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Showing 1 - 9 of 9 signals
8:27

Describing Travel Platform Project and Market Collapse

rswfire describes a travel platform project that followed Pop Star, built on premium domain names like USA.com, London, Asia, Paris, and Berlin. The platform used a geography database powered by Yahoo's API and his custom Matrix Server CMS. **The operation spent $100,000 monthly on SEM campaigns** with ad groups for every city in their database, remaining profitable for several years until Google entered the market directly and began eating their traffic. rswfire explains he **predicted the market trajectory** and suggested pivoting to content-based approaches similar to Pop Star's community model, but lacked partner support for these changes. The platform eventually became unprofitable and died naturally. **He built the entire geography database himself** rather than purchasing existing solutions, creating hundreds of thousands of long-tail SEO pages with A/B testing for conversion optimization. After this project ended, rswfire returned to freelancing and **transitioned into the music industry**, working with a client for 7-10 years on music streaming and distribution services.

Jul 23, 2025 · 28% match
Free
9:55

Showcasing Entertainment Website Project from Freelance Partnership

rswfire presents the first video in a series documenting his work, focusing on an entertainment website project from a 10-year freelance partnership. He acknowledges difficulty with linear presentation but proceeds to demonstrate a locally-running version of the site via slideshow. The project was built using PHP, MySQL, and his custom CMS called Enet Wizard Matrix Server, which he developed from his teens and later made open source. The website featured comprehensive entertainment content including celebrity biographies, movie reviews, and TV show recaps. rswfire recruited and managed writers globally, implementing a revenue-sharing system with dashboards showing trending content and traffic sources. The site included a gamified point system where users could write reviews, rate content, and participate in monthly merchandise auctions using earned points. Notable features included celebrity love awards where users wrote letters to celebrities, with winners receiving custom CDs containing static websites of their letters. The site was populated through web scraping, APIs, and partnerships with entertainment sites including TV Guide. rswfire emphasizes the community-building aspect, describing it as a pre-social media gathering place focused on meaningful participation and reciprocity.

Jul 23, 2025 · 27% match
Free
16:08

Programming Career History and Freelance Reviews

rswfire presents a comprehensive overview of his programming career, beginning with early programming in sixth grade in the 1980s using GW Basic and Pascal. He describes creating early projects including a music education program and a Monopoly game that resulted in a cease and desist letter. He details the development of his "net wizard matrix server," one of the first content management systems he created. The transmission covers his freelance career, including work with major companies like Comcast on database and scheduling systems. He achieved top 10 status as an individual programmer on the Guru platform, working with 25 different employers on various projects ranging from simple fixes to data scraping and complex database work. The majority of the transmission involves reading through client reviews from his Guru profile, highlighting specific projects including pet certification websites, portrait studio scheduling systems, affiliate marketing tracking, Microsoft Access databases, and vehicle listing platforms. He emphasizes his communication style, speed of delivery, and post-project support. The video serves as a portfolio presentation intended for potential clients on Upwork, where he lacks the established reputation he built on Guru. He concludes by expressing hope to build a similar presence on the new platform.

Jul 23, 2025 · 26% match
Free
2:48

Recording Service Introduction Video for Upwork

Sam records a video introduction for potential clients on Upwork. He describes his current situation: 48 years old, living in an RV on the Oregon coast for two years, volunteering as a camp host for the US Forest Service and soon transitioning to a caretaker role in the Oregon Dunes. He outlines his programming background spanning decades, starting with GW Basic in sixth grade and progressing through Pascal, C, C++, Java, and PHP. He emphasizes his backend development expertise while noting he can create professional frontends. Sam describes himself as systems-oriented, pattern-focused, and detail-oriented, with capabilities in data work, networking, server building, and AI. He explicitly states he's not looking for work that will consume his life and seeks aligned projects with clients who need intelligent, systems-thinking support.

