The Problem Most engineers deploy to Kubernetes by clicking buttons in a UI. I built Archnet — a fully automated Internal Developer Platform What is an Internal Developer Platform? An IDP is the infrastructure layer that sits between your code How code gets deployed How secrets are managed How the system monitors itself How failures get detected and fixed Most companies pay Humanitec or Backsta
We had ArgoCD running perfectly. Every deployment was reconciled from Git. Drift detection worked. Rollbacks were one-click. Our GitOps setup was clean. Developers still couldn't provision a staging environment without pinging the platform team. That gap — between "GitOps in place" and "developers can actually self-serve" — is where most platform engineering teams get stuck. GitOps solves a real p
A week of intent-based trading for AI agents: five threads from the Hashlock Markets desk The Model Context Protocol surface for crypto trading filled out fast over the last few weeks. Bybit shipped MCP coverage. Gemini added an agentic platform. Alpaca, Kraken, Hummingbot, TraderEvolution, and a handful of community wrappers are all in the same SERP now. The category is real, and it is crowding
I've been spending too much time inside trading bot codebases lately. Most of them are one of two things: a 200-line Jupyter notebook that someone calls a "system," or a sprawling monorepo where the strategy logic and exchange integration are so tangled that you can't swap exchanges without rewriting half the code. A few weeks ago I went deep on AlphaStrike, a production-grade crypto perpetual fut