Websites
Shop site demos—entertainer layouts, merchandising crew, bakery, bar, and more. Open the list and pick a live sample page.
Samples and installable stacks we set up for shops—websites, signage, where your site lives, and the open tools on your LAN. Pick a card to open a live sample or vendor demo.
Signage, backups, and the same open tools we install at home—on hardware you keep, not another monthly dashboard.
Shop site demos—entertainer layouts, merchandising crew, bakery, bar, and more. Open the list and pick a live sample page.
Menus and specials on a bar TV, or a month-at-a-glance board in the office—on hardware you already own, isolated from your payment network.
Year-one sketch: monthly cloud VPS rent vs a small PC you own in your building—backups, updates, and who controls the stack.
Cloud storage rent sneaks up over time. Compare subscription storage against buying a small PC or drive once and keeping home backups on your own shelf.
Month-at-a-glance on the TV—fictional family, demo only. Same wall-display stack as our shop signage work.
Who brought in money vs what housing, food, and clothes cost them—year-end stats like a video game score screen. Fictional family, saves in your browser.
Open-source tools we install on a shelf in the back office or back room—automation, DNS hygiene, and media libraries you control.
The same kinds of boxes we set up for shops—scaled for family Wi‑Fi, photos, and media at home.
Home Assistant—open-source automation with local control, dashboards on a tablet, lights, sensors, cameras. Cloud is optional.
Great for a shop floor tablet (open sign, back-room temps) or a simple back-office dashboard—add what you need, skip the rest. We can stand up a Pi-class or small PC setup and leave plain-language docs for you or the next tech.
The usual starting point for a calmer smart home: one app, rules that stay on your LAN, and fewer mystery toggles in someone else’s app store.
Pi-hole—network-wide DNS filtering, open source, runs on your hardware. Not a full security product, but a practical layer against noisy domains and sketchy redirects.
Often deployed on guest Wi‑Fi so customers get cleaner browsing and you get fewer “wrong click” headaches—without another SaaS bill for basic DNS hygiene.
Same box, family Wi‑Fi: fewer garbage domains on kids’ laptops and fewer “fat finger” landing pages on the guest network when friends visit.
Jellyfin is open-source media streaming that runs on hardware you own. Great for local video libraries without monthly platform lock-in.
Useful when you want in-house media displays or internal training clips on your own stack.
Useful when you want your own movie and TV library on the couch without subscription app sprawl.
Immich is an open-source photo/video library with search, albums, and mobile backup support on hardware you control.
Strong fit when teams need private photo archives and shared albums without another SaaS media vault.
Strong fit when family photos and videos should live on your own box, not only in someone else’s cloud.
Open Immich live demo → (Immich uses their shared demo login on the page)