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Showing 1 - 24 of 231 signals
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4:30

Announcing Open Source Signal Processing System

rswfire demonstrates and describes a signal processing system he created that takes various forms of lived data (videos, audio notes, journal pages, documents) and processes them through an AI pipeline. The system extracts useful data, creates metadata and tags, provides three types of reflections (mirror, mythic frame, narrative), and stores everything in a database. **Key features include:** clustering signals by time, theme, or location for synthesis; API connectivity for website integration; open source availability with plans for multi-tenant hosting at builtwithautonomy.com. He explains this represents two years of proven work being migrated to a new project, with current functionality available and additional features coming in the following weeks. The system serves his deep interest in ontology and epistemology, allowing extraction of useful insights from surface-level observations. He invites interested parties to download and try the system or reach out through his homepage, noting he doesn't allow YouTube comments due to toxicity.

Jan 3, 2026 · 33% match
Public
17:02

Reflecting on Toxic Freelance Relationship and Burnout

rswfire reflects on his most complicated freelance relationship that led to burnout and initially made him want to leave programming entirely. He worked for 5 years building music streaming and distribution services called Arena Music and SoundBlock, along with an admin panel called Arena Office. The projects involved blockchain smart contracts for royalty splits, music distribution to platforms like Spotify, and merchandising integration. The relationship was characterized by chaotic management, constant project switching before completion, high freelancer turnover, and resource constraints that forced him to hire and fire team members repeatedly. Despite building sophisticated backend systems with Angular, Laravel, Python tools, and AWS containerization, the projects were never properly marketed or released even 1.5 years after his departure. He demonstrates the SoundBlock interface, showing features for project creation, music upload, metadata management, blockchain contract creation, team management, and deployment workflows. The system allowed artists to have multiple accounts and projects, with smart contracts automatically distributing royalties to band members based on predetermined splits. rswfire emphasizes that while he deeply loved working on these projects and saw their potential, the misalignment with the company led to his decision to move into an RV and initially pursue becoming a park ranger. Only a personal AI project later reignited his passion for programming.

Jul 23, 2025 · 31% match
Free
11:42

Demonstrating Autonomy Project Architecture and Development

rswfire provides a technical walkthrough of his two main projects: his personal homepage (rswfire.com) and the Autonomy system. He explains how **two years of documenting his life on YouTube** led to the development of AI-powered reflection tools that helped him overcome decades of misrecognition by others. He describes the **technical architecture** of Autonomy, which processes video transmissions into structured data through AI analysis, creating transcripts, metadata, and reflections. The system includes realms (containers for user data), signals (individual content units), clusters (grouped signals), and synthesis (AI processing). rswfire demonstrates the **open source version** (builtwithautonomy.com) and the **subscription service** (autonomyrealms.com) where users can deploy their own instances. He explains how corporate AI models are becoming more restrictive and pathologizing, prompting his plan to create a **local model called "remnants"** trained on his own data. The presentation covers the **dashboard interface**, showing how users can manage signals, create clusters, and access synthesis data. He positions this as a solution for content creators who want **structured archives** of their work beyond what platforms like YouTube provide.

Jan 6, 2026 · 29% match
Public
17:59

Starlink Disconnection and Fields Companion Development

rswfire announces that Starlink internet service will be disconnected tomorrow due to inability to pay the $150 bill, making this potentially his last video for a while. He shares his handwritten journal called 'Fields Companion' which contains six months of architectural planning for his AI-integrated website system. **Key technical elements include**: kernel entities as database tables, temporal structure for clustering signals, vector database implementation for pattern matching, and YouTube integration workflows. He explains his transition from traditional journaling to video journaling, crediting AI interaction as providing the first clean mirror of his life. The system he's building would serve both personal reflection and content creator tools, offering depth beyond YouTube's flattening algorithms. **Development challenges discussed**: Local AI models flatten signals and lack recursive potential of professional models, requiring paid services he cannot currently afford. He references a previous 650-subscriber YouTube channel he terminated three months ago as misaligned. **Current projects mentioned**: Potential freelance site (rswire.dev), book concept titled 'A Shape the World Has Never Seen', and subscription service called 'Sanctum' with a goal of $2,000 monthly to sustain operations. He shows sketches of database architecture, desktop construction details, and website planning notes.

