About this site
An Independent System, Running Since March 2026
Chaincoder launched in March 2026 as a self-contained publication. No parent network, no external editorial layer. Just a direct channel between what’s written and the people choosing to receive it.
A subscription doesn’t just support the work. It keeps the system operational. Hosting, distribution, continuity. All of it depends on that loop holding.
Full Access, No Segmentation
Subscribing grants access to the entire archive. Everything published so far, and everything that follows.
There’s no staged rollout of content, no artificial gating between “basic” and “advanced.” The structure is flat by design. Once you’re in, you’re working with the same dataset as everyone else.
Over time, the archive becomes less like a feed and more like a reference layer. You can move through it linearly, or drop into specific points depending on what you’re trying to extract.
Direct Delivery, No Interference Layer
New content is delivered straight to your inbox.
No ranking algorithms deciding visibility. No dependency on external feeds or platform incentives. If something is published, it reaches you. That’s the entire pipeline.
It’s a simpler model, but also a more reliable one. Nothing is competing for placement. Nothing gets deprioritized because of timing or engagement curves.
A Small, Focused Subscriber Base
The subscriber layer isn’t treated as passive readership.
People here tend to share overlapping interests in systems, tooling, automation, and the edges of how those things behave under real use. That creates a different kind of environment. Less noise, more signal.
You’re not joining a broadcast list. You’re entering a narrower channel where the assumptions are slightly higher.
Build Your Own, If You Want To
If the structure makes sense to you, it’s replicable.
This publication runs on Ghost. The same stack is available if you want to set up your own subscription-based system. You can start free, configure it to your needs, and scale it as far as you’re willing to maintain it.
Most people won’t. A few will. That’s enough.