a monthâs worth of luggage packed for both the scorching Mexican beach and a freezing European winterâflip-flops sharing suitcase space with thermal jackets, sunscreen next to wool scarves. And sanity (debatable).
After my wifeâbless her patienceâsaid âjust go for it,â and after numerous conversations with both AI and non-AI advisors about how to make it less stressful, we committed. At the end of January, I found myself at the tiny airport of Tepic, eating the most amazing torta de pierna, beginning an absurd journey to Belgium.

We crossed through London, hopped on the Eurostar to Brussels, and somewhere between countries, we lost a pillowâa bear-shaped one my kid had shamelessly stolen from his grandma. Rest in peace, little bear pillow. You survived a Mexican grandmotherâs house only to perish somewhere in the English Channel.
The Candy Store
And then, there I was. At FOSDEM. With my kid. In Brussels.
The place was electric. People from every imaginable background wandered through the halls of the UniversitĂ© libre de Bruxelles. Iâll be honestâthereâs still a noticeable lack of diversity, especially in gender representationâbut the energy was undeniable. It felt like a living, breathing monument to what open source can be.
Seeing the project booths was like being a kid in a candy storeâexcept I literally had a kid with me in this candy store. Mozilla, Thunderbird, Letâs Encrypt, SUSE, and of course Mastodon, to name a few. I couldnât help myself; I told my son that when I was young, one of my first dreams was to work for SUSE. He listened carefully, the way seven-year-olds do when theyâre filing away information for later use (probably to embarrass me at dinner).

Keeping a seven-year-old entertained at a developer conference is its own extreme sport. Thankfully, a friend I hadnât seen in over a decade was thereâwith his kid. Heâs a no-gringo, a Dutchman who happens to have worked at Innox in Mexico. Our kids hit it off, and suddenly the conference had a parallel track: unsupervised childrenâs chaos edition.
The Talk
When the time came for my talk, I walked in, set up, and delivered something far from perfectâbut unmistakably mine. I stumbled on a couple of words, my accent was thick, and Iâm sure I made at least one joke that only landed for me. But thatâs the style. Thatâs always been the style.
Just before stepping up, Elena handed me the most fabulous FOSDEM sweater in existence. People noticed. People asked where to get one. But noâonly I could have it. Exclusive distribution, zero units available. (Okay fine, I was just lucky, but let me have this moment.)

If I have one regret, itâs not spending more time in other talks. Itâs not that I didnât tryâI didâbut balancing a seven-year-oldâs attention span with a conference schedule is a negotiation no diplomacy course prepares you for. I caught fragments, glimpses, enough to know I was missing incredible stuff. But thatâs the thing about FOSDEM: itâs not a one-time event. Iâll be back. And next time, I want to do more than speakâI want to listen, linger, and actually have those hallway conversations that everyone says are the best part of any conference.

The Kid and the Dream
Hereâs what got me, though. The part I didnât expect.
My kid watched me speak at FOSDEM. He didnât fully understand the contentâheâs seven, and ActivityPub isnât exactly bedtime story materialâbut he saw his dad on a stage, in front of a room full of people, in another continent, talking about something he built. When the Q&A started, he wanted to raise his hand. He got shy, though, and didnât. Later, visibly upset about his missed opportunity, he told me what he wanted to ask: âDo you play Minecraft?â In front of an auditorium full of open-source developers discussing federation protocols, my kidâs burning question was about Minecraft. I love this human being more than I can express.

He asked questions the entire trip back: âWhat does SUSE do?â âWill you talk at another one?â âCan I have my own desk computer?â
He saw the booths, the projects, the people. He kept posing for photos with each open-source mascot like a tiny celebrity on a press tour. His favorite was the PostgreSQL elephant, though we were genuinely concerned about its health. Based on the state of that costume, I think he might be rightâPostgreSQL could use your donations, folks. That elephant has seen better days.

And the trip back was no less insane than the trip there. Brussels â Iceland â Seattle. Because apparently, when youâre already doing something absurd, you might as well add a layover near the Arctic Circle. We landed in ReykjavĂk with our beach-and-winter Frankenstein luggage, stepped outside into wind that felt personally offended by our existence, and my kid asked if the land was actually made of ice. Close enough, kid. Close enough.

