Your supercomputers do your work. And pay for themselves.
Own 🤫 Puppy One supercomputers for your own work, and earn from them when they sit idle. The AI Factory turns warehouses, commercial buildings, and homes with cheap power and good cooling into distributed edge-compute capacity you rent back to the grid, at the going rate, only when you are not using it.
Own-first. Monetize the idle.
Buy for your own work, first
You buy 🤫 Puppy One supercomputers to do your own work. You own them outright, and your workloads always run at top priority.
Most owned compute sits idle
Like a truck that is parked most of the day, your machines are idle far more than they are busy. That idle time is a stranded asset.
Sell the idle to the grid
When your machines are not working for you, 🤫 Agent One automatically lists their spare capacity to the network. Nearby people and businesses who need a burst of compute use it, at the going market rate.
Get paid for what was wasted
You keep the majority of that spare-capacity revenue. It is found money on hardware you already bought for yourself, by your consent, with a receipt for every job.
What is possible. Move the sliders.
A novel, multi-dimensional model: turn industrial, commercial, and residential space, power, and cooling into edge-compute capacity you rent back to the grid when you are not using it. Every number is illustrative, from your inputs.
How many supercomputers you host.
Your hardware capex per node.
The rest is idle and sold to the grid.
Market price for a node-hour of burst compute.
Draw while serving the grid.
Cheaper power = more upside.
Your cut of gross spare-capacity revenue.
Illustrative only. Your machines do your work first; only idle capacity is sold, by your consent, with a receipt. Power, utilization, and the going rate move these numbers materially. Not a quote or a guarantee.
What makes a great AI Factory site.
Six things make the economics sing. Power price is the biggest lever.
Cheap, abundant power
The single biggest lever. Low, stable electricity prices (ideally subsidized or renewable) make the economics sing.
Excellent cooling
Good ambient cooling or cheap mechanical cooling keeps machines healthy and costs down. Cool climates and cheap HVAC win.
Space you already have
A spare corner of a warehouse, a commercial building, or even a garage. You do not need a data center, just room and airflow.
Great connectivity
Best-in-class fiber plus satellite (Starlink) so your site is always on the grid and can serve your district with low latency.
Approvals in place
Local zoning, electrical, and any permits already handled, or straightforward to obtain for your space.
Willing owner
You want the compute for your own use anyway. The grid revenue is upside, never the reason to buy.
Warehouses, buildings, and homes.
Warehouse & industrial owners
A spare bay becomes an AI factory. Re-industrialize your space into modern token production.
Commercial building owners
Offices, rec centers, retail backrooms with power and cooling to spare.
Homes & garages
The garage-owner thesis: even a home with cheap power and a cool corner can host and earn.
Re-industrializing space into token production.
The cloud and edge are effectively sold out, while most owned compute sits idle. The AI Factory turns ordinary American space, power, and cooling into a distributed grid of edge supercomputers, owned by the people who host them, and resold onto telecom networks when the neighborhood needs a burst. Modern factories, producing tokens and knowledge, helping people do better work. Built for humans, first.
Turn your space into an AI Factory.
Buy compute you will actually use, and let it pay for itself by renting its idle hours. Owner-first, consent-first, on a grid owned by the people who host it.
Illustrative model only; not financial advice, not an offer, and not a guarantee of earnings. Actual results depend on hardware cost, power price, utilization, and the going market rate for compute. One is a product of Hushh Technologies Corporation (brand: 🤫 “hussh”), an independent company. One runs on third-party silicon, systems, and cloud; all company names are used solely to describe the platforms on which One software runs. Hushh Technologies is not affiliated with, endorsed by, sponsored by, or partnered with any company named.