DepinRun

About DepinRun

What DepinRun Is

DepinRun is a practical guide site for people evaluating whether a DePIN node, device, or compute setup is realistic for them. The focus is on individual operators: small hardware owners, homelab users, and technically curious readers who want honest, detailed information before committing time, hardware, or tokens.

DepinRun is not a directory of investment opportunities. It is a research and documentation resource for people who operate or are considering operating physical and compute infrastructure in decentralized networks.

What We Cover

Coverage may include GPU compute, AI compute networks, storage, bandwidth sharing, wireless infrastructure, mapping, sensors, and other physical infrastructure networks that involve individual operator participation.

Guides typically cover:

  • Onboarding process and access requirements
  • Hardware and infrastructure requirements
  • Reward mechanics and how earnings are calculated
  • Ongoing maintenance, software, and monitoring
  • Risks and limitations, including hardware wear, token volatility, and reward uncertainty
  • Whether the project is realistic for small individual operators given current network conditions

How Guides Are Researched

DepinRun uses public project documentation, official sources where available, governance proposals, published dashboards, and practical operator-focused research. Where community or operator reports are used, they are noted as such and not presented as verified universal conditions.

Hardware eligibility, staking requirements, reward rates, and network conditions change. Guides include a dated disclaimer and encourage readers to verify details with official project sources before making any decisions.

What DepinRun Is Not

DepinRun does not provide financial advice, investment advice, or guaranteed profitability estimates. Nothing on this site should be read as a recommendation to buy hardware, purchase tokens, or join a network. That decision is yours, based on your own circumstances, hardware, electricity costs, and risk tolerance.