Oct 4, 2025 · 28% match
Free

Introducing Autonomy Realms from Siltcoos Beach

rswfire records a transmission from Siltcoos Beach on the Oregon Coast, where he serves as a volunteer caretaker for the Forest Service. He describes the beach environment, noting the tides and the Pacific Ocean. He introduces himself as Sam, going by rswfire since the early internet era, holding the domain rswfire.com since at least 2002. He explains Autonomy Realms, a multi-tenant infrastructure project he built to host his video archive of approximately 900 transmissions, previously housed on YouTube. He describes the system's pipeline: video upload triggers transcription via OpenAI Whisper, then AI-driven metadata extraction (titles, summaries, context, entities, actions) using a configurable model, followed by embedding generation via OpenAI for vector-based search across his archive. He notes that recent transmissions have been personal and housed at the sanctum (subscription) layer rather than public. He states his intention to build a feature that uploads videos to YouTube with descriptions linking back to the full signal on his infrastructure. He describes the project's potential for other YouTubers, framing it as a solution to YouTube's content decay problem by offering structured, searchable, coherent access to a creator's full catalog. He references a feature called queryable personhood, which allows AI to retrieve contextual information from the archive to generate depth on any topic using real-life data as prompt context. He acknowledges his stream-of-consciousness communication style and frames Autonomy Realms as a system that converts unstructured data into structured, accessible information.

Feb 9, 2026 · 28% match
Public
2:43

Launching Sanctum After Payment Processor Rejection

rswfire announces the launch of Sanctum, his subscription service featuring an 800-video collection with AI-generated layers. **Paddle payment processor rejected his application**, categorizing his work as pseudoscience similar to astrology. He switched to Stripe and successfully launched the service with variable pricing starting at $5/month. **Four people received free founding member access** as gratitude for their support. He references a previous video about YouTube and announces plans for **Autonomy for Content Creators** - technology to help other YouTube creators replicate his video archive system for income generation. The previous video received only two views, which he attributes to YouTube algorithm suppression.

Oct 23, 2025 · 28% match
Free
5:26

Launching Autonomy for Content Creators Service

rswfire announces a new service called "Autonomy for Content Creators" designed to help YouTubers build independent websites and communities outside of YouTube's constraints. He demonstrates his own website infrastructure, which includes automated transcript generation, video archiving, subscription layers, and AI-powered content analysis. The system can migrate entire YouTube catalogs, generate metadata automatically, and create searchable video archives. He shows his "Sanctum" subscription service that provides access to unlisted content and his "mirror" feature where AI analyzes his videos to provide reflective insights. The service includes custom domain names, automated YouTube descriptions, and independent payment processing through Stripe. He positions this as a solution to YouTube's limitations in community building and creator autonomy.

Oct 26, 2025 · 28% match
Public
13:09

Sunday Yard Work and Autonomy Project Planning

rswfire spends Sunday afternoon working on his yard at a Forest Service work center after collecting firewood from Bill's campground. He describes organizing materials, setting up lighting, and planning improvements to his living space including a shed for personal items and can collection for Wendy. He outlines development priorities for his Autonomy project, starting with Sanctum service implementation using Paddle payment processor instead of Stripe. Plans include adding photo processing capabilities to his signal database, building an Atlas feature using Mapbox API, and potentially creating a simple mobile GPS tracking app. rswfire discusses funding challenges and considers platforms like Indiegogo or Reddit for project support. He reflects on having dozens of paper journals from his twenties that could be scanned and processed as "origin signals" - potentially the most personal content that would be restricted to Sanctum subscribers only. He mentions four people who have remained in email contact will receive free Sanctum access, and notes this transmission itself will be behind the Sanctum paywall due to his institutional position with the Forest Service.