Sep 20, 2025 · 23% match
Free
3:19

Setting Up Upwork Profile for Freelance Transition

rswfire documents the process of creating an Upwork freelance profile after paying for membership. He describes using his own shower for the first time after cleaning it, then focuses on profile setup tasks. He shares existing statistics showing $4,000 in earnings from a previous 10-year employment relationship and reads a review he wrote for himself in April 2023 when initially attempting to join Upwork. The review describes his technical skills, project management experience, and role managing other developers. He outlines the challenge of having worked with only two clients over 20 years, making testimonials difficult to obtain since he hasn't contacted the first client in 5-7 years. He considers adding Park Service volunteering experience to his employment history and discusses various profile sections including portfolio, skills, and a new project catalog feature with fixed pricing. He notes Laravel developer opportunities on the platform and expresses intent to focus on AI field work while ensuring freelance work complements rather than dominates his life. Current profile title includes full stack developer, project manager, Laravel, Symphony, and VJs, with plans to add AI-related terms.

Jan 12, 2025 · 22% match
Free
8:43

Demonstrating Autonomy Infrastructure for Content Creators

rswfire presents a software infrastructure called 'autonomy' that he built over six months to process and organize video content. He demonstrates how the system imported his 800 YouTube videos and used AI to generate four types of analysis: surface, structure, patterns, and mirror. The surface analysis creates summaries, keywords, titles, and hashtags for content creators. He explains that YouTube's algorithm and design deliberately flatten creators and make old content unsearchable. His system addresses this by creating searchable catalogs on independent websites with features like timeline views and vector database clustering that finds content by semantic resonance rather than just keywords. The demonstration includes a subscription layer he built to gate access to deeper content analysis, moving away from YouTube's comment system which he describes as shallow and distorting. He mentions building this entire system under financial scarcity and offers the technology to other creators who might have more functional communities or funding support.

Oct 22, 2025 · 22% match
Free
13:00

Programmer Presents Career History While Walking to Ocean

rswfire records an unpolished video message while walking from a lagoon in a national forest to the ocean, presenting his programming career history as a pitch to potential clients. He describes living in an RV for over a year and volunteering for the Forest Service. **Career timeline includes:** starting programming in 6th grade in the 1980s, doing programming on paper in high school, building early content management systems, earning $72,000 on guru.com with 40+ glowing reviews, working as independent contractor for 10 years on popstar.com (entertainment platform with celebrity profiles, writer revenue-sharing program, auction system, and celebrity love awards), transitioning to travel industry work on Hotel.net and geographical domains, creating SEM campaigns with 100,000+ ad groups and millions of keywords generating $100,000+ monthly revenue until Google entered the market, then working 8-10 years managing projects for Serena.com including Arena music streaming service and Soundblock music distribution with blockchain royalty contracts. **Management experience:** supervised dozens of programmers over a decade, learning how rare his skill level is through hiring struggles. **Current status:** free agent looking for work after 18 months away from last client, occasionally helping with AI playlist optimization. He positions himself as pattern recognition specialist who sees programming as natural extension of this ability, emphasizes working with AI, and states requirements for project alignment with his lifestyle. **Video concludes** at ocean dunes where he compares himself to the ocean - expansive, deep, controlling environment and atmosphere, with rhythms and patterns, calling it his mirror.

Apr 17, 2025 · 21% match
Free
22:29

Rebuilding Freelance Career After Institutional Rejection

rswfire explains his transition back to freelancing after being rejected by Oregon State Parks. He walks through his technical background, showing previous work on popstar.com (celebrity database) and hotel.net (travel comparison platform) from his decade with World Media Group. He demonstrates his old Guru.com profile with $72,000 earned and 41 reviews, but notes the platform is now dead. He's now building reputation on Upwork with minimal history - just one transaction. He discusses the challenge of presenting 20 years of work with only two long-term clients, where much of the work isn't publicly visible. He reflects on systemic unsustainability and his belief that programming will be disrupted by AI. He wanted to become a park ranger to help people during coming destabilization, but discovered institutions focus on liability and control rather than helping. He expresses frustration that his audience won't provide reciprocal financial support despite sharing his life for two years, noting people will spend $20 on trivial YouTube questions but won't help when he lacks food.

Jul 23, 2025 · 20% match
Free