1 00:00:00,017 --> 00:00:06,677 Which is the report from the working groups, of which there are several in multitude. So, Aleix. 2 00:00:07,797 --> 00:00:08,277 Yep. 3 00:00:10,417 --> 00:00:16,017 So kind of by omission, I ended up doing this slide deck talking about the advisory board. 4 00:00:16,177 --> 00:00:21,897 We called it a working group because it fit nicely on our organization, 5 00:00:22,237 --> 00:00:27,517 but it's not like, yeah, there's a whole group working on it. 6 00:00:27,617 --> 00:00:32,117 It's been mostly Anika. So if Anika is here, Thank you very much for helping us there. 7 00:00:33,257 --> 00:00:39,957 So let's see what we've been doing. So the advisory board, what we do is we 8 00:00:39,957 --> 00:00:45,557 have a number of organizations that are part of it. Some of them are patrons. 9 00:00:45,717 --> 00:00:49,117 It's one of the perks you get as a patron to be part of this advisory board. 10 00:00:49,397 --> 00:00:51,957 And we have some other sister organizations. 11 00:00:52,577 --> 00:00:57,057 We went through them before. And the idea is to keep them up to date with the 12 00:00:57,057 --> 00:00:58,257 different things that we can do. 13 00:00:59,137 --> 00:01:03,317 With the idea of, let's see if we can collaborate at any level. 14 00:01:03,717 --> 00:01:09,357 So we've been having meetings every four to six months. 15 00:01:09,537 --> 00:01:14,057 We had one in October, for example. We were talking about the events, 16 00:01:14,277 --> 00:01:16,517 the things that were happening in KDE. 17 00:01:16,777 --> 00:01:20,677 Another one in April. April was after the sixth release, right? 18 00:01:20,897 --> 00:01:23,517 So we were talking about how it all happened. 19 00:01:24,277 --> 00:01:27,977 Some of the people on the advisory board are from the distro, 20 00:01:27,977 --> 00:01:34,897 So they were talking about how they were adopting it and so on and so forth, et cetera. 21 00:01:35,017 --> 00:01:38,437 We also had updates from Kiriaco. Something we do, for example, 22 00:01:38,437 --> 00:01:41,557 is when there's something interesting happening in our project, 23 00:01:41,717 --> 00:01:43,917 then we'll invite somebody. 24 00:01:44,157 --> 00:01:50,977 We had Joseph this year. We had Kai at some point also and talked about what they were working on. 25 00:01:51,057 --> 00:01:55,557 So the different partners are also aware of these things happening. 26 00:01:55,557 --> 00:01:58,337 Like, this is very important, right, because otherwise, like, 27 00:01:58,417 --> 00:02:01,717 it's very hard for all of these organizations to follow what we do, 28 00:02:01,777 --> 00:02:08,037 but it's a good way to, like, put that forward, and if they have something to latch on, then we can do. 29 00:02:08,197 --> 00:02:12,757 We had another one in July, we talked about Krita, we talked about the different conferences. 30 00:02:13,117 --> 00:02:17,037 Kai Uwe, for example, he joined and talked about the amazing things we were 31 00:02:17,037 --> 00:02:20,537 doing in Plasma 6. At this point, it was already all released and ready, right? 32 00:02:21,277 --> 00:02:25,517 And we're going to have another one in a few weeks. 33 00:02:28,018 --> 00:02:31,498 And yeah, thank you very much, Anika, for putting that together. 34 00:02:32,958 --> 00:02:37,758 How can you help? One thing that we do as advisory board besides these meetings 35 00:02:37,758 --> 00:02:40,038 is we assign each of these partners 36 00:02:40,038 --> 00:02:44,418 with a person from the KDE who is knowledgeable about everything we do. 37 00:02:44,518 --> 00:02:49,058 The idea is that these organizations don't need to reach out to the board or 38 00:02:49,058 --> 00:02:53,838 something like that whenever they have some kind of question or doubt or idea. 39 00:02:53,838 --> 00:03:00,238 So if you are their partner, you can say, have regular conversations with them 40 00:03:00,238 --> 00:03:01,918 if you're familiar with what they do, et cetera. 41 00:03:03,458 --> 00:03:06,378 And if you know an organization that should be part of the board, 42 00:03:06,578 --> 00:03:10,378 then convince them, tell us, and we can see to it. 43 00:03:12,018 --> 00:03:15,918 For next year, the idea is to continue doing more or less the same things, 44 00:03:15,938 --> 00:03:21,198 to continue meeting, make sure that things that we discuss matter to them. 45 00:03:21,198 --> 00:03:24,058 Like it's especially interesting and important in this 46 00:03:24,058 --> 00:03:26,998 kind of meetings to make sure that they care about what we're talking 47 00:03:26,998 --> 00:03:29,878 about so that they like 48 00:03:29,878 --> 00:03:32,778 keep continuing during the meetings because obviously it's a 49 00:03:32,778 --> 00:03:37,478 good opportunity for all of us so yeah and yeah 50 00:03:37,478 --> 00:03:40,618 you can reach out to us you can reach out to the board about different 51 00:03:40,618 --> 00:03:44,218 topics the advisory board contacts KD.org mailing 52 00:03:44,218 --> 00:03:47,578 list this one is for the KD side of things so if 53 00:03:47,578 --> 00:03:51,058 you have an idea and you want to discuss it with the advisory board but obviously 54 00:03:51,058 --> 00:03:57,718 only our people you can do it over there um do so don't hesitate now the community 55 00:03:57,718 --> 00:04:08,918 working group who is going to do that presentation are you from the community working group. 