A week later, during a conversation with his teacher, my son was asked about the most memorable thing from the trip. He didnât say the beach in Mexico, or the train through Europe, or the wind in Iceland, or even the lost bear pillow. He said the most memorable thing was seeing his dad talk at a university. That it made him proud (Iâm not going to pretend I didnât need a moment after hearing that).
I thought about my own childhood. About the kid who couldnât find a single hacker in his town. About the dusty streets and half-built houses. About how representation works in mysterious waysâhow seeing someone like you doing something impossible makes it feel possible. My son doesnât know what itâs like to not see a path. For him, this is just what dad does. And maybe thatâs the whole point.
Full Circle

Twenty years ago, I was a teenager in a small Mexican town, writing code in paper notebooks and dreaming of a world I could barely imagine. Today, I stood in Brussels and spoke to a room full of open-source developers about a project I created.
The path from there to here wasnât straight. It was messy, full of detours, broken English, lost pillows, and more coffee than any doctor would recommend. But every stepâevery hackerspace meetup with eight people, every local conference talk, every late night wrestling with codeâwas a brick in the road that led to that stage.
And yeah, I get it, talking for half an hour at a conference with hundreds of talks may seem like a small feat. One slot among many. But it wasnât small to me. For the kid who couldnât find a single hacker in his hometown, standing in front of that room was enormous.
FOSDEM wasnât just a conference for me. It was proof that the kid from Tepic who dreamed of finding hackers in real life finally did. They were in Brussels all along, waiting for him to show up.
And he brought his kid.
Also readable in: https://maho.dev/2026/02/fosdem-2026-the-kid-who-dreamed-of-hackers-found-them-in-brussels/ by @mapache:
#fosdem #open-source #conferences #community #travel #personal-growth #europe #public-speaking
@mapache such a good read, TY! Perhaps itâs my attention, perhaps how good your writing is (I am quite sure itâs the latter!), but I added your blogâs RSS feed to my reader before even finishing the post.
This resonates so much with me: getting to know my bunch of fellow hackers was so instrumental to my growth and, ultimately, my own identity.
I love #FOSDEM but now I hate that I missed you there... I wanted to talk riddles with you! But Iâll make up for it, oh I will!

-
FOSDEM 2026: The Kid Who Dreamed of Hackers Found Them in Brussels
Summary: A kid from a small Mexican town dreamed of finding real-life hackers. Two decades later, he flew his family to Brussels and spoke at one of the worldâs largest open-source conferences. This is that story.
âWe reject: kings, presidents and voting. We believe in: rough consensus and running code.â â David D. Clark
The Dream
When I was a young hackerâyeah, believe it or notâmy dream was to find other hackers in real life and just hang out together. Thatâs it. That was the whole dream.
It sounds modest now, but you have to understand the context. I come from a very small town in Mexico, the kind of place where internet was a luxury, Linux was a word nobody recognized, and âWindowsâ was mostly what you opened to let the heat out. The idea of attending a tech conference was absurd. Attending one in English? In another country? That was pure science fictionâlike telling my block friends about Dragon Ball Z spoilers Iâd read online, except even less believable.
But with time, and a painfully slow DSL connection, I found my people. I stumbled into the local Linux user groupâfewer than ten of us in a city of thousandsâand we built something from nothing. A hackerspace. Community events. Workshops with maybe a dozen attendees if we were lucky. Eventually, I found my way to national conferences and even talked at a few of them. Each one felt like a small victory, a tiny crack in the wall between where I was and where I wanted to be.

