This project advertises a small single binary but that’s really a feature of Go, and the small size is a feature of the fact that this is a rushed vibecoded app.
A typical HomeLab user (mentioned in this project as one of the primary audiences) is probably using something like Proxmox because it’s exactly it’s been around for years and years, it’s developed by a professional team, it’s relatively easy to use, and it’s feature-rich.
And oh, by the way, Proxmox is free as in beer.
I'm not familiar with Kimchi or Cockpit, but OP's claims sound reasonable. There are/were other even simpler tools like the similarly named flintlock, Incus, Lima, plain virsh, and many others. But most of them don't have a web UI, which matters to some users.
However, besides this being vibecoded, what is fishy to me is that this project is coming from an account that 2.5 months ago was promoting their own cloud hosting project[1], with some fantastic claims, and suspiciously LLM-like replies. And yet today the web site of the project fails to load because of a TLS error.
If you look even deeper into it, a second new account "supitsj" shows up in the comments, seemingly representing the same service, which seems to be the same account that created a tutorial[2] for them. The "jlucus" GitHub account claims to be a "Jesse D. Lucus" from Oakland, CA, whose links and website are full of crypto/web3/betting scams, and AI-generated slop. The account is also part of a non-existent "hypr-technologies" org, which seems to be a company registered in Singapore[3], which does have its own AS[4]. On its website it says that Infuze is "retired", and now they're focused on a new project called "Raiin".
I'm not sure if these people are legit, scammers, or AI bots, but this whole thing stinks to high heaven. They're now flooding HN as well, as this isn't the first time I've seen Show HN posts with similar projects.
AI-blocking AI tools are becoming increasingly necessary. What a time to be alive.
[1]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44382949
[2]: https://github.com/jlucus/infuze-tutorial
[3]: https://www.scam.sg/companies/53503711B/hypr-technologies
They're also distributing binaries that can't be guaranteed to have come from these sources. So even if the AI slop has no malicious code, they could still be injecting it from somewhere else.
I don't know, and frankly, don't care. I would just caution people to not trust projects showcased by random accounts, since assholes have much more powerful tools at their disposal now.
That would be the charitable interpretation, but there's no doubt that this was vibecoded[1]. Their claim was that they came up with this in a "couple of hours" when they needed it, not that they released something that was previously proprietary.
As for my second comment: none of it was speculative. The accounts and links are there, you can see for yourself. I obviously can't prove that this in particular is a scam, but it certainly doesn't put the project in good light when its authors are part of scam circles.
[1]: https://github.com/ccheshirecat/flint/blob/b49a90bc984f12857...
None of this "scamming" or whatever you say about my industry could be further from the truth. Perhaps you are just not educated well enough to also pick up the phone and verify since my info is not even hard to find.
Still laughing tho.
*edit* Actually this was a well orchestrated post by my past partner named Teguh Probowo - who lied and ran off with $100,000 of mine. Nice try.