How to Access and Watch FOSDEM 2026 Conference Recordings: A Complete Guide

From Putty P Hub, the free encyclopedia of technology

Overview

FOSDEM (Free and Open Source Software Developers' European Meeting) is one of the largest annual gatherings for open-source enthusiasts, developers, and contributors. The 2026 edition, held in Brussels, Belgium, featured hundreds of talks, workshops, and discussions covering everything from kernel development to community building. If you missed the live event – or want to rewatch a favourite session – you're in luck: the FOSDEM team has released all video recordings deemed “worth publishing” from FOSDEM 2026.

How to Access and Watch FOSDEM 2026 Conference Recordings: A Complete Guide
Source: lwn.net

This guide walks you through everything you need to know to find and watch these recordings. We'll cover the official sources, step‑by‑step instructions for accessing videos through different portals, common pitfalls, and tips to make the most of the archive. By the end, you'll be able to navigate the FOSDEM 2026 video collection like a pro.

Prerequisites

  • A modern web browser (Chrome, Firefox, Edge, or Safari – all work fine).
  • Stable internet connection – videos are streamed in high quality, so a connection of at least 5 Mbps is recommended for smooth playback.
  • Optional: a media player – if you prefer to download videos, you can use VLC, mpv, or any player that supports common formats (MP4, WebM).
  • Optional: an RSS reader – if you want to subscribe to updates from FOSDEM's video feed.

Step‑by‑Step Instructions

Method 1: Accessing Videos via Individual Schedule Pages

The most direct way to watch a specific talk is through its schedule entry. Here's how:

  1. Open the FOSDEM 2026 full schedule page.
  2. Browse or search for the talk you're interested in. Each entry includes the talk title, speaker, room, and time.
  3. Click on the talk title to go to its dedicated schedule page.
  4. On that page, look for a link labelled “Video” or “Watch”. It usually appears near the top or under the description.
  5. Click the link – the video will open in your browser's default video player, or you may be redirected to a streaming source.

If you prefer to browse talks by track or keyword, use the search box or filter options on the main schedule page.

Method 2: Browsing Videos Organised by Room

For a more systematic exploration, FOSDEM provides a room‑based directory at video.fosdem.org/2026. This is ideal if you want to see all talks from a particular track (e.g., “Main Track”, “Devroom”, “Lightning Talks”).

  1. Visit https://video.fosdem.org/2026/.
  2. You'll see a list of directories – each corresponds to a room (e.g., h1301/, janson/, k4401/).
  3. Click a room folder to see all videos recorded in that room, listed as .mp4 or .webm files.
  4. Click on a video file to stream it directly in your browser. Alternatively, right‑click and select “Save link as…” to download the file for offline viewing.

Tip: File names follow a pattern like fosdem-2026-{room}-{talk_id}.mp4. You can often match them to schedule entries using the talk ID.

Method 3: Using LWN's Conference Coverage

If you want expert commentary and summaries alongside the videos, check out LWN.net. Their team covered many FOSDEM 2026 talks and published articles that include links to the video recordings.

  1. Go to the LWN conference index page.
  2. Scroll through the list – each entry typically has a title, author, and a link to the LWN article.
  3. Open the article for a talk you're interested in. Inside the article, you'll find a direct link to the FOSDEM video (often high‑lighted as “Video recording” or “Watch now”).
  4. Click the link to watch the talk.

LWN articles also provide context, analysis, and sometimes a transcript – perfect if you want to understand the talk's key points quickly.

Method 4 (Bonus): Using the FOSDEM Companion App

While not officially supported for video playback, the FOSDEM companion app (available for Android and iOS) shows the schedule and may include links to recorded talks after the event. This can be convenient for mobile users.

Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

  • Mistake: Looking for videos before they are uploaded. Some talks may be missing if the speaker did not consent to recording or if technical issues occurred. The “worth publishing” filter means only complete, high‑quality recordings are included. Double‑check the schedule page for any note like “No video available”.
  • Mistake: Using outdated URLs. The official video archive uses the year “2026” in the folder structure. Make sure your bookmark points to video.fosdem.org/2026/, not /2025/ or /2024/.
  • Mistake: Expecting subtitles or captions. Most FOSDEM videos do not have built‑in subtitles. If you need them, check if a transcript is available in the LWN article or the talk's schedule page.
  • Mistake: Forgetting to use a proper video player. Some browsers may struggle with high‑bitrate streams. If playback stutters, try downloading the file and playing it locally with VLC.
  • Mistake: Assuming all videos are indexed by search engines. The directory listing at video.fosdem.org is not always crawled by Google. For hard‑to‑find talks, use the schedule search instead.

Summary

Accessing FOSDEM 2026 recordings is simple once you know the three main entry points: the official schedule pages, the room‑based directory at video.fosdem.org/2026/, and LWN's conference coverage. Each method gives you a different way to discover and watch talks. Avoid common pitfalls by verifying that the video is actually published, using the correct year in URLs, and downloading files if streaming is problematic. With this guide, you can dive into the wealth of open‑source knowledge from FOSDEM 2026 at your own pace.