The Shot
So when the opportunity to submit a talk to FOSDEM 2026 appeared, I just shot my shot.
I did it almost by instinct, without overthinking it. FOSDEMâthe Free and Open Source Software Developersâ European Meetingâis one of the largest open-source conferences in the world. Thousands of developers, hundreds of talks, legendary project booths. It had always been a place that existed on the other side of a dream for me. But hereâs the thing: Iâm more financially stable now, Iâve traveled to Europe for both leisure and work, and I speak comfortable (but still heavily accented) English. Iâve made peace with my accentâitâs part of the package, take it or leave it.
So, why not? The real surprise was that I hadnât applied before.
The Logistics of Madness
When my proposed talk was accepted, my first reaction wasnât joyâit was panic. The kind of panic you feel when you push to main and then read the diff. The real problem was logistics.
I already had a trip to Mexico planned for personal reasons. Going to FOSDEM meant extending the family travel by a week, rerouting flights, and solving the kind of logistical puzzle that makes your brain hurt. Tepic, a small city in the mountains of western Mexico â Mexico City â London â Brussels. With a seven-year-old. And a monthâs worth of luggage packed for both the scorching Mexican beach and a freezing European winterâflip-flops sharing suitcase space with thermal jackets, sunscreen next to wool scarves. And sanity (debatable).
After my wifeâbless her patienceâsaid âjust go for it,â and after numerous conversations with both AI and non-AI advisors about how to make it less stressful, we committed. At the end of January, I found myself at the tiny airport of Tepic, eating the most amazing torta de pierna, beginning an absurd journey to Belgium.

We crossed through London, hopped on the Eurostar to Brussels, and somewhere between countries, we lost a pillowâa bear-shaped one my kid had shamelessly stolen from his grandma. Rest in peace, little bear pillow. You survived a Mexican grandmotherâs house only to perish somewhere in the English Channel.
The Candy Store
And then, there I was. At FOSDEM. With my kid. In Brussels.
The place was electric. People from every imaginable background wandered through the halls of the UniversitĂ© libre de Bruxelles. Iâll be honestâthereâs still a noticeable lack of diversity, especially in gender representationâbut the energy was undeniable. It felt like a living, breathing monument to what open source can be.
Seeing the project booths was like being a kid in a candy storeâexcept I literally had a kid with me in this candy store. Mozilla, Thunderbird, Letâs Encrypt, SUSE, and of course Mastodon, to name a few. I couldnât help myself; I told my son that when I was young, one of my first dreams was to work for SUSE. He listened carefully, the way seven-year-olds do when theyâre filing away information for later use (probably to embarrass me at dinner).

Keeping a seven-year-old entertained at a developer conference is its own extreme sport. Thankfully, a friend I hadnât seen in over a decade was thereâwith his kid. Heâs a no-gringo, a Dutchman who happens to have worked at Innox in Mexico. Our kids hit it off, and suddenly the conference had a parallel track: unsupervised childrenâs chaos edition.
The Talk
When the time came for my talk, I walked in, set up, and delivered something far from perfectâbut unmistakably mine. I stumbled on a couple of words, my accent was thick, and Iâm sure I made at least one joke that only landed for me. But thatâs the style. Thatâs always been the style.
Just before stepping up, Elena handed me the most fabulous FOSDEM sweater in existence. People noticed. People asked where to get one. But noâonly I could have it. Exclusive distribution, zero units available. (Okay fine, I was just lucky, but let me have this moment.)

If I have one regret, itâs not spending more time in other talks. Itâs not that I didnât tryâI didâbut balancing a seven-year-oldâs attention span with a conference schedule is a negotiation no diplomacy course prepares you for. I caught fragments, glimpses, enough to know I was missing incredible stuff. But thatâs the thing about FOSDEM: itâs not a one-time event. Iâll be back. And next time, I want to do more than speakâI want to listen, linger, and actually have those hallway conversations that everyone says are the best part of any conference.

The Kid and the Dream
Hereâs what got me, though. The part I didnât expect.
My kid watched me speak at FOSDEM. He didnât fully understand the contentâheâs seven, and ActivityPub isnât exactly bedtime story materialâbut he saw his dad on a stage, in front of a room full of people, in another continent, talking about something he built. When the Q&A started, he wanted to raise his hand. He got shy, though, and didnât. Later, visibly upset about his missed opportunity, he told me what he wanted to ask: âDo you play Minecraft?â In front of an auditorium full of open-source developers discussing federation protocols, my kidâs burning question was about Minecraft. I love this human being more than I can express.

