Monthly Archives: January 2025

38th Chaos Communication Congress (38C3)

Over the last week of 2024, I attended a four-day conference in Hamburg, Germany. The conference was called the 38th Chaos Communication Congress, 38C3 for short. It is considered one of the largest hacker conferences in the world and is organized by the Chaos Computer Club.

The conference was attended by all sorts of people, or creatures as they were referred to at the conference. There were thousands of hackers (primarily IT, but also from other fields), activists, political dissidents and just people interested in learning. It was also a safe space for marginalized groups.

Naturally, taking pictures of other people was frowned upon. It was okay to take pictures of the venue without including anyone, so here are some of the only pictures I took during the four days.

Very pretty, eh?

Starting from day 1, the talks in the main rooms ran all the way until midnight, and sometimes even way past that. I remember attending a 1am talk on Net Neutrality and thinking to myself, this is what a nerd paradise feels like! Oh, and they also have a music club where I went and danced after that DRM talk.

Due to the countless tracks, it was impossible to make it for all the talks that I was interested in. Fortunately, most of the talks in the main rooms get streamed and uploaded for later viewing. For the live audience, there’s real time translation of talks, primarily from English to German and vice-versa.

The conference was highly political and isn’t shy about it, and I absolutely loved it. The theme of the congress for 2024 was “Illegal Instructions”, and it was a hint at what needs to be done in the face of rising fascism around the world.

While roughly half of the talks are in German, there was plenty for non-German speakers, and as a buddying German speaker, I didn’t feel excluded at all.

I was with some friends there, and going to conferences with friends is always super pleasant. It feels like university; checking up on each other, meeting for food or hanging out, but also doing things independently when we felt like. I’d recommend finding some people to take along to such events.

The topics covered in the conference weren’t limited to tech, but covered politics, social justice, climate and more. One of the more unexpected talks was around the philosophical aspects of AI.

Another interesting talk that I didn’t attend, but later discovered was titled “Sacrificing chickens correctly”.

Overall, one of the best conferences and events I’ve attended in my life and without a doubt be a regular in the future events. Highly recommend you give it a try if you have the option.

Thank you for reading!

Six whole years in Berlin

Happy new year!

Time flies. It feels like just a few weeks ago that I arrived in a cold grey Berlin for the first time, having lost a suitcase. But it was 2,192 days ago.

The day I arrived here wasn’t my best, and the next few weren’t much better either. But eventually, things worked out and the city really grew on me. Let me rephrase. Cities don’t grow on people. It is the people, the experiences and the sense of belonging that makes us feel home.

A year before I moved to Berlin, I was living in Nahur, Mumbai trying to make sense of why one set of walls feel like home while the other just a place to sleep. What makes a home, home? Fortunately for me, the important lessons learned then were used time and again whenever I wanted to feel homely in this foreign city, in a foreign country.

This week I’m crowd sourcing some new year resolutions from my close friends inspired by Moxie, and trying to shape the year forward to the best of my abilities. It has been a busy week at work, since everyone is back from vacations. That, and catching up with people that I hadn’t see in sometime means I’m having a packed week.

But I still wanted to find some time to write this article. It is a way of snapshotting this moment in time. Lots of positive changes over the last couple of weeks including a visit to CCC Congress, Freiburg, reading books like Tuedays with Morrie and The Last Lecture and a lot of introspection.

The books and the introspection gave me a profound realization that the passage of time doesn’t stop, and it passes fast if we don’t keep moving, keep growing in life. Not only am I getting older, but so are the people around me. If there’s something I really want to do, now is a good time. I knew this, of course. I just had forgotten it lately.

Thank you for reading!