56 00:04:14,785 --> 00:04:17,625 Yes, like I say, I'm the community working group today anyway. 57 00:04:21,405 --> 00:04:25,465 So the community working group takes care of KDE's community members, 58 00:04:26,165 --> 00:04:30,785 enables the KDE community to work effectively and efficiently by helping community 59 00:04:30,785 --> 00:04:34,185 members maintain healthy interactions and resolving conflicts. 60 00:04:35,665 --> 00:04:38,665 We have two new active members this year. 61 00:04:39,545 --> 00:04:46,105 Kai Potter, who is from Australia. He's not here probably because he's very far away. Me. 62 00:04:47,785 --> 00:04:52,645 We have two existing members, Andy Betts. I haven't seen him here yet, 63 00:04:52,665 --> 00:04:53,845 but I think he's going to be here. 64 00:04:54,245 --> 00:04:57,185 And Neofitos. He's right there. 65 00:04:59,565 --> 00:05:03,625 David Edmondson stepped down. He was here last year. 66 00:05:07,245 --> 00:05:12,865 Year. Some of our work in the past year was we created internal guidelines for 67 00:05:12,865 --> 00:05:14,165 reaching out to people on Matrix. 68 00:05:15,865 --> 00:05:23,145 We received a total of 41 requests since AGM 2023, which is 10 times more than the previous year. 69 00:05:24,605 --> 00:05:30,845 37 of those were complaints. Five community members had had more than one complaint. 70 00:05:31,505 --> 00:05:36,005 One was a bogus complaint from someone outside of our community against a community 71 00:05:36,005 --> 00:05:39,145 member, and we unbanned one community member. 72 00:05:41,885 --> 00:05:46,405 We are one person shy of a full community working group. 73 00:05:46,665 --> 00:05:51,785 Having another member would enable us to respond and work on our goals more quickly. 74 00:05:52,885 --> 00:05:55,665 It's the kind of work that a lot of of people don't really want 75 00:05:55,665 --> 00:06:02,045 to do but kind of needs to get done um some 76 00:06:02,045 --> 00:06:06,305 of our goals and plans for the coming year are to standardize the onboarding 77 00:06:06,305 --> 00:06:12,225 process for new cwg members it was a bit chaotic being having like two new members 78 00:06:12,225 --> 00:06:16,085 with like not a lot of you know senior people, 79 00:06:18,485 --> 00:06:25,305 um define requirements for uh joining the cwg mainly just like you know make 80 00:06:25,305 --> 00:06:30,785 sure you don't have someone insane on the board or something or on the on the working group, 81 00:06:33,345 --> 00:06:39,305 uh define guidelines for moving community members if they do something like really bad or something. 82 00:06:42,225 --> 00:06:47,145 Define a policy for giving updates for requests, so when people send a request 83 00:06:47,145 --> 00:06:51,025 we have to say oh, this is the situation. 84 00:06:53,825 --> 00:06:57,925 Promote the CWG within KDE so people know about it. 85 00:06:59,405 --> 00:07:03,785 Chain the mailing list to avoid confusion with community at KDE.org. 86 00:07:03,785 --> 00:07:08,345 We had someone make that mistake and make a public complaint. 87 00:07:10,545 --> 00:07:11,465 All right. 88 00:07:14,065 --> 00:07:15,765 And if you want to talk to us, you 89 00:07:15,765 --> 00:07:20,865 can send us an email address at that suspiciously similar email address. 90 00:07:22,185 --> 00:07:23,945 Or talk to us during Academy. 91 00:07:26,445 --> 00:07:28,485 And that's not my report there. 92 00:07:30,865 --> 00:07:34,885 All right, let's see. Okay, the financial working group. 93 00:07:34,985 --> 00:07:39,865 So the financial working group exists to assist KDEV in its financial matters. 94 00:07:39,865 --> 00:07:45,105 It acts as a sounding board for the board and the treasurer in particular. 95 00:07:46,285 --> 00:07:50,645 We review important documents. Sometimes we write them, including this report 96 00:07:50,645 --> 00:07:56,045 or, for example, the financial information that is published in KDEV's annual report. 97 00:07:57,065 --> 00:08:02,125 We also do some software development. We develop the web-based dashboard application 98 00:08:02,125 --> 00:08:06,245 that KDEV uses to track its finances. 99 00:08:06,245 --> 00:08:12,585 The current members of the Financial Working Group are myself as the treasurer 100 00:08:12,585 --> 00:08:15,865 of KDEV, who is always included in the Financial Working Group, 101 00:08:16,005 --> 00:08:20,025 as well as Marta, who was the previous treasurer of KDEV. 102 00:08:20,145 --> 00:08:24,565 And it's really great that she's still around and we have a lot of continuity 103 00:08:24,565 --> 00:08:30,325 when it comes to the financial side of the organization, as well as Till, 104 00:08:30,425 --> 00:08:34,465 who, of course, has also been involved with KDEV for many decades. 105 00:08:34,465 --> 00:08:38,805 And is very experienced in business and financial matters. 