I guess it is about time I posted a new summary of the free software and open culture activites and projects I have been involved in the last year. The days have been so packed the last year that I have failed with my intention to post at least one blog post per month, so this summary became rather long. I am sorry about this.
This year was the year I got tired of the lack of new releases of the multimedia related libraries published via Xiph, and I decided to wrap up the current state and make the releases myself. In a burst of activity early this year, I collected and tested patches, coordinated with other developers and finally made new tarballs and release announcement for theora, and new tarball releases for liboggz, kate and fishsound. This upstreamed several patches accumulated in Debian and other Linux distributions for the last 15 years or so.
To change the world and the future, it is important to start with the kids, and one such avenue of change have been created by the current president of FSF Europe, Matthias Kirschner. He wrote a book for children, Ada & Zangemann, and I have been involved in its translation framework for the entire year. The source code has been transformed to Docbook and I have been conducting and coordinating translations into Norwegian Bokmål and Nynorsk, as well as preparing paper editions of the book and an animation movie with Norwegian voices. The Bokmål edition is very close to ready, and will be available early in 2026, and the movie release will follow shortly after this. I intend announce this on my blog and elsewhere when this happen. Please get in touch if you want to help spread the word about this book in Norwegian. I hope we can get the author to Norway when making the Norwegian releases.
This year I continued a push for the system I made a few years ago to improve hardware dongle handling on Linux. The Isenkram system use hardware mapping information provided by relevant packages using the AppStream system to propose which Linux distribution packages to install on a given machine to support dongles like cameras, finger print readers, smart card readers, LEGO controllers, ECC memory and other hardware. I have followed up on the list of packages providing such mapping, either to get it into Debian or to upstream the necessary metadata. I am not sure if we are at a point where package maintainers on their own add such information to their packages, but there are Debian lintian reports suggesting it and I have send patches to all packages I am aware of that should include such mappings. Most of the patches are included in Debian now, only 27 was left the last time I checked.
As part of my involvement with Debian, I continued my push to get all orphaned packages without a version control repository migrated to git. I am not sure how many packages I went through, but it was in the range of 200-300 packages. In addition to this I updated, sponsored, pushed maintainers for updates upstreamed patches for and fixed RC issues with battery-stats, bs1770gain, isenkram, libonvif, mfiutil, opensnitch, simplescreenrecorder, vlc-plugin-bittorrent and wakeonlan. I've also followed up LEGO related packages, dahdi support for Asterisk, llama.cpp and whisper.cpp in particular for the AMD GPU I was donated by AMD, as well as tried yet again to convince the upstream developers of the photogrammetric workstion e-foto to get their program into a state that could be included in Debian.
As I do not buy into the story that it is great to expose oneself to the whims of and priorities of commercial entities to have access to cultural expressions like films and music, I still maintain a huge collection of movies. For this to work well, I have ended up as part of the people maintaining lsdvd upstream and wrapped up a new release fixing several crash bugs caused by DVDs with intentionally broken metadata, and introduced code to list a DVD ID in the lsdvd output. Related to this, I have also worked some add-ons for my main video and music player, and took over upstream maintenance of the Invidious add-on, which sadly stopped working for non-authenticated users when web scrapers made it impossible for Invidious installations to provide a open API, as well as contributed to the NRK and projector control add-ons.
As part of my involvement in the Norwegian archiving community and standardisation work, we organised a Noark 5 workshop this spring discussing how to decide what to keep and what to delete in digital archives. We finally managed to apply for Noark 5 certification for the free software archive API Nikita, as well as worked to test and improve the performance of Nikita together with people on my day job at the university.
Manufacturing using Free Software is still a focus for me, and I have continued my involved with the LinuxCNC community, organising a developer gathering this summer with the help from NUUG Foundation and sponsoring from Debian and Redpill-Linpro. We plan to repeat the event also in 2026, but this time NUUG Foundation have told us they do not want a role, so we have found another friendly organisation to handle the money.
A popular machine controller with LinuxCNC is the MESA set of electronics, which is centred around a FPGA which now can be programmed using only Free Software. We discussed during this summers gathering how hard it would be to compile the current FPGA source using a Free Software tool chain, and I started looking into this, locating tools to transform the VHDL source into something the Yosys tool chain can handle. Still lot to do there, and I hope to get further next year.
An important part of Free Software manufacturing is the ability to design parts and create programs that can be passed to machines making parts, also known as CAD/CAM. The most prominent project for this is FreeCAD, and I have been both pushing to get opencamlib integrated with it in Debian as well as fixing bugs in the handling of Fanuc controlled machines, do make it easier to generate instructions for machines I have access to. I expect to also continue this also next year.
This year the UN conference Internet Governance Forum (IGF) was held in Norway, and I tried my best to get a stand for the Norwegian Unix Users Group (NUUG) there. Sadly the effort failed, due to lack of interest with the NUUG Board, but I was happy to see several members at least attend some of the activities related to IGF. Sadly to participate at IGF one need to hand over quite private information, so I decided not to participate in any of the closed forum events myself. Related to NUUG I have been a member of the election board proposing board member candidates to the general assembly, and been part of the program committee of the "Big Tech må vekk" (Big Tech must go away) festival organised by Attac in concert with NUUG and EFN. I've also assisted the Norwegian open TV channel Frikanalen with access to their machines located in a machine room at the university.
Related to the University, I have become involved in a small team of students working to build and program robots for the Robocup@Home competition. For 2026 we also plan to use the new features of FreeCAD to make parts for the open hardware robot arm OpenArm. This is also the group that will handle the money for the LinuxCNC gathering in 2026. Also related to the university I was looking into the Linux security auditing system Falco earlier this year, making improvements to the detection rules. This activity is on hold at the moment, and do not expect to continue with this in 2026.
I will most likely have to cut down a bit on my free software and open culture activities going forward, as NUUG Foundation, who have funded one day a week for such activities for several years no, sadly have decided they do not want to continue doing this.
As usual, if you use Bitcoin and want to show your support of my activities, please send Bitcoin donations to my address 15oWEoG9dUPovwmUL9KWAnYRtNJEkP1u1b.