Too much stuff!


There are basically two approaches to moving overseas. One is to pay for a

shipping container or portion thereof and move just about everything with you,

which is slow and expensive. The other is to ruthlessly pare your life down to

what you can fit in a suitcase and a backpack and start afresh in your new

destination. I have taken the latter option twice previously in my life. It is

most assuredly not easy, but I have always taken a degree of pride in being the

kind of preson who can do this. That pride is feeling rather hurt right now,

though.

One would think that this process would get easier with time, but actually I

have to say that paring down for this most recent move was the most difficult by

far. Maybe this is just a memory problem, where previous moves are less

horrific in my mind now years later than they were at time, but I don't think

so. Getting my life down to around ~30kg of stuff that fits in one suitcase and

one 35L hiking pack was really hard and painful and required me to get rid of

things I didn't really want to. Throughout the whole process I went to great

lengths to make sure that as little as possible went to waste and was rather

sold, donated or recycled where possible, and I'm pleased with how I did on that

front. But I'm not pleased with the idea that I'm not doing as well as I used

to at not accumulating things and at not getting attached to the things I do

accumulate.

Because the whole experience is still fresh in my mind, and because I know that

the move to Finland is highly unlikely to be permanent and this means that I'm

going to have to do this yet again further down the line, I have been thinking a

lot lately about how I want to live in Finland, with regard to physical

posesesions, and I might write about this at some point in the future.

Anyway, for fun, here is a list of all the computing devices I will be taking

with me to Finland, ranked in order of freedom, because why not?

and two RS-232 serial channels. It occupies first place here because literally

every byte of software this things run was hand-written in assembly by me. None

of the peripheral chips are smart enough to have firmware, so the contents of

the ROM chip are about all there is! Oh, well, I guess the CF card that acts

as a hard drive must have a controller in it, but this is still the least

proprietary computer I own by a large margin.

as media centre and a (slow, rarely used) file server. The 2 was an upgrade to

the 1 (I hoped the extra CPU grunt would speed up file transfers, as the FUSE

NTFS driver is quite heavy and I think it was the bottleneck with the 1B. The

1B has not been used much since, but I'd like to give it a new lease on life in

Finland, perhaps install NetBSD on it and use it as a SLIP gateway for the Z80

machine. The Rasperry Pis are relatively open hardware, but I think the

graphics processors still require binary blobs to run, so this is less free than

my Z80 but more free than everthing else.

pleasure. I have always been a big fan of the ThinkPad X series. It's running

Debian Jessie (stable), because I hate updating things and am perfectly happy

using years old software. I have to use non-free wireless drivers and I'm using

Lenovo's proprietary BIOS. However, the X220 is apparently pretty well

supported by Coreboot, so once I'm settled in in Finland I'm hoping I'll be able

to flash that. Then, freed from the BIOS whitelist, I can install a new wifi card

with libre drivers, and then this may jump to second place in the list.

about them, and every phone after my first has just been the most recent thing

that a friend of family member has discarded after upgrading to the latest shiny

thing. I really can't tell much difference between them, possibly because I

always immediatley install Cyanogenmod or thesedays LineageOS, and don't install

anything from Google, which means my phones don't do most of what I guess

mainstream users do with them anyway. LineageOS is open source, but I imagine

that all the highly integrated chips in modern smartphones are loaded with

proprietary firmware so this ranks below the ThinkPad.

Market or Play Store or whatever it's called these days. We bought this

exclusively to use when travelling on our most recent trip to Japan. Having

something larger than a phone with wifi, GPS and translation software is a

lifesaver when travelling, especially as it let us travel without laptops, keeping

things light. This has sat pretty much unused since we got back, and will

probably do so until our next overseas trip. This is less free than my phone,

but this doesn't bother me too much since I basically treat it as a

special-purpose appliance, don't use it for anything too sensitive, and in fact

have it turned off 99% of the time.

is actually an entirely proprietary system, but I have not listed it at the very

end of the list because I suspect that whatever copy protections Nintendo put in

place back in the day have now been extensively broken making it possible in

principle to run whatever code you like. As far as I know this is definitely

not the case for the final entry.

which I actually use as something vaguely resembling a general purpose computer.

It's also probably the single heaviest item we are taking with us. I find

myself retroactively questioning the wisdom of this decision, but we made it at

the time after looking at the cost of replacement in Finland and I suppose it

must have made sense at the time.

That's everything. It's not exactly super-minimalist, but aside from the PS4 it

would be entirely feasible and not even all that cumbersome to carry all of the

above simultaneously in a single bag, which I think is pretty neat. If forced

to rescue things from a burning building, I'd grab the X220 first because all my

data's on it, the Z80 second because it's one-of-a-kind and I sank a lot of

sweat, blood and tears into it, and let the rest burn without too much worry

because they're pretty much fungible.

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