106 00:08:40,065 --> 00:08:46,825 Looking back at the past year, and you fortunately hear me say this often or 107 00:08:46,825 --> 00:08:54,085 others who speak to you in this occasion, it's been a stable year with no major negative surprises. 108 00:08:54,185 --> 00:08:58,965 Sometimes we also say uneventful. And what we mean with that is that nothing 109 00:08:58,965 --> 00:09:04,505 happened that we were not able to predict, at least nothing that put any undue 110 00:09:04,505 --> 00:09:06,545 strain on the organization. 111 00:09:06,845 --> 00:09:11,925 This is very important given our current financial operational strategy, 112 00:09:12,285 --> 00:09:16,485 which is that we intentionally operate at a deficit. 113 00:09:16,605 --> 00:09:21,505 We outspend our income because we have very high financial reserves from past 114 00:09:21,505 --> 00:09:26,245 donations that under non-profit law we are not allowed to keep. 115 00:09:26,925 --> 00:09:33,645 So that means that we are intentionally outspending and we want to of course 116 00:09:33,645 --> 00:09:38,605 track this very, very well so that we don't accidentally end up with a burn 117 00:09:38,605 --> 00:09:40,505 rate that becomes unsustainable. 118 00:09:40,645 --> 00:09:47,425 So it is great to hear maybe that our income in the past year was just within 119 00:09:47,425 --> 00:09:48,985 500 euro of our projection. 120 00:09:49,645 --> 00:09:52,725 For the second year in a row, it was very close to the prediction. 121 00:09:52,725 --> 00:09:56,125 That means that we have a really good handle. 122 00:09:56,853 --> 00:10:00,793 On that side of our finances, we know what will happen. 123 00:10:01,033 --> 00:10:05,413 Our expenses tend to be below what we actually put into our budget plan because 124 00:10:05,413 --> 00:10:08,133 we budget plan with sort of a high watermark approach. 125 00:10:08,753 --> 00:10:13,293 We assume that allocated money will be spent completely, even though particular 126 00:10:13,293 --> 00:10:17,473 projects might not actually manage to do this. So we prepare for the worst. 127 00:10:17,953 --> 00:10:22,093 And then we have sort of a min and a max there. 128 00:10:22,273 --> 00:10:26,433 And again, our expenses were entirely within the range of our expectations. 129 00:10:26,853 --> 00:10:29,613 Even though they did not actually hit that high watermark. 130 00:10:30,113 --> 00:10:35,293 We mentioned already in the board report that fundraising has been going great, 131 00:10:35,373 --> 00:10:37,773 particularly our supporting membership program. 132 00:10:38,413 --> 00:10:41,893 Our income increased significantly due to that. 133 00:10:42,453 --> 00:10:47,653 So did our expenses. Again, as planned, they are mainly personnel expenses where 134 00:10:47,653 --> 00:10:50,313 we have many tuning screws due to the way that we contract. 135 00:10:50,893 --> 00:10:56,113 If things should one day not work out, we can scale there fairly easily. 136 00:10:56,113 --> 00:10:59,053 Easily, of course, we don't want to do that, but we can. 137 00:10:59,713 --> 00:11:04,093 The reason this keeps climbing is that we are traveling again, 138 00:11:04,193 --> 00:11:08,013 but also many positions that we've created in past years have now for the first 139 00:11:08,013 --> 00:11:10,293 time been filled for an entire year. 140 00:11:10,393 --> 00:11:12,853 So, of course, those expenses accumulate. 141 00:11:13,833 --> 00:11:19,653 Academy 2023 set a new sponsorship record by some margin. It was really great. 142 00:11:19,773 --> 00:11:22,353 Thanks so much to the sponsors of last year's conference. 143 00:11:22,973 --> 00:11:25,753 That said, organizing it was also very expensive. 144 00:11:26,413 --> 00:11:28,733 So it was largely offset. 145 00:11:29,793 --> 00:11:34,293 This is a big change from Academy in the past when we used to use Academy as 146 00:11:34,293 --> 00:11:37,213 a source of income. We used to make quite a bit of money with the conference. 147 00:11:37,953 --> 00:11:40,573 Now our goal is mostly to break even. 148 00:11:41,801 --> 00:11:45,621 You could say open source or free software, we are now so established that nobody 149 00:11:45,621 --> 00:11:49,621 gives us stuff for free anymore, which used to be more the case with Academy. 150 00:11:49,781 --> 00:11:52,201 But these days, for example, venue costs are much higher. 151 00:11:54,021 --> 00:12:00,301 As you can see, broadly speaking, our income is growing year by year. 152 00:12:00,781 --> 00:12:06,381 This reflects the overall growth of the organization and also its sort of activity profile. 153 00:12:06,881 --> 00:12:09,881 As you know, we have many contractors now that we didn't have in the past. 154 00:12:09,881 --> 00:12:15,961 They have more things to fund and fortunately our income trajectory is generally going well. 155 00:12:16,101 --> 00:12:19,081 The same on the expenses side, obviously with more activities, 156 00:12:19,181 --> 00:12:21,001 things are expensive, contractors are expensive. 