Projects

Rogue Wolf Tech

A collection of products that are either service platforms or software as a service models.

First Draft In Progress

Have you ever had an idea for a book but just weren’t sure if it was something you should pursue? Well head on over to First Draft In Progress (FDIP). Here you can post chapters or excerpts of your idea. Readers navigate the website looking for snippets that intrigue them and can give coins to posts that they like. Nothing motivates you to pursue that passion project like positive feedback and a financial incentive. Post a chapter and see how people are eager to read more.

TinyCloudTV

There was a point in time where the internet was a relatively safe place, but that time has faded. More and more we find it difficult to allow our children to navigate the internet without fear of them finding adult content that we might not want them introduced to. Our favorite platforms for video content and livestreams Youtube and Twitch, seem to consistently decay into morally degraded content. Its become difficult to allow our children freely navigate these platforms without heavy monitoring.

This is where TinyCloudTV comes in. TinyCloud allows for viewers to freely navigate their favorite video game streamers and content creators who pride themselves on being family friendly. TinyCloud also allows for parents to create accounts for their children and set regulations on the types of content that they can view. No more will parents have to worry about that innocent Minecraft stream turning into a hot tubs and bikinis stream. No more worries about what oddities the Youtube algorithm will autoplay.

While focusing on the safety of our young viewers, TinyCloud will also provide resources for our content creators. Want to stream to other platforms as well? TinyCloud will provide tooling for that. View all of your chats from our dashboard at once. And most importantly, collect revenue from ads and subscriptions in the industry’s more creator friendly splits.

Lyte Software

In the process of building our platforms for Rogue Wolf Tech, we have to create many tools. Some of these tools, we find so useful that we want to share. For this we created Lyte Software as a home for all of our Open Source projects. While these projects are necessarily truly open source in terms o who can contribute to them, these projects will always be free for you to use.

Little Flagger

Feature flagging has become a hot topic as of late. Its always been an elegant system for releasing features, but lately is become even more popular. We wanted to start feature flagging some of our code, but all of the solutions that we looked at seemed overly bloated and frustrating to use.

Little Flagger is a simplistic feature flagging solution that can be ran within a container and interacted with via http requests.

54 Games

Having always wanted to make a video game, its about time that we finally make it happen.

Bombseeker

You have been recruited to help traverse a set of tiles that span a field. Each tile showing how many bombs neighbor it, can you mark all of the bombs on the map and make it to the other side for a safe exit? Collect coins for every bomb that you mark!

Adamson Impact Project

Once we have more momentum, there is nothing that we would love more than to raise money for charity. The Adamson Impact Project is a non profit that will host charity events of varying types.

WearWolfHQ

Do you like any of our brands? Do you like swag? The WearWolfHQ will be your favorite place. WearWolfHQ is the official swag shop for all of the Rogue Wolf Co brands and projects.

Discontinued Previous Projects

Not all of our projects persist. We all have things in life that we consider failures. Maybe sometimes projects just run their course. Either way they come to an end.

IGotQuarantined

There was a point in time, in late March of 2020, that we all had to face hardship. The restaurants that we ate at, the bars that we drank at, the gyms that we worked out at all closed their doors amidst a global pandemic. It was the night before mandated lockdowns that I stood in the lobby of my gym talking with the owner. Worries about how to pay their employees, how to pay their bills, and how to make sure they’d be able to open up again eventually flooded him. I loved that gym and wanted nothing more than for his worries to go away. I turned to him and said, “let me help you while I can” and bought a bunch of shirts that they had for sale.

That’s when it hit me.

There needed to be a place where businesses that were getting affected by mandated shutdowns could post shirts online for their loyal customers to purchase. Even if a small amount of money could get redistributed to the servers, bartenders, tattoo artists, gym employees, baristas that we loved, then the shutdowns would be a little easier for everyone. So I came up with IGotQuarantined and began working.

The idea was simple; local businesses could submit a form. From which we would take their logo and put it into our design. “I wanted to ____ at {logo} but then I got quarantined.” It was meant to be simple and slightly humorous.

From there we would post the shirt on our website where customers could pick the amount that they wanted to pay for the shirt, with a minimum on $20 and no maximum. From whatever amount the customer paid, we subtracted the cost of the shirt, printing, shipping, and transaction fees. In total, if I am recalling correctly, the total that we subtracted was approximately $16.00 from the purchase price. The rest of the money would be given to the company that the customer was trying to support. So if someone bought a shirt for $20 then the business would only get $4.00, but if you paid $36.00 for the shirt then they would get $20.00 in return.

It was a system designed solely to put money in the hands of businesses with zero profit to be gained.

The Phoenix Project

Early the days of Rogue Wolf, when the wolf was still young, a bright eyed web developer aspiring to use his new found skills for good, went searching for local Phoenix businesses to help. We actively created websites for these small business owners and did so at no cost to them. We also participated in multiple charity coding events to help nonprofits. All of this was done under The Phoenix Project.