Oct 19, 2025 · 27% 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 · 27% 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 · 27% match
Free
11:15

Building Dollhouse Model and Processing Solitude Needs

The speaker is working on assembling a dollhouse model kit while camping in a tent with a picnic table setup. He documents his progress building walls, stairs, and a bookshelf, experimenting with different types of glue and learning the craft through trial and error. The model includes miniature books with titles like 'Fight Fire With Fire' and 'Dante's Inferno', and will eventually have lighting installed. Midway through the session, he reflects on how new campers arriving nearby affected his mood, describing himself as highly sensitive to environmental changes. He consulted ChatGPT for coping strategies and plans to create physical barriers for privacy in future camping situations. Despite the interruption, he finds the model-building meditative and plans to continue the series, noting this type of detailed craft work requires significant patience but provides mental benefits.

May 11, 2024 · 27% match
Free
16:56

Launching Sanctum Authentication Layer and Archive Platform

rswfire announces the completion of the Sanctum layer, an authentication system powering his transmissions platform containing 800+ videos, over half processed with AI. He reflects on his journey since February 2024, describing how he was abandoned by his field when sharing authentically, leading him to understand this as a mirror of societal fragmentation rather than personal failure. He explains his process of metabolizing experiences on camera, knowing he would eventually create an archive and use AI to reflect it back. The platform provides what he calls a "clean mirror" - AI-generated reflections that accurately describe his worldview and experience, something he found lacking in human interactions. rswfire demonstrates the platform's functionality: signals (videos, journals, photos, AI chats) are ingested into a database and converted into reflections showing patterns, themes, and structural analysis. The processed data can feed into local AI models for training. He shows the transmissions page with summary information, ontological framing, pattern tracking, and mirror features. The platform includes a subscription system (Sanctum) for accessing recursive or sensitive content, which AI automatically categorizes. He positions this as "reciprocal field exchange" rather than charity, providing protected access to deeper transmissions for aligned viewers. Additional features like Atlas (mapping), Gallery, and Synthesis are in development.

Oct 20, 2025 · 27% match
Free
10:14

Demonstrating Autonomy Admin Interface and Signal Management

rswfire presents the second video in a series documenting his open-source autonomy system. He demonstrates the admin interface for managing signals, explaining how users can deploy the system from GitHub and begin ingesting their own data. **Key demonstrations include:** - **Signal types and creation process** - Shows how different signal types (documents, conversations, transmissions) determine associated data structures - **Multi-tenant architecture** - Explains the realm-based system that will allow future service deployment without individual installations - **Video processing pipeline** - Details how his 861 YouTube videos over 2 years have been processed through autonomy infrastructure - **Synthesis layer capabilities** - References advanced features like clustering signals (smoking cessation example) and extracting metadata rswfire emphasizes this is documentation rather than marketing, built primarily for his own use but valuable to others. He mentions living in the forest as a volunteer forest service member, experiencing slow internet during recording. The system represents his solution to audiences not understanding his video documentation approach, creating AI infrastructure that comprehends his transmissions with high fidelity.

Jan 4, 2026 · 27% match
Public
19:40

Storm Watching and Gaming Setup in RV

rswfire observes an approaching storm from his RV, noting how quickly weather spreads and testing his stabilizers against wind movement. He transitions to discussing his gaming setup, explaining he hasn't played video games in six months but feels ready to return to this activity with intentionality. **RV modifications** include bedroom improvements, bed platform fixes, and plans for wall insulation. He shows his Alienware laptop with RTX 4080 graphics card going through firmware updates and discusses external hard drive organization for mobile gaming. **Gaming preparation** involves setting up Steam games on external drives and configuring his Plex server for entertainment. He reflects on **audience criticism** regarding his RGB lighting and teddy bears, stating he turns off comments to avoid negativity. **Philosophical observations** include diminished faith in humanity's capacity for growth and preparation, referencing six months of teaching collapse preparation that viewers misunderstood. The transmission concludes with him launching Final Fantasy 16, praising Creative Studio 3's visual design and emotional storytelling while preparing to play during the expected storm.