157 00:12:21,201 --> 00:12:23,661 So that is also going up. 158 00:12:24,881 --> 00:12:28,441 You can see here the ratio between income and expenses. 159 00:12:28,641 --> 00:12:32,121 You can see here the strategy that I talked about that intentionally in the 160 00:12:32,121 --> 00:12:37,361 past two years we have outspent our income to deaccumulate our financial reserve. serve. 161 00:12:38,081 --> 00:12:44,481 Our goal now for the running year is to make that gap smaller. 162 00:12:44,701 --> 00:12:50,281 We are now taking the first steps to limit our expense growth and to lower our 163 00:12:50,281 --> 00:12:54,901 burn rate so that hopefully by 2026-27 with an increase in fundraising, 164 00:12:55,281 --> 00:13:00,341 we end up breaking even again and then we can take aim at further growth of the organization. 165 00:13:01,241 --> 00:13:06,961 In pie chart form, you see things are not that complicated, really Really, 166 00:13:07,001 --> 00:13:08,961 most of our expenses are personnel. 167 00:13:10,361 --> 00:13:14,161 The income pie chart is the one that has more significantly changed. 168 00:13:14,341 --> 00:13:19,201 If you look in years past, there used to be an almost even 50-50 split between 169 00:13:19,201 --> 00:13:23,321 donations from organizations such as our corporate patrons and individuals. 170 00:13:23,721 --> 00:13:30,101 And now the patronage side is dwarfed by the individual donations because the 171 00:13:30,101 --> 00:13:33,121 supporting membership program has been going so well. 172 00:13:33,121 --> 00:13:39,481 But you've also heard that the board plans to change the way that our patron program works a bit. 173 00:13:39,601 --> 00:13:43,661 So maybe there will be some more changes to this pie chart going forward. 174 00:13:44,101 --> 00:13:47,901 The budget plan has been done by the treasurer and the financial working group. 175 00:13:47,941 --> 00:13:52,581 And we expect to grow our income significantly with the fundraising. 176 00:13:52,861 --> 00:13:57,541 We now have new tools. Our dashboard can project the income channels that we 177 00:13:57,541 --> 00:14:02,121 have on the donation side. and also there we have sort of a min-max and even 178 00:14:02,121 --> 00:14:05,521 with conservative projections we should be growing our income quite a bit. 179 00:14:06,321 --> 00:14:11,221 This again allows us to lower our burn rate in addition with some steps to limit 180 00:14:11,221 --> 00:14:17,021 our expense growth and the ultimate goal is that in the 26-27 time frame we're even again. 181 00:14:18,201 --> 00:14:23,441 Things are on track with regard to that. So far the year is looking great. 182 00:14:23,881 --> 00:14:28,741 Sponsorship continues well, um, academy sponsorship is not as high as last year, 183 00:14:28,821 --> 00:14:33,341 but we expected this, it's a tough year for conferences and we've heard the 184 00:14:33,341 --> 00:14:36,981 same from other conference teams, almost done. Um. 185 00:14:39,092 --> 00:14:42,292 It's kind of dying, you know, I try to, but it's been lowering in volume over 186 00:14:42,292 --> 00:14:43,552 time. So at some point I gave up. 187 00:14:45,112 --> 00:14:50,332 You've heard for many years that we would like to dissolve our US-based KDE 188 00:14:50,332 --> 00:14:54,092 satellite organization, the KDE League, and that we expect also its remaining 189 00:14:54,092 --> 00:14:58,472 money then to be disseminated to us. The dissolution has finally passed. 190 00:14:58,772 --> 00:15:02,772 We don't have the money yet, but we expect it sort of any minute now. 191 00:15:03,192 --> 00:15:07,092 We're in the pace that it's going at, it will probably be next year, 192 00:15:07,172 --> 00:15:09,212 but it's It's good news all the same. 193 00:15:10,852 --> 00:15:15,972 All right. Tools, I already talked about it. Our dashboard is doing great and 194 00:15:15,972 --> 00:15:19,492 it's now doing better things with donations that allows us to forecast things 195 00:15:19,492 --> 00:15:23,612 and keep an even closer eye on how our income is developing. 196 00:15:24,372 --> 00:15:29,172 So thanks for the people who work on that tool. All right. And then handing 197 00:15:29,172 --> 00:15:30,392 off to the fundraising working group. 198 00:15:32,332 --> 00:15:33,532 Maybe it works better for you. 199 00:15:36,592 --> 00:15:42,892 Yeah. Yeah, so fundraising working group. Yeah, so where we are and what we 200 00:15:42,892 --> 00:15:45,692 do, like you can say, currently alone. 201 00:15:46,172 --> 00:15:49,792 We had a few members leaving the working group this year. 202 00:15:50,092 --> 00:15:55,812 So I'm now looking for new volunteers to join the working group and help fundraising. 203 00:15:57,732 --> 00:16:01,852 What we do is coordinate the execution of the fundraising campaigns. 204 00:16:02,432 --> 00:16:06,112 We had a lot of help from the promo team, Paul and Annika. 205 00:16:07,683 --> 00:16:12,043 Yeah, and we maintain and improve the technical infrastructure, 206 00:16:12,323 --> 00:16:18,303 which was CVCM, past years, not anymore. Yeah. 207 00:16:20,003 --> 00:16:25,563 So now there's a bit less work on the technical infrastructure and just editing the websites. 