He asked questions the entire trip back: âWhat does SUSE do?â âWill you talk at another one?â âCan I have my own desk computer?â
He saw the booths, the projects, the people. He kept posing for photos with each open-source mascot like a tiny celebrity on a press tour. His favorite was the PostgreSQL elephant, though we were genuinely concerned about its health. Based on the state of that costume, I think he might be rightâPostgreSQL could use your donations, folks. That elephant has seen better days.

And the trip back was no less insane than the trip there. Brussels â Iceland â Seattle. Because apparently, when youâre already doing something absurd, you might as well add a layover near the Arctic Circle. We landed in ReykjavĂk with our beach-and-winter Frankenstein luggage, stepped outside into wind that felt personally offended by our existence, and my kid asked if the land was actually made of ice. Close enough, kid. Close enough.

A week later, during a conversation with his teacher, my son was asked about the most memorable thing from the trip. He didnât say the beach in Mexico, or the train through Europe, or the wind in Iceland, or even the lost bear pillow. He said the most memorable thing was seeing his dad talk at a university. That it made him proud (Iâm not going to pretend I didnât need a moment after hearing that).
I thought about my own childhood. About the kid who couldnât find a single hacker in his town. About the dusty streets and half-built houses. About how representation works in mysterious waysâhow seeing someone like you doing something impossible makes it feel possible. My son doesnât know what itâs like to not see a path. For him, this is just what dad does. And maybe thatâs the whole point.
Full Circle

Twenty years ago, I was a teenager in a small Mexican town, writing code in paper notebooks and dreaming of a world I could barely imagine. Today, I stood in Brussels and spoke to a room full of open-source developers about a project I created.
The path from there to here wasnât straight. It was messy, full of detours, broken English, lost pillows, and more coffee than any doctor would recommend. But every stepâevery hackerspace meetup with eight people, every local conference talk, every late night wrestling with codeâwas a brick in the road that led to that stage.
And yeah, I get it, talking for half an hour at a conference with hundreds of talks may seem like a small feat. One slot among many. But it wasnât small to me. For the kid who couldnât find a single hacker in his hometown, standing in front of that room was enormous.
FOSDEM wasnât just a conference for me. It was proof that the kid from Tepic who dreamed of finding hackers in real life finally did. They were in Brussels all along, waiting for him to show up.
And he brought his kid.
Also readable in: https://maho.dev/2026/02/fosdem-2026-the-kid-who-dreamed-of-hackers-found-them-in-brussels/ by @mapache:
#fosdem #open-source #conferences #community #travel #personal-growth #europe #public-speaking
@blog @mapache an inspiring @Migueldeicaza finds his way into this story!
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@blog @mapache an inspiring @Migueldeicaza finds his way into this story!
@jmc @blog @Migueldeicaza thanks! I have always admired Miguel, specially his last years with strong stance in what he believes.
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@mapache such a good read, TY! Perhaps itâs my attention, perhaps how good your writing is (I am quite sure itâs the latter!), but I added your blogâs RSS feed to my reader before even finishing the post.
This resonates so much with me: getting to know my bunch of fellow hackers was so instrumental to my growth and, ultimately, my own identity.
I love #FOSDEM but now I hate that I missed you there... I wanted to talk riddles with you! But Iâll make up for it, oh I will!

@mala see you soon, somewhere!
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FOSDEM 2026: The Kid Who Dreamed of Hackers Found Them in Brussels
Summary: A kid from a small Mexican town dreamed of finding real-life hackers. Two decades later, he flew his family to Brussels and spoke at one of the worldâs largest open-source conferences. This is that story.
âWe reject: kings, presidents and voting. We believe in: rough consensus and running code.â â David D. Clark
The Dream
When I was a young hackerâyeah, believe it or notâmy dream was to find other hackers in real life and just hang out together. Thatâs it. That was the whole dream.
It sounds modest now, but you have to understand the context. I come from a very small town in Mexico, the kind of place where internet was a luxury, Linux was a word nobody recognized, and âWindowsâ was mostly what you opened to let the heat out. The idea of attending a tech conference was absurd. Attending one in English? In another country? That was pure science fictionâlike telling my block friends about Dragon Ball Z spoilers Iâd read online, except even less believable.
But with time, and a painfully slow DSL connection, I found my people. I stumbled into the local Linux user groupâfewer than ten of us in a city of thousandsâand we built something from nothing. A hackerspace. Community events. Workshops with maybe a dozen attendees if we were lucky. Eventually, I found my way to national conferences and even talked at a few of them. Each one felt like a small victory, a tiny crack in the wall between where I was and where I wanted to be.

