From abb2b35225e7166b36592f6b8e01c5204866cb13 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Valentin Knabel Date: Tue, 3 Feb 2026 15:53:26 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] fix: link Co-authored-by: Alexander Pilz --- blog/2026/02-fosdem-recap/index.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/blog/2026/02-fosdem-recap/index.md b/blog/2026/02-fosdem-recap/index.md index 53f8baf..b92d390 100644 --- a/blog/2026/02-fosdem-recap/index.md +++ b/blog/2026/02-fosdem-recap/index.md @@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ Theoretically, yes. Theoretically, you can do a lot of things. 🤓 metal-stack is definitely classified as data center technology and installing this at home is kind of overkill. The bigger your environment gets, the more value you can get from metal-stack. It enables a small team of just a few people to manage thousands of servers. Maybe consider the company you work for to use metal-stack, as it fits their needs more likely than at home. -However, for educational purposes, like learning about networking, booting Linux, switches and so on, metal-stack might be a perfect playground for that. Specifically, (containerlab)[https://containerlab.dev/] turned out to be a really cool project to test out ideas regarding network topologies and using BGP in the data center. This is used in our virtual lab, called the [mini-lab](https://github.com/metal-stack/mini-lab), too. +However, for educational purposes, like learning about networking, booting Linux, switches and so on, metal-stack might be a perfect playground for that. Specifically, [containerlab](https://containerlab.dev/) turned out to be a really cool project to test out ideas regarding network topologies and using BGP in the data center. This is used in our virtual lab, called the [mini-lab](https://github.com/metal-stack/mini-lab), too. ### **When did you start?**