The most interesting part of Tinybox isn't just the hardware, but the push for a more vertical integration with tinygrad. We've become so accustomed to the CUDA/PyTorch stack that seeing a serious attempt at a different software-hardware synergy is refreshing, even if the hardware specs or price point relative to DIY homelabs raise some eyebrows for power users. It's more about reducing the friction for researchers who want a "just works" environment without the nightmare of driver/toolkit version hell.