<description>Recent content in Federated Computer Blog on Federated Computer | A fast, responsive replacement for Google Workplace and much more</description>
<description>We are very proud to introduce Federated &ldquo;Core&rdquo; to the wide world. We built Federated Core because we were tired of the surveillance happening with common productivity tools on the web, our collection of tools was costing a small fortune every month, and it was a pain to get everything to work together.
Design Goals Federated Core was built to provide regular users who wanted privacy, great features and functions, the right price, basically all the benefits of today&rsquo;s software-as-a-service offerings, in a self-hosted environment but without the aggravation and technical commitment self-hosting requires.</description>
<description>How Bitcoin Becomes Money in the Next Decade
I have followed bitcoin for over a decade now and one of the best quotes I have seen is from Paul Buchheit, “Bitcoin may be the TCP/IP of money.” Just as TCP/IP facilitated the free flow of information and transformed how we communicate and access data globally, Bitcoin will have a similar impact on the transfer of value and the way we perceive and use money, MoIP, money over Internet protocol!</description>
<description>At Federated, we try to put our tools, our digital tools, where our mouth is. We don&rsquo;t used centralized software for almost nothing to run our business preferring to use Federated Core and other self-hosted open-source projects.
While we have systems running (virtual machines) for Windows and macOS testing, we run Linux on the desktop with most of us choosing to run Pop!_OS. The &ldquo;tile windows&rdquo; manager and integration with Federated services makes this a winner.</description>
<description>Cloud 1.0 At Joyent, my previous startup, we literally invented &ldquo;cloud computing&rdquo;. We figured developers would appreciate the ability to purchase an &ldquo;on-demand data center&rdquo; in order to build web applications at scale without the enormous up-front infrastructure costs previously associated with datacenters.
This all seems like old-hat today, but at the time, in the early 2000s, we were felt like pioneers.
Centralization Sucks What happened with cloud infrastructure is a story, in the technology universe, as old as time.</description>
<description>Much like the incredible expense of all the software-as-a-service offerings today, when taken in aggragate, in the 1960s and 1970s, computing was a &ldquo;big company&rdquo; sport because of expense. Large computer companies sold mainframes and smaller mainframes (called &ldquo;minis&rdquo;) and were very content with the status quo and profits.
When the idea of personal computers came along, no establish computer company had any desire to play along. In fact, when Steve Wozniak created the Apple I personal computer, he offered it to his employer Hewlett-Packard five times but the big-computing company had no interest.</description>
<description>The Origins of Federated Most of the founders of Federated Computer come from an earlier company that worked on decentralization called &ldquo;Joyent&rdquo;. You can read some of that story in a blog post I wrote when Joyent was sold to Samsung at this link.
The picture above shows the first few engineers and designers who worked on Joyent, including the now tremendously successful Apple, Dallas Cowboys, and other topics blogger and podcast John Gruber in the red shirt.</description>