Company

Roadmap

SolarCompute is moving from infrastructure development and public testing toward a transparent renewable compute network.

Where It Started

From energy infrastructure to compute infrastructure

SolarCompute began with a practical question: can available energy, compute hardware, and distributed infrastructure be coordinated into a useful network for real workloads?

The first stage was not about scale. It was about proving that machines, workloads, users, hosts, dashboards, and network controls could begin working together as one system.

Foundation built around

  • Energy-aware infrastructure thinking
  • Workload execution
  • Machine onboarding
  • Job queueing and allocation
  • Host participation
  • Public network transparency
Progress

Current roadmap phases

01

Foundation

Platform concept, early systems, workload architecture, machine connection, and public site structure.

Status: Established

02

Public Testing

Free workload pages, reusable launcher, network visibility pages, and controlled public participation.

Status: Active

03

Network Expansion

More machines, broader workload types, host onboarding, reporting, and operational refinement.

Status: In Progress

04

Compute Operations

Stronger workload routing, result delivery, API integration, dashboard visibility, and platform reliability.

Status: Developing

05

Renewable Integration

Verified energy contribution, renewable conditions, host participation, and infrastructure reporting.

Status: Planned

06

Production Network

Commercial workload support, published pricing, stronger host reporting, and expanded network capacity.

Status: Future

Current Focus

What SolarCompute is building now

The current priority is turning the public website into a real entry point for the network. Visitors should be able to choose a workload, submit a free test, and understand what happens next.

This phase is focused on facts, function, testing, and transparency rather than claims or unverified metrics.

Active work areas

  • Workload launcher pages
  • Public workload testing
  • Machine availability flow
  • Running workload visibility
  • Network status pages
  • Host and hardware participation
Network Direction

How the roadmap connects

Workloads

Public pages allow users to submit AI, rendering, simulation, CPU, and container workloads.

Machines

Approved machines provide compute capacity and report availability into the network.

Hosts

Hosts and contributors support the network through infrastructure, hardware, energy, or facilities.

Transparency

Public-safe reporting helps explain workload activity, network status, and participation.

Long-Term Vision

A distributed renewable compute network

SolarCompute’s long-term direction is to support a network where compute workloads can be matched with available infrastructure and energy-aware operating conditions.

The goal is to keep building carefully: verify systems, connect real machines, run real workloads, protect users and hosts, and publish only information that can be supported by operational data.