208 00:16:27,103 --> 00:16:29,803 But nothing much more. 209 00:16:34,043 --> 00:16:41,403 Last year, we had the Plasma 6 fundraising campaign, which was a success, 210 00:16:41,603 --> 00:16:43,623 as you can see by the financial report. 211 00:16:45,023 --> 00:16:52,683 We also shut down CVCRM, which was a bit of a pain, and it's good that we are done with that. 212 00:16:55,023 --> 00:16:57,943 Yeah, I mean, I think Ben is quite happy about that. 213 00:17:00,783 --> 00:17:06,703 Yeah, and yeah, success stories, like we increased the number of frequent donations, 214 00:17:08,503 --> 00:17:11,323 other one-time donations, thanks to DonorBox. 215 00:17:13,543 --> 00:17:19,503 I mean, the Plasma 6 campaign was like a really We had a plan at the beginning 216 00:17:19,503 --> 00:17:26,143 to have like 500 or 250 new members and we managed to go a lot higher. 217 00:17:27,043 --> 00:17:31,043 Yeah. And that's what we learned is that posting often about the fundraising 218 00:17:31,043 --> 00:17:36,083 and campaigns and asking people often to do donations actually work. 219 00:17:36,303 --> 00:17:42,283 Like if you ask people to donate, many of them will do that. Yeah. Yeah. 220 00:17:44,003 --> 00:17:48,163 Yeah, like I said, join the working group, we need help. 221 00:17:48,963 --> 00:17:53,123 And yeah, and if you do blog posts, don't forget to mention what we are. 222 00:17:54,972 --> 00:17:59,772 You can do the donation to KDE for, yeah, I think that's it. 223 00:18:00,772 --> 00:18:06,812 Yeah. And at least my plan would be like to do a fundraising campaign again in December. 224 00:18:07,412 --> 00:18:13,912 We already had like with Plasma, there's a notification which will appear in December. 225 00:18:14,152 --> 00:18:19,292 We should recommend you to do a donation and let's try to do that in social 226 00:18:19,292 --> 00:18:22,112 media and other places to see. 227 00:18:24,132 --> 00:18:29,652 Yeah. If you want to talk to us, you can either talk to me, or there's a matrix 228 00:18:29,652 --> 00:18:36,532 room, which is public, and an email address for many of us. Yeah, that's it. 229 00:18:44,812 --> 00:18:47,792 Hello. Yeah. OK, so yeah. 230 00:18:49,152 --> 00:18:55,192 I'm Albert, and I'm here to report on the Katie Free Qt Foundation Working Group 231 00:18:55,192 --> 00:18:57,412 and on the Freddie Qt Foundation. 232 00:18:57,992 --> 00:19:00,012 Two things very similar, not the same. 233 00:19:02,492 --> 00:19:03,872 So what do we do? 234 00:19:05,912 --> 00:19:10,712 It's a working group with a lot of people. 235 00:19:10,972 --> 00:19:16,552 So there's me and Olaf, which are the actual people, which which are part of 236 00:19:16,552 --> 00:19:21,572 the FreeQt KD Foundation, together with other two folks from the Qt group. 237 00:19:22,112 --> 00:19:28,832 And then there is Chris, David, AK, Frederick, Martin, and Victoria, which help us, 238 00:19:31,126 --> 00:19:35,546 Shape our communications with with the foundation right it's like we are good 239 00:19:35,546 --> 00:19:39,346 friends with the cute group But it's always when you're doing things at a more 240 00:19:39,346 --> 00:19:41,586 official level It's always a 241 00:19:41,586 --> 00:19:44,466 good thing to have your message not be hey dude. How are you doing right? 242 00:19:45,226 --> 00:19:47,606 It's it's better if you come across a bit more professional. 243 00:19:50,546 --> 00:19:56,186 So what did we do last year? We have a work a group in in matrix, 244 00:19:56,486 --> 00:20:01,286 and we had a few discussions there Nothing super important. 245 00:20:01,406 --> 00:20:04,886 We have a few live calls on meetkd.org. 246 00:20:06,406 --> 00:20:10,146 I think we didn't have many this year. That's a good thing. Not many things 247 00:20:10,146 --> 00:20:13,046 happened. So we didn't have to do many calls. 248 00:20:15,346 --> 00:20:22,646 We have not met yet formally with the foundation. So with the Qt group people, 249 00:20:22,846 --> 00:20:28,946 the four of us haven't met yet at the time of writing and not at the time of today either. 250 00:20:29,386 --> 00:20:33,606 So this is something we're going to do this year at some point. 251 00:20:33,666 --> 00:20:40,406 We have to meet and approve the taxes and all those boring things that foundations do. 252 00:20:41,186 --> 00:20:46,006 We had an informal talk on the Qt Code Editor Summit last year and also this year. 253 00:20:46,086 --> 00:20:49,546 But this was like two days ago, so it didn't make it. 254 00:20:49,886 --> 00:20:51,826 Into the slides. 255 00:20:54,426 --> 00:20:58,266 Lessons learned. So yeah, we're in good relations with them. 256 00:21:00,506 --> 00:21:03,926 No news is good news, right? So the foundation, like the Free KDE Qt foundation 257 00:21:03,926 --> 00:21:07,846 is a foundation that exists for when bad shit happens. 258 00:21:08,026 --> 00:21:10,346 So no bad shit has been happening, so that's good. 259 00:21:12,406 --> 00:21:16,766 The working group continues to be a great help for both me and Olaf, 260 00:21:16,926 --> 00:21:20,486 which are the official people on the foundation. 