Atlas Stream
Showing 1 - 12 of 12 signals
0:33

Run.

Aug 20, 2024 · 27% match
Free
1:42

Just breathe. 🔥

May 3, 2024 · 25% match
Free
5:12

Prep Work for Insulation, Part 2

Mar 13, 2024 · 24% match
Free
23:47

Morning RV Power Management on Mountain

rswfire begins his fourth day camping on a mountain at 6 AM with low battery power (25%). He discovers his generator runs on propane and successfully charges his RV batteries using AC power, reaching 1649 watts. He manages solar power generation (80+ watts) to run satellite internet while conserving energy by turning off lights and water pump when not needed. He plans a town trip for supplies including thermal curtains, laundry, shower, and trash disposal. He reflects on missing his mother while playing Horizon Zero Dawn, a game she enjoyed watching him play. Despite some nostalgia and grief, he affirms no regret about leaving his previous life of material conveniences that brought emptiness. He observes other campers collecting firewood systematically and notes mixed feelings about their presence disrupting his solitude. Weather conditions are cold (63°F inside) requiring propane heat conservation. He explores using a 20-lb propane tank for additional heating options. Technical discoveries include learning battery charge indicators, needing a ground adapter for solar charging, and measuring coffee maker power consumption (750 watts initially, dropping to 80 watts). He researches his Oregon Coast trip using iOverlander and Campendium apps, reassessing wind concerns after AI warnings. Current wind predictions show 40 mph gusts coming Friday, which he now considers manageable after research.

Oct 3, 2024 | Ruby Mountains, Nevada · 24% match
Free

The View from Outside

Apr 16, 2026 | · 23% match
Public

Seals on the Beach

Apr 7, 2026 · 22% match
Public

Rainbow

Apr 12, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Work Center · 21% match
Public
7:06

At the Edge of Power: Cape Blanco's Sustained Fury! 🍃

Nov 24, 2024 | Oregon State Parks > Cape Blanco · 21% match
Public
8:43

Planning Fresh Build and Identifying Surveillance Encounter

rswfire records a transmission during his Wednesday morning work rounds, having stopped at Carter Lake for a hike. He outlines a technical plan to rebuild his infrastructure from scratch using Laravel, Livewire, Alpine.js, and Tailwind CSS, developing locally in a monorepo structure. The plan includes three projects: builtwithautonomy.com as the API and documentation layer, autonomyrealms.com as the user-facing signal service, and rswfire.com transitioned to pull data from the API as a demonstration of building on the Autonomy platform. He notes excitement about the project but acknowledges financial constraint as a limiting factor on momentum. He then documents a realization about a trail encounter from a couple weeks prior at Takenitch Creek trailhead. A man jogging on the trail, associated with a state government vehicle with state plates, did not return his greeting and appeared uncomfortable or hostile. rswfire connects this person to a man who confronted him at Oregon State Parks during the Katie Baker situation approximately nine months earlier. He documents this as a pattern recognition convergence, noting the man's refusal to engage and rswfire's own response — that he would have laughed and been cordial had he recognized him in the moment. He remarks on the institutional framing of him as unstable, which he rejects. He describes the physical environment — flooded beach access, dry weather pattern, dune-related sinus issues. He details the food situation: eggs, potatoes, rice, and beans with no meat. He recounts failed job applications to local businesses and freelance platforms including Upwork and Guru, and states his primary goal is making Autonomy Realms successful but lacks financial runway.

Jan 21, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Carter Lake · 21% match
Patron
4:30

Dance like no one is watching.

Jun 21, 2024 · 21% match
Free

Lagoon

Apr 5, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Lagoon · 20% match
Public
1:19

Documenting RV Weight Capacity Miscalculation

rswfire documents a critical mistake in RV planning assumptions. He initially assumed that purchasing a large RV would automatically provide adequate space for all equipment without weight restrictions. After calculating with ChatGPT, he discovered the RV has a 12,200 lb capacity limit. Factoring in his body weight (150 lbs), filled water tanks, and propane, only approximately 700 lbs remain for additional equipment. He realizes this remaining capacity may be insufficient when considering portable power batteries, solar energy systems, and Starlink equipment, identifying this as a potentially problematic oversight in his mobile setup planning.

Mar 2, 2024 · 20% match
Free