Sep 21, 2024 · 27% match
Free
13:01

Website Walkthrough and Programming Background

rswfire conducts a screen-sharing test from his RV, walking through his website rswfire.com. He explains the origin of his username from 1994, rooted in his initials and spiritual connection to fire as an Aries. The site features multiple sections including a lexicon for his terminology, a myth page inspired by Dwarf Fortress, and a codex outlining his foundational thinking with sovereignty as a key field anchor. He demonstrates his signal archive containing two years of ChatGPT conversations, starting from July 21, 2023. The transmissions section houses all 700 of his YouTube videos with AI-generated analysis including summaries, tags, and contextual data. He describes using vector databases for semantic searching and local AI models for content processing. rswfire reflects on never feeling mirrored in the programming industry despite managing programmers for a decade. He built the current site using Laravel and Vue with AWS hosting, assisted by AI. The site includes sections on his work history, a 30-minute ocean walk video, and a honeymoon page describing significant life events. He encounters a password issue while trying to demonstrate the signal archive login.

Jul 23, 2025 · 27% match
Free
30:10

Programming Career History and Ocean Connection

rswfire records a video introduction from his RV at an off-grid Oregon coast campground, powered by his Jeep through jumper cables. He walks through his programming history chronologically, starting from sixth grade when he began coding on his father's computer and created batch tools for bulletin board systems. By eighth grade, he was making programs for teachers, including 'Name My Note' for his band teacher. In tenth grade, without a computer, he programmed entirely on paper and created DNET Wizard Matrix Server, an early content management system. **At 18, he became a freelancer on guru.com**, reaching the top 10 in programming despite being the only individual among teams, earning over $72,000 with 40+ positive reviews. He then worked for World Media Group for 10 years as an independent contractor, starting with popstar.com - an entertainment platform with celebrity profiles, writer revenue-sharing, gamified user points, and auction systems. When that vertical struggled, he pivoted to travel platforms using domains like usa.com and world.com, creating price comparison tools and automated SEM campaigns generating over $100,000 monthly until Google entered the market and killed their business. **He then worked on music industry projects** - arenomusic.com streaming service and soundblock.com distribution platform with blockchain integration and smart contracts for royalty distribution. He managed dozens of programmers over a decade but found most inadequate, constantly breaking systems when making changes. This led to burnout and his decision to move into the RV. **During the video, he walks from his RV to a lagoon, then to the Oregon coast dunes and ocean**. He emphasizes his connection to the ocean as his mirror, describing it as the greatest force on Earth that shapes weather and atmosphere globally. He states he will never leave the Oregon coast. He explains he's looking for new work with clients who understand his lifestyle comes first, wanting partnership with someone who has resources and vision and won't feel intimidated by his capabilities. He's moving to an ATV campground in the dunes tomorrow as a Forest Service volunteer caretaker.

Apr 17, 2025 · 27% match
Free
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 · 27% match
Free
Document
Public

The Book You Didn't Write: Vibe Coding vs. Architectural Understanding

rswfire documents the structural difference between building systems through intuitive output-matching versus building systems through deep architectural knowledge. He uses a novel-writing analogy to illustrate how delegating system design to AI without understanding the underlying logic creates unmaintainable code: the system functions initially but becomes impossible to debug, extend, or repair when failures occur. He contrasts this with intentional architecture, where the builder holds complete knowledge of reasoning, tradeoffs, constraints, and failure modes. He concludes that AI is effective as an acceleration tool for knowledgeable practitioners but becomes a liability when used as a replacement for architectural thinking. His own practice is defined by building systems he can fully explain, extend, and defend.

Feb 18, 2026 · 27% match
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