261 00:21:21,126 --> 00:21:23,626 So yeah, it's great that we have this working group. 262 00:21:24,546 --> 00:21:30,306 We have increased collaboration at the technical level between KDE and Qt group. 263 00:21:30,526 --> 00:21:35,666 So not something we do at all, but there's more people from KDE contributing, 264 00:21:36,186 --> 00:21:42,706 to Qt, which is a good thing, because the more communication, the less bad blood. 265 00:21:42,946 --> 00:21:46,486 So no, they did that. No, yeah. OK. Done. If you talk to people, 266 00:21:46,626 --> 00:21:50,006 you realize we're all friends. So yeah, that's good. 267 00:21:52,186 --> 00:21:57,586 Obstacles during the year. We had a very big obstacle, which is we lost access to our bank account. 268 00:21:58,146 --> 00:22:03,446 The foundation has a bank account. It got blocked because of reasons. 269 00:22:04,966 --> 00:22:08,786 If you want to pay me a beer, I will explain you what happened. 270 00:22:09,006 --> 00:22:12,606 But it's like, well, there was churn in the foundation. There was churn in the bank. 271 00:22:12,726 --> 00:22:18,346 There was churn in the company people. and some of the messages that the bank 272 00:22:18,346 --> 00:22:20,846 sent, we didn't see them, and blah, blah, blah. 273 00:22:21,719 --> 00:22:27,359 So yeah, we're working on getting access back. That was what we wrote in July. 274 00:22:28,639 --> 00:22:34,959 An update is that the bank account is not blocked anymore, which is a good thing. 275 00:22:35,459 --> 00:22:39,759 We don't have access to it yet, which is not a great thing. But we're halfway 276 00:22:39,759 --> 00:22:42,779 in the middle of resolving the thing. 277 00:22:43,459 --> 00:22:46,519 I mean, the main problem is the foundation is set up in Norway, 278 00:22:46,759 --> 00:22:50,279 but none of the people from the foundation live in Norway nowadays. 279 00:22:50,279 --> 00:22:56,539 I'm in Barcelona, the cute people are in Finland, and Olaf is somewhere in Germany, I think. 280 00:22:56,659 --> 00:23:00,039 So when you have to go physically somewhere and it's far away, 281 00:23:00,239 --> 00:23:02,399 not so easy. But we'll get it fixed. 282 00:23:04,899 --> 00:23:09,419 Where we need help. I mean, if you could live in Norway, that would be amazing. 283 00:23:11,299 --> 00:23:15,319 But you're not going to change your place of living just to help us. 284 00:23:15,459 --> 00:23:17,159 So yeah, we didn't add that to the slides. 285 00:23:18,139 --> 00:23:21,739 But yeah, just continue being what you're doing, right? 286 00:23:21,859 --> 00:23:27,959 Continue building good relationships with, yeah, it's not the kid company anymore. It's the kid group. 287 00:23:28,899 --> 00:23:34,899 But yeah, talk to them. You don't have to even pretend you're part of the working group or not. 288 00:23:35,039 --> 00:23:39,099 Just be nice people and say, hey, I'm ComKD, and I want to help. 289 00:23:40,399 --> 00:23:43,599 Do that. You're doing it. It's great. So yeah, keep doing that. 290 00:23:44,119 --> 00:23:46,739 And I think that was my, no, there's more slides. Right, OK. 291 00:23:47,979 --> 00:23:52,739 Key goals for the next year, yeah, just basically what I said, right? 292 00:23:53,339 --> 00:23:57,079 Keep doing what you're doing and fixing the bank account. This is really important. 293 00:23:58,059 --> 00:24:01,039 I'm the chairman of the foundation. I don't want to go to jail just because 294 00:24:01,039 --> 00:24:06,199 we didn't present the taxes on time. So eventually, this needs to be fixed. 295 00:24:07,839 --> 00:24:13,479 And yeah, talk to us. What do we do? So if you're interested in Qt licensing, talk to us. 296 00:24:13,539 --> 00:24:17,259 If you're basically anything related to Qt, right? So talk to us. 297 00:24:19,972 --> 00:24:22,512 Who's here. It's basically only me and David Redondo, I think. 298 00:24:23,152 --> 00:24:26,692 But otherwise, we have a mailing list and there's a matrix IRC. 299 00:24:26,872 --> 00:24:31,912 Just, yeah, you find the name of the people here and talk to us, 300 00:24:32,012 --> 00:24:34,092 right? Oh, Victoria's here. Sorry, forgot about you. 301 00:24:35,332 --> 00:24:38,752 So, yeah, talk to us. And then this is. 302 00:24:47,952 --> 00:24:52,632 Thank you. Hopefully I didn't get this too long, but we'll see how we go. 303 00:24:54,672 --> 00:25:01,052 So what have we been doing? Well, continuous integration basically being the rock star of this year. 304 00:25:01,872 --> 00:25:08,192 Lots going on. Previously we had some issues where if you did a craft build, it would hit WebEngine. 305 00:25:08,752 --> 00:25:11,672 Web engine likes memory likes lots of memory 306 00:25:11,672 --> 00:25:14,912 and it would cause an out of memory era would 307 00:25:14,912 --> 00:25:18,832 crash vms cause lots of issues so we introduced some new high memory workers 308 00:25:18,832 --> 00:25:25,792 they have 128 gigs of ram so web engine build issues no more windows and vbc 309 00:25:25,792 --> 00:25:30,452 builds don't crash anymore and life is good we also introduced the notary service 310 00:25:30,452 --> 00:25:34,152 which the board was kind enough to fund that's what ingo we've spent this time on. 311 00:25:34,392 --> 00:25:39,312 So we now have all of our signing stuff for Windows, for Mac, 312 00:25:39,592 --> 00:25:45,132 for flat packs, the website deployments, all that other fun stuff is done using the notary service. 