The Shot
So when the opportunity to submit a talk to FOSDEM 2026 appeared, I just shot my shot.
I did it almost by instinct, without overthinking it. FOSDEMâthe Free and Open Source Software Developersâ European Meetingâis one of the largest open-source conferences in the world. Thousands of developers, hundreds of talks, legendary project booths. It had always been a place that existed on the other side of a dream for me. But hereâs the thing: Iâm more financially stable now, Iâve traveled to Europe for both leisure and work, and I speak comfortable (but still heavily accented) English. Iâve made peace with my accentâitâs part of the package, take it or leave it.
So, why not? The real surprise was that I hadnât applied before.
The Logistics of Madness
When my proposed talk was accepted, my first reaction wasnât joyâit was panic. The kind of panic you feel when you push to main and then read the diff. The real problem was logistics.
I already had a trip to Mexico planned for personal reasons. Going to FOSDEM meant extending the family travel by a week, rerouting flights, and solving the kind of logistical puzzle that makes your brain hurt. Tepic, a small city in the mountains of western Mexico â Mexico City â London â Brussels. With a seven-year-old. And a monthâs worth of luggage packed for both the scorching Mexican beach and a freezing European winterâflip-flops sharing suitcase space with thermal jackets, sunscreen next to wool scarves. And sanity (debatable).
After my wifeâbless her patienceâsaid âjust go for it,â and after numerous conversations with both AI and non-AI advisors about how to make it less stressful, we committed. At the end of January, I found myself at the tiny airport of Tepic, eating the most amazing torta de pierna, beginning an absurd journey to Belgium.

We crossed through London, hopped on the Eurostar to Brussels, and somewhere between countries, we lost a pillowâa bear-shaped one my kid had shamelessly stolen from his grandma. Rest in peace, little bear pillow. You survived a Mexican grandmotherâs house only to perish somewhere in the English Channel.
The Candy Store
And then, there I was. At FOSDEM. With my kid. In Brussels.
The place was electric. People from every imaginable background wandered through the halls of the UniversitĂ© libre de Bruxelles. Iâll be honestâthereâs still a noticeable lack of diversity, especially in gender representationâbut the energy was undeniable. It felt like a living, breathing monument to what open source can be.
Seeing the project booths was like being a kid in a candy storeâexcept I literally had a kid with me in this candy store. Mozilla, Thunderbird, Letâs Encrypt, SUSE, and of course Mastodon, to name a few. I couldnât help myself; I told my son that when I was young, one of my first dreams was to work for SUSE. He listened carefully, the way seven-year-olds do when theyâre filing away information for later use (probably to embarrass me at dinner).

Keeping a seven-year-old entertained at a developer conference is its own extreme sport. Thankfully, a friend I hadnât seen in over a decade was thereâwith his kid. Heâs a no-gringo, a Dutchman who happens to have worked at Innox in Mexico. Our kids hit it off, and suddenly the conference had a parallel track: unsupervised childrenâs chaos edition.
The Talk
When the time came for my talk, I walked in, set up, and delivered something far from perfectâbut unmistakably mine. I stumbled on a couple of words, my accent was thick, and Iâm sure I made at least one joke that only landed for me. But thatâs the style. Thatâs always been the style.
Just before stepping up, Elena handed me the most fabulous FOSDEM sweater in existence. People noticed. People asked where to get one. But noâonly I could have it. Exclusive distribution, zero units available. (Okay fine, I was just lucky, but let me have this moment.)

