Own the stack
Source, servers, and operational knowledge belong to the client at the end of the engagement. We build things you can take with you.
About MeiuxMeiux
We're operators first. MeiuxMeiux is the umbrella company for our software engineering, logistics work, and consulting engagements — all run by the same principals, out of St. Petersburg, Florida, on infrastructure we own and operate.
What we believe
We've seen enough dashboards, slide decks, and re-platforming plans to have opinions. Here are the ones that shape how we work.
Source, servers, and operational knowledge belong to the client at the end of the engagement. We build things you can take with you.
Go files under 250 lines. CSS under 450. Deploy rituals written down. The kind of discipline that makes the next person's job easier.
You'll get the actual status, the actual risk, and the actual bill — not a PDF engineered to survive a procurement review.
By the numbers
We run a multi-region production fleet for our own portfolio and client workloads. Our internal infrastructure dashboard keeps us honest.
Production servers
Plus redundant edge nodes
Countries
US, Finland, Netherlands
Metro regions
US coast-to-coast + EU
Live domains
Production + staging
Repositories
Client work, R&D, tooling
Production languages
Each one picked on purpose
Mobile apps shipped
On purpose — not our sport
In-house monitoring
Our own tooling
The toolbox
We pick the language that fits the blast radius. Fast binaries in Go and Rust. Interactive UIs in TypeScript. Legacy integrations in PHP. Scripts and automation in Python. Every choice is a tradeoff we can defend.
Targets we ship to
We've made a deliberate choice to sit out the iOS and Android market. Everything else — browser, desktop, kiosk, daemon — we're happy to build.
Admin panels, SaaS, customer portals
Native desktop utilities
Native apps, menubar tools
systemd, Docker, PM2 daemons
Event hardware, in-store setups
Godot web builds + native
Orchestration and tool-use
Not on the menu — by choice
The invitation
If your project touches code, servers, operations, or all three — we're probably the right call. If it doesn't, we'll tell you that too.