313 00:25:45,652 --> 00:25:50,592 It keeps the signing keys away from your CI jobs, but still lets the CI jobs 314 00:25:50,592 --> 00:25:53,832 have things done that need signing or privilege. 315 00:25:54,472 --> 00:26:00,472 Really good way of separating secure stuff you need to keep private from general 316 00:26:00,472 --> 00:26:02,392 CI stuff because the builders can't be trusted. 317 00:26:02,712 --> 00:26:04,752 Those builders run everyone's jobs. 318 00:26:05,212 --> 00:26:09,552 Anyone random can register an account, log in, essentially start running CI 319 00:26:09,552 --> 00:26:12,952 builds on them. They can't be trusted. The keys can never go anywhere near them. 320 00:26:14,571 --> 00:26:19,471 Which is one of the big problems with the binary factory. Those signing keys were on the builders. 321 00:26:20,311 --> 00:26:26,231 No more. The binary factory is now gone, dead, finished, shut down and gone. 322 00:26:26,551 --> 00:26:30,931 Very happy about that. Jenkins was a bit of a nightmare, but it's gone now. 323 00:26:31,911 --> 00:26:35,791 FreeBSD builds. They transitioned to running as Podman containers. 324 00:26:36,391 --> 00:26:42,451 That involved doing a bit of work with upstream. Patches went into two different 325 00:26:42,451 --> 00:26:43,811 bits of FreeBSD, I believe. 326 00:26:43,811 --> 00:26:46,531 I can't remember how many I had to do I think it was two or three 327 00:26:46,531 --> 00:26:50,091 yes GitLab and it was Podman itself so 328 00:26:50,091 --> 00:26:52,891 now all the free BSD builds you've noticed don't fall 329 00:26:52,891 --> 00:26:55,871 over anywhere near as much as they used to they now just 330 00:26:55,871 --> 00:26:58,931 run and work reliably although it 331 00:26:58,931 --> 00:27:01,691 wasn't perfect KDevelop does some 332 00:27:01,691 --> 00:27:04,631 really weird things in their tests and they still manage to 333 00:27:04,631 --> 00:27:09,731 hang the processes with what HTOP shows as a T and eventually means you have 334 00:27:09,731 --> 00:27:14,171 to rebuild reboot the worker apparently even containerization can't save us 335 00:27:14,171 --> 00:27:18,571 from everything and we also had some first steps towards adding support for 336 00:27:18,571 --> 00:27:23,531 alpine or musel based builds which i understand helps with a bunch of embedded stuff, 337 00:27:24,311 --> 00:27:28,531 and there was a huge amount of planning and research towards planning towards vm based builds, 338 00:27:29,191 --> 00:27:32,091 which we essentially need for snaps you can't build 339 00:27:32,091 --> 00:27:37,131 snaps in anything other than a vm if you try and put any kind of container around 340 00:27:37,131 --> 00:27:41,391 the snap build process it just doesn't work it blows up horribly and the same 341 00:27:41,391 --> 00:27:45,731 thing happens with flat pack you can sort of hack around it but it doesn't work 342 00:27:45,731 --> 00:27:50,471 very well and you certainly can't run the resulting flat pack so we're getting closer towards that. 343 00:27:51,291 --> 00:27:55,731 You might think it's easy but it's not all the kind of existing stuff that sits 344 00:27:55,731 --> 00:28:01,031 out there is designed around public cloud usage so your google cloud your aws your digital ocean. 345 00:28:02,391 --> 00:28:07,991 Or your google one we don't have that and of course there was also a lot of 346 00:28:07,991 --> 00:28:10,931 queries from and various developers around CI jobs. 347 00:28:11,851 --> 00:28:15,051 And then we had a whole bunch of other stuff regarding the general infrastructure. 348 00:28:15,511 --> 00:28:19,531 We replaced our GitLab server. Previously, it was a container running on one 349 00:28:19,531 --> 00:28:24,191 of our servers, but GitLab kind of outgrew that. It's now sitting on its own iron. 350 00:28:24,751 --> 00:28:28,131 It's been working pretty well. We've been seeing some overload issues lately. 351 00:28:28,211 --> 00:28:29,471 I've seen people complaining about it. 352 00:28:29,751 --> 00:28:32,911 I'm keeping an eye on it. It looks like we've got a bunch of bots that are like 353 00:28:32,911 --> 00:28:35,011 spidering it, probably for AI stuff. 354 00:28:36,011 --> 00:28:39,491 I've been blocking them. I whacked a Google IP range the other day. 355 00:28:39,591 --> 00:28:41,751 It was Google themselves indexing us, interestingly. 356 00:28:42,591 --> 00:28:47,231 We migrated to DNS control along with CloudNS managed DNSSEC. 