If I have one regret, itâs not spending more time in other talks. Itâs not that I didnât tryâI didâbut balancing a seven-year-oldâs attention span with a conference schedule is a negotiation no diplomacy course prepares you for. I caught fragments, glimpses, enough to know I was missing incredible stuff. But thatâs the thing about FOSDEM: itâs not a one-time event. Iâll be back. And next time, I want to do more than speakâI want to listen, linger, and actually have those hallway conversations that everyone says are the best part of any conference.

The Kid and the Dream
Hereâs what got me, though. The part I didnât expect.
My kid watched me speak at FOSDEM. He didnât fully understand the contentâheâs seven, and ActivityPub isnât exactly bedtime story materialâbut he saw his dad on a stage, in front of a room full of people, in another continent, talking about something he built. When the Q&A started, he wanted to raise his hand. He got shy, though, and didnât. Later, visibly upset about his missed opportunity, he told me what he wanted to ask: âDo you play Minecraft?â In front of an auditorium full of open-source developers discussing federation protocols, my kidâs burning question was about Minecraft. I love this human being more than I can express.

He asked questions the entire trip back: âWhat does SUSE do?â âWill you talk at another one?â âCan I have my own desk computer?â
He saw the booths, the projects, the people. He kept posing for photos with each open-source mascot like a tiny celebrity on a press tour. His favorite was the PostgreSQL elephant, though we were genuinely concerned about its health. Based on the state of that costume, I think he might be rightâPostgreSQL could use your donations, folks. That elephant has seen better days.

And the trip back was no less insane than the trip there. Brussels â Iceland â Seattle. Because apparently, when youâre already doing something absurd, you might as well add a layover near the Arctic Circle. We landed in ReykjavĂk with our beach-and-winter Frankenstein luggage, stepped outside into wind that felt personally offended by our existence, and my kid asked if the land was actually made of ice. Close enough, kid. Close enough.

A week later, during a conversation with his teacher, my son was asked about the most memorable thing from the trip. He didnât say the beach in Mexico, or the train through Europe, or the wind in Iceland, or even the lost bear pillow. He said the most memorable thing was seeing his dad talk at a university. That it made him proud (Iâm not going to pretend I didnât need a moment after hearing that).
I thought about my own childhood. About the kid who couldnât find a single hacker in his town. About the dusty streets and half-built houses. About how representation works in mysterious waysâhow seeing someone like you doing something impossible makes it feel possible. My son doesnât know what itâs like to not see a path. For him, this is just what dad does. And maybe thatâs the whole point.
Full Circle

Twenty years ago, I was a teenager in a small Mexican town, writing code in paper notebooks and dreaming of a world I could barely imagine. Today, I stood in Brussels and spoke to a room full of open-source developers about a project I created.
The path from there to here wasnât straight. It was messy, full of detours, broken English, lost pillows, and more coffee than any doctor would recommend. But every stepâevery hackerspace meetup with eight people, every local conference talk, every late night wrestling with codeâwas a brick in the road that led to that stage.
And yeah, I get it, talking for half an hour at a conference with hundreds of talks may seem like a small feat. One slot among many. But it wasnât small to me. For the kid who couldnât find a single hacker in his hometown, standing in front of that room was enormous.
FOSDEM wasnât just a conference for me. It was proof that the kid from Tepic who dreamed of finding hackers in real life finally did. They were in Brussels all along, waiting for him to show up.
And he brought his kid.
Also readable in: https://maho.dev/2026/02/fosdem-2026-the-kid-who-dreamed-of-hackers-found-them-in-brussels/ by @mapache:
#fosdem #open-source #conferences #community #travel #personal-growth #europe #public-speaking
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@andypiper @blog no, thanks to you, you made fosdem a great place for the #socialweb
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FOSDEM 2026: The Kid Who Dreamed of Hackers Found Them in Brussels
Summary: A kid from a small Mexican town dreamed of finding real-life hackers. Two decades later, he flew his family to Brussels and spoke at one of the worldâs largest open-source conferences. This is that story.
âWe reject: kings, presidents and voting. We believe in: rough consensus and running code.â â David D. Clark
The Dream
When I was a young hackerâyeah, believe it or notâmy dream was to find other hackers in real life and just hang out together. Thatâs it. That was the whole dream.
It sounds modest now, but you have to understand the context. I come from a very small town in Mexico, the kind of place where internet was a luxury, Linux was a word nobody recognized, and âWindowsâ was mostly what you opened to let the heat out. The idea of attending a tech conference was absurd. Attending one in English? In another country? That was pure science fictionâlike telling my block friends about Dragon Ball Z spoilers Iâd read online, except even less believable.
But with time, and a painfully slow DSL connection, I found my people. I stumbled into the local Linux user groupâfewer than ten of us in a city of thousandsâand we built something from nothing. A hackerspace. Community events. Workshops with maybe a dozen attendees if we were lucky. Eventually, I found my way to national conferences and even talked at a few of them. Each one felt like a small victory, a tiny crack in the wall between where I was and where I wanted to be.

