

This branded-alternative to LinkTree is used as a digital business card, providing my audience with a list of options to learn about myself and make contact. Contact: While it's awesome to build cool things, sometimes you just need a simple website tool for static content.Chartbrew (website): Similar to Backstage, the Chartbrew frontend is a separate process which I host on Vercel.Backstage (website): The Backstage Frontend is a separate process from the backend, so I opted to host it on Vercel.Chartbrew (server): Chartbrew is open-source reporting service which really makes it easy to visualize data.Backstage (server): Backstage is an open-source project from Spotify which enables teams to build developer portals and customize them in a way to aggregate data from all the various tools a team uses.
TWO PAGE SPREAD YACREADER IPHONE MANUAL

PiHole: PiHole is a DNS Sinkhole I added to reduce the number of ads and trackers served to devices on my local network.Traefik: Traefik acts as an ingress for my homelab, enabling me to route traffic to the other services I have running on the edge without overly exposing my Firewall with open ports.v: v encompasses all of my cloud computing services from a variety of different providers, including DigitalOcean, Vercel, and others.I use this zone to serve content primarily within my home, as well as services which are either experimental, or cost-prohibitive in the cloud. Knowhere.space: Knowhere is my edge-computing zone, with the DNS routing to a NAS server or Raspberry PIs within my home.Using Cloudflare's amazing DNS service, my Sandbox is spread across two domains: Below is the first architecture diagram I've produced, describing from a top level the services which make up my sandbox & how they're zoned or organized: As part of my effort to build out a comprehensive public documentation portal, over the weekend I set about starting a document to describe my Sandbox's Architecture. That work has resulted in a rather robust mixed-use sandbox. I've been busy this year executing my take on the #100DaysOfCode challenge by rebuilding a set of development skills that I can use to implement products using micro-services.