357 00:28:47,771 --> 00:28:52,371 Previously, we had an awful setup with Bind and DNSSEC and occasionally Bind 358 00:28:52,371 --> 00:28:56,131 would get confused and I'd have to update the DNSSEC keys by hand. 359 00:28:56,491 --> 00:28:59,991 It was all kind of awful and fiddly and setting new domains was a real pain. 360 00:29:00,431 --> 00:29:05,251 DNS control and CloudNS makes it an absolute breeze. It means we don't have 361 00:29:05,251 --> 00:29:10,591 to have a DNS set keys sitting on one of our servers that was getting old and 362 00:29:10,591 --> 00:29:13,691 unmaintained and was an out of date release of Debian anyway. 363 00:29:15,310 --> 00:29:19,350 We rolled out a release keyring, which means now for those of you who are distributions 364 00:29:19,350 --> 00:29:22,810 going, where do I find a contributor's GPG key? 365 00:29:23,290 --> 00:29:25,690 There's a Git repository you can go to. They should all be in there. 366 00:29:26,470 --> 00:29:29,610 If you are someone who independently releases your own software, 367 00:29:29,870 --> 00:29:31,670 please make sure your key is in there. 368 00:29:31,910 --> 00:29:35,850 It's at sysadmin slash release dash keyring on GitLab. 369 00:29:36,270 --> 00:29:41,870 We retired Civi's ERM. And there's a bunch of other CMS instances that are in 370 00:29:41,870 --> 00:29:43,270 the process of being retired as well. 371 00:29:43,850 --> 00:29:47,430 Crit has moved towards being a Hugo-based site now, and I believe Kdenlive is 372 00:29:47,430 --> 00:29:49,950 starting to move slowly but surely down that road. 373 00:29:50,170 --> 00:29:52,610 So even WordPress is going to be extinct soon. 374 00:29:52,970 --> 00:29:58,070 I think we've only got two Drupal 7 instances left. I'll be happy to see the back of those. 375 00:29:58,750 --> 00:30:03,930 And we also went through the process of registering with Microsoft to be able 376 00:30:03,930 --> 00:30:05,870 to do a bunch of Office 365 integration. 377 00:30:06,530 --> 00:30:10,030 They are so much easier to deal with than all of the other lot. 378 00:30:11,410 --> 00:30:14,470 Hats out to the people at Microsoft software make that life easy because the 379 00:30:14,470 --> 00:30:17,590 others are a nightmare and there's been a quite a bit of significant 380 00:30:17,590 --> 00:30:21,830 work put into planning for a new infrastructure we're looking at moving away 381 00:30:21,830 --> 00:30:28,970 from LXC based containers on bare metal that we do now towards using uh Proxmox 382 00:30:28,970 --> 00:30:34,250 hypervisors and a cluster to make lives a bit easier because a lot of software 383 00:30:34,250 --> 00:30:36,390 these days demands being docker, 384 00:30:37,190 --> 00:30:41,210 essentially demands being its own VM even the likes of discourse you think you 385 00:30:41,210 --> 00:30:45,650 can have multiple discourse instances on the same server? Nah, it's not compatible. 386 00:30:48,060 --> 00:30:52,720 Key goals and plans for the coming year. Got quite a bit on. 387 00:30:53,120 --> 00:30:57,260 I do want to finally retire Fabricator. The only thing left in there now is tasks. 388 00:30:58,200 --> 00:31:02,480 Get that over to GitLab, then we can get rid of that. For the curious fact for 389 00:31:02,480 --> 00:31:05,600 the people who aren't aware of it, the Fabricator database is a couple hundred 390 00:31:05,600 --> 00:31:08,280 gigabytes because it's got a copy of ESPN in it. 391 00:31:08,540 --> 00:31:10,840 And I'd really like to get rid of it because if something happens, 392 00:31:11,100 --> 00:31:14,800 restoring from backups will be near and impossible. 393 00:31:15,100 --> 00:31:17,800 I don't want to even think about it. i want to start 394 00:31:17,800 --> 00:31:20,560 provisioning the new infrastructure and starting to migrate all our 395 00:31:20,560 --> 00:31:23,240 services over to it consolidating a bunch 396 00:31:23,240 --> 00:31:26,500 of stuff getting rid of the old servers moving towards current 397 00:31:26,500 --> 00:31:29,840 and update lts versions we've got a mixture of 398 00:31:29,840 --> 00:31:33,040 various 2204 2004 i think there's some 1804 out 399 00:31:33,040 --> 00:31:35,640 there as well unless you're talking about fabricator which is on 400 00:31:35,640 --> 00:31:38,660 1604 and moving continuous 401 00:31:38,660 --> 00:31:41,980 integration over to being vm based which is 402 00:31:41,980 --> 00:31:44,780 easier said than done i can give a whole talk on that one 403 00:31:44,780 --> 00:31:48,060 that will be we'll see how we go with that and 404 00:31:48,060 --> 00:31:51,760 we'll also be looking to migrate away from digital ocean our 405 00:31:51,760 --> 00:31:54,920 cluster will take over the duties of hosting the stuff that's currently there 406 00:31:54,920 --> 00:31:58,400 there's not a huge amount of stuff there thankfully but we'll see how we go 407 00:31:58,400 --> 00:32:02,540 oh and there's also the email infrastructure that is quite old and decrepit 408 00:32:02,540 --> 00:32:07,100 at this point we're on mailman 2 still which is basically unsupported likely 409 00:32:07,100 --> 00:32:11,100 looking to move to mailman 3 there and changing for other bits and pieces. 410 00:32:13,800 --> 00:32:17,980 The contact us like kind of speaks for itself you know where to find us and 411 00:32:17,980 --> 00:32:21,700 you can certainly know where to find me because i'll be around this week but uh any questions.