The Shot
So when the opportunity to submit a talk to FOSDEM 2026 appeared, I just shot my shot.
I did it almost by instinct, without overthinking it. FOSDEMâthe Free and Open Source Software Developersâ European Meetingâis one of the largest open-source conferences in the world. Thousands of developers, hundreds of talks, legendary project booths. It had always been a place that existed on the other side of a dream for me. But hereâs the thing: Iâm more financially stable now, Iâve traveled to Europe for both leisure and work, and I speak comfortable (but still heavily accented) English. Iâve made peace with my accentâitâs part of the package, take it or leave it.
So, why not? The real surprise was that I hadnât applied before.
The Logistics of Madness
When my proposed talk was accepted, my first reaction wasnât joyâit was panic. The kind of panic you feel when you push to main and then read the diff. The real problem was logistics.
I already had a trip to Mexico planned for personal reasons. Going to FOSDEM meant extending the family travel by a week, rerouting flights, and solving the kind of logistical puzzle that makes your brain hurt. Tepic, a small city in the mountains of western Mexico â Mexico City â London â Brussels. With a seven-year-old. And a monthâs worth of luggage packed for both the scorching Mexican beach and a freezing European winterâflip-flops sharing suitcase space with thermal jackets, sunscreen next to wool scarves. And sanity (debatable).
After my wifeâbless her patienceâsaid âjust go for it,â and after numerous conversations with both AI and non-AI advisors about how to make it less stressful, we committed. At the end of January, I found myself at the tiny airport of Tepic, eating the most amazing torta de pierna, beginning an absurd journey to Belgium.

We crossed through London, hopped on the Eurostar to Brussels, and somewhere between countries, we lost a pillowâa bear-shaped one my kid had shamelessly stolen from his grandma. Rest in peace, little bear pillow. You survived a Mexican grandmotherâs house only to perish somewhere in the English Channel.
The Candy Store
And then, there I was. At FOSDEM. With my kid. In Brussels.
The place was electric. People from every imaginable background wandered through the halls of the UniversitĂ© libre de Bruxelles. Iâll be honestâthereâs still a noticeable lack of diversity, especially in gender representationâbut the energy was undeniable. It felt like a living, breathing monument to what open source can be.
Seeing the project booths was like being a kid in a candy storeâexcept I literally had a kid with me in this candy store. Mozilla, Thunderbird, Letâs Encrypt, SUSE, and of course Mastodon, to name a few. I couldnât help myself; I told my son that when I was young, one of my first dreams was to work for SUSE. He listened carefully, the way seven-year-olds do when theyâre filing away information for later use (probably to embarrass me at dinner).

Keeping a seven-year-old entertained at a developer conference is its own extreme sport. Thankfully, a friend I hadnât seen in over a decade was thereâwith his kid. Heâs a no-gringo, a Dutchman who happens to have worked at Innox in Mexico. Our kids hit it off, and suddenly the conference had a parallel track: unsupervised childrenâs chaos edition.
The Talk
When the time came for my talk, I walked in, set up, and delivered something far from perfectâbut unmistakably mine. I stumbled on a couple of words, my accent was thick, and Iâm sure I made at least one joke that only landed for me. But thatâs the style. Thatâs always been the style.
Just before stepping up, Elena handed me the most fabulous FOSDEM sweater in existence. People noticed. People asked where to get one. But noâonly I could have it. Exclusive distribution, zero units available. (Okay fine, I was just lucky, but let me have this moment.)

