Skip to main content

// WRITING

Thoughts & transmissions

Technical logs, architectural musings, and field notes from the digital trenches. Focused on DX, clean systems, and local infrastructure.

Focus opens instant search with live suggestions.
SORT_BY

Instant index

Search writing

Query

Live suggestions

esc close · arrows navigate · enter open

// FEATURED LATEST

The Invisible Burn: The Hidden Energy Developers Use (And Why DX is Not Optional)
DEVELOPER EXPERIENCE

The Invisible Burn: The Hidden Energy Developers Use (And Why DX is Not Optional)

Developers don't just "sit at computers." They build entire universes in their minds. Discover why the "mental load" of coding is the most undervalued resource in tech and how to protect it.

READ TRANSMISSION →

// LATEST DROPS

The Three-Layer Fortress: Building a Private Cloud with Coolify, Directus, and Cloudflare

10 MIN READ

Stop punching holes in your firewall and exposing your home IP to the world. In 2026, building a private cloud is no longer about managing complex VPNs or risky port forwarding; it’s about creating an invisible, outbound-only bridge to the internet. By combining Coolify for orchestration, Directus for data management, and Cloudflare Tunnels for Zero Trust connectivity, you can build a three-layer fortress that is accessible from any browser but completely hidden from scanners. This is the definitive guide to professional-grade self-hosting on your own hardware—no open ports required.

The Architectural Pivot: Why I Ditched Cloud Music for Local-First Audio

4 MIN READ

If your lighting doesn't depend on a monthly subscription, why should your music? After struggling with the "Cookie Nightmares" of YouTube Music and the "Subscription Tax" of Spotify, I realized that cloud audio is a fundamental failure point in the smart home. I pivoted to a Local-First architecture—storing high-quality files on my server's SSD and using Music Assistant to orchestrate a multi-room experience. No cloud, no lag, and zero recurring costs. Here is how I turned my music from a rented service into solid infrastructure.

The Death of the Smart App: Why My Home is Now a State Machine

4 MIN READ

We were promised the future, but we got a folder full of apps. For years, my "smart" home was actually a burden of distributed cognitive load—one app for the lights, another for the coffee, and a constant mental checklist of manual inputs. I decided to kill the apps and rebuild my home as a State Machine. By migrating Home Assistant to an old laptop and repurposing Surface tablets as dedicated interfaces, I've moved from "remote controlling" my life to living in a home that anticipates my needs.

// TOPIC EXPLORATION

// ALL TRANSMISSIONS

Enjoyed these thoughts?

I occasionally share updates on new projects and technical discoveries. Reach out if you want to go deeper on any of these threads.

Get in touch