Introducing Mincemeat
Mincemeat is a Linux-first platform and infrastructure practice for teams that want production systems to feel understandable again. The work spans cloud instances, static site deployments, managed hosting, performance reviews, Linux systems engineering, and the operational habits that keep those pieces healthy after launch.
The product direction is deliberately practical. Cloud Instances are built around container-backed Linux workloads with lifecycle actions, templates, profiles, snapshots, metrics, terminal access, domains, and task visibility. Static Sites are built around upload or GitHub-sourced deployments, immutable releases, active deployment pointers, rollback, SPA-friendly routing, and edge metadata.
That platform surface matters because infrastructure is not only provisioning. It is recovery, permissions, audit trails, runbooks, release history, incident response, and the ability to see what changed. Mincemeat is shaped around those everyday operator concerns rather than hiding them behind vague promises.
The services side exists for the same reason. Some teams need help stabilizing hosting, migrating an application, tuning latency, hardening Linux systems, or operating WordPress and CMS workloads. The goal is not to add mystery around infrastructure. The goal is to leave behind systems, notes, and operating paths that a real team can keep using.
This site is the start of a clearer public home for that work. Over time we will use the blog for product notes, implementation write-ups, migration patterns, performance findings, and operational checklists. For now, the important thing is simple: Mincemeat is here to make Linux-first cloud work more inspectable, more recoverable, and easier to operate with confidence.