If I have one regret, itâs not spending more time in other talks. Itâs not that I didnât tryâI didâbut balancing a seven-year-oldâs attention span with a conference schedule is a negotiation no diplomacy course prepares you for. I caught fragments, glimpses, enough to know I was missing incredible stuff. But thatâs the thing about FOSDEM: itâs not a one-time event. Iâll be back. And next time, I want to do more than speakâI want to listen, linger, and actually have those hallway conversations that everyone says are the best part of any conference.

The Kid and the Dream
Hereâs what got me, though. The part I didnât expect.
My kid watched me speak at FOSDEM. He didnât fully understand the contentâheâs seven, and ActivityPub isnât exactly bedtime story materialâbut he saw his dad on a stage, in front of a room full of people, in another continent, talking about something he built. When the Q&A started, he wanted to raise his hand. He got shy, though, and didnât. Later, visibly upset about his missed opportunity, he told me what he wanted to ask: âDo you play Minecraft?â In front of an auditorium full of open-source developers discussing federation protocols, my kidâs burning question was about Minecraft. I love this human being more than I can express.

He asked questions the entire trip back: âWhat does SUSE do?â âWill you talk at another one?â âCan I have my own desk computer?â
He saw the booths, the projects, the people. He kept posing for photos with each open-source mascot like a tiny celebrity on a press tour. His favorite was the PostgreSQL elephant, though we were genuinely concerned about its health. Based on the state of that costume, I think he might be rightâPostgreSQL could use your donations, folks. That elephant has seen better days.

And the trip back was no less insane than the trip there. Brussels â Iceland â Seattle. Because apparently, when youâre already doing something absurd, you might as well add a layover near the Arctic Circle. We landed in ReykjavĂk with our beach-and-winter Frankenstein luggage, stepped outside into wind that felt personally offended by our existence, and my kid asked if the land was actually made of ice. Close enough, kid. Close enough.

A week later, during a conversation with his teacher, my son was asked about the most memorable thing from the trip. He didnât say the beach in Mexico, or the train through Europe, or the wind in Iceland, or even the lost bear pillow. He said the most memorable thing was seeing his dad talk at a university. That it made him proud (Iâm not going to pretend I didnât need a moment after hearing that).
I thought about my own childhood. About the kid who couldnât find a single hacker in his town. About the dusty streets and half-built houses. About how representation works in mysterious waysâhow seeing someone like you doing something impossible makes it feel possible. My son doesnât know what itâs like to not see a path. For him, this is just what dad does. And maybe thatâs the whole point.
Full Circle

Twenty years ago, I was a teenager in a small Mexican town, writing code in paper notebooks and dreaming of a world I could barely imagine. Today, I stood in Brussels and spoke to a room full of open-source developers about a project I created.
The path from there to here wasnât straight. It was messy, full of detours, broken English, lost pillows, and more coffee than any doctor would recommend. But every stepâevery hackerspace meetup with eight people, every local conference talk, every late night wrestling with codeâwas a brick in the road that led to that stage.
And yeah, I get it, talking for half an hour at a conference with hundreds of talks may seem like a small feat. One slot among many. But it wasnât small to me. For the kid who couldnât find a single hacker in his hometown, standing in front of that room was enormous.
FOSDEM wasnât just a conference for me. It was proof that the kid from Tepic who dreamed of finding hackers in real life finally did. They were in Brussels all along, waiting for him to show up.
And he brought his kid.
Also readable in: https://maho.dev/2026/02/fosdem-2026-the-kid-who-dreamed-of-hackers-found-them-in-brussels/ by @mapache:
#fosdem #open-source #conferences #community #travel #personal-growth #europe #public-speaking
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