Matt (iotapi322) ❖
2.9K posts

Matt (iotapi322) ❖
@iotapi322
https://t.co/T7Ggfc7XXO pool operator 15 years of embedded C / linux kernel dev / DOCSIS dev 10 years of config management, 5 years as a pool operator.
Roswell, Ga. Katılım Şubat 2011
294 Takip Edilen362 Takipçiler
Matt (iotapi322) ❖ retweetledi

This is going to be more fun than watching Trump troll Hillary.
Sam Altman@sama
homeboy you're the one sellling public market investors on short-term space datacenters
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@RedFoxCrypto @Schnitzel I haven’t flashed my s19j pro yet , but I’m excited to try it out…
Except all the solar power is going to GPU’s right now.
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@Schnitzel @iotapi322 Yes! I was just considering building this myself for my own home.
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Matt (iotapi322) ❖ retweetledi

Open source mining firmware + AI = unstoppable. ⚡
For years, people have tried to chase excess solar power with bitcoin miners. Stock firmware doesn't let you adjust power at all. Third-party firmware was too slow, some even restarted mining every time you changed the target.
@256FOUNDATION & @ryankuester's Mujina just solved that.
In this video: what I've been building with @ry3t_official for their upcoming RY3T NOVA. ☀️
It tracks a power target anywhere from 1,000W to 3,000W, stepless, within seconds.
Connect it to your inverter or smart home and turn excess solar into sats, instead of selling it back to the grid for pennies.
NOVA scales to 1-3 miners, up to 9kW. 🔋
Learn more at nova.ry3t.com/en/ (CH and EU currently - interested other places? let me know)
A lot more coming in the next few weeks. Open source bitcoin mining hardware + software + AI is about to get very interesting. 🚀
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Matt (iotapi322) ❖ retweetledi

Grab your popcorn friends, its starting all over again. Sam vs. Elon: round 2

Sam Altman@sama
homeboy you're the one sellling public market investors on short-term space datacenters
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@ChikinChop SHHHHHHH - that's just for us select few to know! Seriously, nice call... That walk to the rideshare area is annoying.
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Matt (iotapi322) ❖ retweetledi

I co-founded pfSense. For the last year I've been building its successor.
If you run pfSense today, you already know the reasons to look around: development you can't influence, a CE edition that feels like an afterthought, FreeBSD driver roulette on modern hardware, and a config workflow where one bad apply on a remote box means a drive.
nfSensei is my answer. Built from scratch in Rust, on Linux, and designed around the things pfSense users actually complain about.
Your config.xml imports. There's an importer that reads your pfSense config, shows you exactly what maps over and what needs attention, then applies it. You don't start from zero.
You can't brick it from the couch. Changes stage as a candidate, diff before apply, validate through the real engines before anything is written, and auto-roll-back if you don't confirm in time. If a config ever fails at boot, the box falls back to the last good one on its own.
The hardware works. Linux base means modern NICs and drivers just work — and the fast path compiles your rules to XDP at 40Gbps.
Automation is native, not scraped. Everything the UI does is a documented API call — about 1,140 of them, with a built-in explorer. Your Ansible finally gets a real interface.
The VPNs are current. WireGuard, IPsec, Tailscale, and self-hosted mesh — your own control plane, your keys — plus post-quantum key exchange where it counts.
The experimental stuff has its own wing. Thirty-plus Labs features behind toggles: WAN bonding that fuses multiple cheap uplinks through a $5 VPS into one resilient pipe, per-flow SLA telemetry with tamper-evident audit chains, GeoDNS that steers traffic by live RTT and load, application-aware QoS, config push to a whole fleet of remote nodes, and an AI assistant on the box that reads your actual interfaces and logs using local models. Toggles are per-browser and can't touch your running config — flip things on, break them, tell me about it. Oh, and there is much more to mention here!
Self-hosted, on your hardware, no cloud account, no subscription.
It's NOW IN ACTIVE BETA (previously alpha) with about 40 testers, and bug reports typically get fixed in days. I want more people who know what pfSense does well and can tell me exactly where nfSensei falls short.
If you are interested in testing please email me: sullrich@gmail.com. Tell me about your pfSense setup and I'll get you access.
Note: Affiliates and employees of Netgate are not invited.
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Matt (iotapi322) ❖ retweetledi

#Incus 7.0.1 LTS is now out!
That's got quite a lot of bugfixes, security fixes and a whole bunch of backported enhancements.
discuss.linuxcontainers.org/t/incus-7-0-1-…
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@LegacyBTC We just need one thing... we need revenue on the coin
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@LegacyBTC I agree, yespower is a great low power cpu mining algo that can't be cheated.
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THE PERFECT COMBO: 8MB + 10 MINUTES
When you combine a heavy memory requirement with a 10-minute block time, you get the most fair system possible:
🎯 r=32 (8MB) limits HOW MANY threads a machine can run.
⏱️ 10 Minutes limits HOW FAST those threads can win.
🤝 Fair Competition: This isn't a sprint; it’s a marathon. In this race, your laptop is a world-class athlete because it doesn't need 100 cores to stay competitive.
#CPUMining #Yespower #Satoshi

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Matt (iotapi322) ❖ retweetledi

We hired a new VP of Engineering who is obsessed with agile methodology.
He called a meeting on his first day and said we need to transition to 2-week development sprints.
He wanted daily stand-ups, retrospective boards, and continuous deployment pipelines.
He wanted us to actually write new code.
I realized immediately that he was an existential threat to my lifestyle.
I let him finish his impassioned speech about workflow velocity.
Then I stood up, walked to the whiteboard, and drew a single horizontal line.
I told him agile sprints are a localized solution for a localized mindset.
I said our infrastructure operates on a Zenith Release Cycle.
He asked what a Zenith Release Cycle was.
I told him it's a holistic, macro-stabilization framework where we observe the system in a state of prolonged stasis.
By not touching the code for 18 months, we allow the legacy dependencies to organically settle.
I told him that deploying bi-weekly updates creates micro-abrasions in our database architecture.
I used the phrase chronological data scarring.
The CEO was in the room and audibly gasped.
He told the new VP that we can't risk chronological data scarring just to satisfy a trendy tech buzzword.
The VP looked at me like I'd just invented a new color.
He was completely paralyzed by the sheer density of my fabricated jargon.
He quietly agreed to adopt the Zenith Release Cycle.
We're officially scheduled to deploy our next update in the third quarter of 2027.
I spent the rest of the afternoon buying things I don't need on Amazon.
Agile is a disease invented by people who want to be punished for their salary.
I refuse to participate in my own suffering.
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Matt (iotapi322) ❖ retweetledi


@MiningRabid Correct this isn’t new we can not compete against data centers. We can have their scraps
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Pearl mining just got a reality check.
If B200 data centers can pull numbers like this, home GPU miners need to ask the hard question…
Are we still early, or already being priced out?
New video 👇
youtu.be/k1cmS1U6QmA

YouTube
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Matt (iotapi322) ❖ retweetledi

If buying isn't owning, then pirating isn't stealing.
That COMICBOOK Guy@Culture3ase
PlayStation is ending physical discs in the beginning of 2028.. Wow.
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Matt (iotapi322) ❖ retweetledi

A former Microsoft engineer rebuilt Notepad into 2.5 kilobytes.
That’s smaller than the icon Microsoft uses for Notepad.
It’s free, it’s on GitHub, and it opens the instant you tap it.
@davepl1968 you’re a legend!
👇
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Matt (iotapi322) ❖ retweetledi








